The Sunday Paper: “Blood Come” by Ryan Adam Murray. Part 3 of 7.
They say he was running coke for some Vietnamese gang when his car went off the road and hit a tree. He tried to drag himself away from the crash so he wouldn’t be caught with the blow, but only made it a few hundred yards. He wasn’t found for three days. In the meantime, his injuries became infected. He ended up losing three fingers, two toes, and an eye. He went to the hospital and then to prison, where he served seven years. During that time, he acquired a culinary degree and (rumor has it) killed two other inmates.
This is how the Chef came into my life. Because of the culinary degree that is, not the jailhouse murders.
When he really doesn’t like somebody and decides its time for a disciplinary lecture, he takes out his glass eye first. He loves forcing people to deal with that gaping socket. God help you if you look away.
“If you were stranded in the wilderness due to a plane crash,” he asked me during the job interview. “How long would it be before you chose to consume human flesh?”
I immediately said that after five days without meat I would probably resort to cannibalism to survive.
“To survive?” he asked. “You would make that choice?”
“Anything to survive,” I told him emphatically.
“The important thing,” he gripped me tightly in a firm handshake as his eyes penetrated my soul. “Is that you don’t have to think about it. The important thing, is that I know you have asked yourself this question before I asked you this question.”
“I will destroy you,” he said. “Only to rebuild you. The man you are will be immolated in the fires of discipline. From his ashes, a sous chef shall rise.”
The dishwasher interrupts my reverie. Bandula is looking at me thoughtfully. Seeing that he has caught my eye, he turns his gaze upward, as though addressing some highly placed authority figure. Any time his remarks become analytical, Bandula looks at the ceiling.
“Denis has a trouble,” he says mournfully, rubbing his hands together. “No doubt. If he does the fuck up, fucked he will be. Not by the gleaming cock of his playdream, but by the burning cock of failure.”
“Woah,” Jack squints at me little. “That’s intense.”
“The cock of failure will fuck him away from his home, fuck him away from his job, fuck him away from the cake that is his love. You,” Bandula looms over me, his face a stony mask of prognostic calm, “beware the cock of failure.”
“Glad you guys are looking out for me,” I mutter. “Thanks a lot, but I won’t fuck this up.”
“Maybe you don’t. Maybe you do,” Bandula considers the possibilities. “Life is a maybe. Maybe I kill someone today,” he likes to launch into little homicidal soliloquies. To pass the time, I assume. “Maybe I kill you,” he points at me, fully extending his long, bony arm in my direction. “Yeeeesssssss,” he says thoughtfully. “You fat, lonely faggot. No one cry for you. No police. Oh, but not to worry,” he beams benevolently at me. “Before I kill you, I fuck you. I fuck you. You cry. Blood come. Then die. No more cake.”
Jack sighs, “and they say romance is dead.”
“Wow,” what else do you say, right? “You couldn’t even, like, buy me dinner first?”
“I buy hallmark card for dead baby’s mama,” he snaps. “Wipe my ass.”
“This is awkward,” says Jack. “I’m a little jealous right now.”
Finally, almost an hour late, Nick shows up. He brought another joint, so I forgive him. He’s more of a retard than an asshole, so when you take the bribes into account he does more good than harm. He’s white as a sheet and his hands are shaking, but that’s pretty normal.
“Hey shitwits,” he says as he fills a one liter container with water, downs it in a single gulp, and fills it again. “Did I miss the four p.m. rush?”
Nick says shit like that to emphasize his view that it’s not such a big deal whether or not he shows up to work on time. I inform him that we just got hit with a thirty-person rezzie. He shuffles his feet and stares at the wall. Then he mumbles something vaguely apologetic and heads out the back door to begin his daily ritual of open vomiting and clandestine masturbation.
“One weeks, three day,” Bandula says. “Three hundred.”
Jack laughs, and says, “no way man. I give my boy a month at least.”
“I make from you the money,” Bandula smiles. “I buy for me the pussy.”
“A week and three days?” Jack scoffs. “That guy’s been a day away from death for six years. It’s going to take more than a payday weekend to kill him.”
“Your money will be my money.”
Peter, passing through the kitchen to get lemons and limes for the bar, provides his own analysis.
“If Nick lives to the end of his shift I’ll be shocked,” he laughs. “I saw him at the Centurian last night getting his ass kicked by three bouncers. Tom told me that he whipped it out on one of the shooter girls,” Tom is a bartender at the Centurian.
“Sunshine is lucky he works here. That’s the only reason they haven’t banned him.”
“Dude, that was entrapment,” Nick walks in to hear his reputation slowly dwindling. Or growing, depending on the scale that we’re using. “She offered me thirty bucks for it.”
“What?” a shrill note creeps into Peter’s voice. “Are you nuts? Who the fuck wants to see that?”
“You’d be surprised,” Nick grins, slapping his ball-sack with his palm, as he always does when he thinks he’s scoring a point. “I gotta charge you fifty though, I got bills to pay and you got no damn vagina.”
Jack and Nick laugh their asses off. Peter is unphased.
“How are YOU standing?” he demands of Jack. “You were there with him, weren’t you? Didn’t you guys go to the Burn after that?” The Burn is an after hours bar which is only slightly less welcoming than a Russian gulag after three days without gruel.
“I went home at ten a.m.” Nick yawns. “Gotta get my beauty sleep.”
“See, that’s his problem,” Jack says, pointing at Nick and shaking his head. “This dumbass went to bed.”
Oh, I get it. Jack isn’t hungover because he’s still drunk. Figures. That explains how he managed to make it to his shift on time. He probably didn’t even go home last night.
When the supper rush hits, we’re all ready. I love the rush. The rush is the reason that I cook on the line. You just put your head down and go. Consciousness is restricted to one hundred and twenty seconds in either direction. There are no long-term plans and no distant memories. It’s all about right now and what needs to be done. From six p.m. to nine, everything is a blur.
Wooden Rocket Press’ Sunday Paper posts new serialized fiction each Sunday. Return next Sunday morning for the next section of Blood Come. For other stories check out the Sunday Paper archive.
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