Rust and Bone Shadows

0
1

The gas pump clicked off. Eighteen gallons. Forty-two dollars. Dale Henderson stood there with the nozzle, wearing a Ford plant shirt faded to gray. Three years since the plant closed.

Ray came out of the office counting cigarettes. You oughta drive somewhere, Ray said. Not here. Not Dayton. Somewhere that isn't here.

Dale's Chevy coughed twice and started. He drove out on I-70.

In rural Indiana, a girl at a pump, hands shaking. Full-body shake, not tremor. Left hand bruised around knuckles. She paid in cash. Got four dollars back.

In a nameless town, a motel sign reading VACANCY in letters that lost their L and C. Room: thirty-two dollars. He lay on the bed and stared at water damage shaped like a country he couldn't identify. Connor. Six months ago in a courtroom, across a table with a wooden divider.

Impound yard outside Indianapolis: a red SUV. Lisa's shape. He stood for twenty minutes. Drove north.

Gary, Indiana: a man in a white robe called Guru Ram Dass talked for forty-five minutes about converting negative energy. Dale paid fifty dollars and got a crystal that looked like broken window. On the drive to Detroit, the crystal flew out the window.

Detroit: buildings mostly standing but empty. The neighborhood where he and Connor lived was now a field of weeds and rubble. A sign said CONDEMNED.

Inside the fence, in the weeds, chalk: a drawing Connor had made at six. A house. A stick-figure family. Three figures. The boy had extra arms.

Dale knelt. He tried to remember Connor's voice. Not laughing. Not crying. Speaking. He could not hear it. He could see the crayon. But the voice was gone. Not taken. He had never paid attention to it.

Ray called: Want me to come get you? Yeah.

Back in Dayton. Ray waiting at the garage. You alright? Yeah.

Dale picked up the phone. I'd like to schedule a visitation with my son, Connor Henderson. Positive words about availability and scheduling. He said thank you. Hung up. His hand was shaking.

He closed it into a fist. Stopped. Started again. Outside, the Dayton sky was the color of a bruise.

© 2026 - Authored by Z R ZHANG ( EL9507135 ) The aforementioned Author hereby grants to OXFORD INDUSTRIAL HOLDING GROUP (ASIA PACIFIC) CO., LIMITED (BRN74685111) all economic property rights. Such grant is exclusive and irrevocable. The term of such rights shall be 49 years from the date of publication. To contact author, please email to datatorent@yeah.net




Author Note & Copyright:

Pesquisar
Categorias
Leia mais
Literature
The Ink of Tomorrow
ACT I: THE SPARK (20%) The New Year's Eve light display on Woodward Avenue was the sort of thing...
Por Z.R. ZHANG 2026-04-26 04:17:11 0 25
Literature
The Silence of the Harmony
The city of Orestia was a masterpiece of symmetry and silence. Every citizen lived in a white...
Por Z.R. ZHANG 2026-04-22 09:59:37 0 29
Literature
The Man Sitting by the Road
## [English Version] Frank Kovac picked up the guy at a bar on North Western Avenue. The bar was...
Por Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-12 18:16:07 0 9
Literature
The Tiger's Tooth
The house on St. Charles Street breathed. This was not a metaphor. The floorboards exhaled in the...
Por Z.R. ZHANG 2026-04-25 11:13:34 0 35
Dance
The Wolf in the Ashes
Raymond found the track at dawn, when the light was still grey and the ground hadn't fully dried...
Por Shirley Horton 2026-05-13 17:32:45 0 1