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Authors: Alan Spencer

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BOOK: Coin-Operated Machines
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Brock sighed. 
"I have to keep busy.  Keep my mind off my mind."

“You've got the right attitude.  Stay busy.  Grab a woman by the titties, look up an
old friend, or hey, refurnish your apartment, or better yet, knowing your sense-of-humor, why not start a page on that website about all those ex-famous people called "Washed Up and Loving It?" Really turn the tables on those tabloid assholes."

Brock started to enjoy the taste of his soda again.  Perhaps he’d been looking at his time alone the wrong way.  “
Maybe I’ll bust out the biggest jigsaw puzzle in history.  It'll have to be a thousand piece job.  Maybe a puzzle with a kitty cat on it.  There's that impossible one with a hundred Dalmatian dogs on it.  It's really hard to finish."

Ryan held up his bottle
in cheers, and Brock clanked his glass against his friend’s.  “To making good use of your time.”

Brock celebrated the toast, though he still held his reservations
about what the next two months could hold for him. 

 

 

 

 

COMING HOME

 

 

After catching a flight from Illinois to San Diego, Brock realized he did have something to go home to, and her name was Hannah Riley—or Sheryl Flynn, that being her acting name.  Hannah waited at the San Diego Airport terminal for his arrival.  Seeing her, Brock was so grateful for the pleasant surprise.  He caught Hannah mark her place in a romance novel and met up with him.  The woman was beautiful despite her wear—and who was he kidding, his face was as worn as the tires of an old dirt bicycle rode hard—with her one hundred and twenty pound physique sculpted by aerobics and dieting.  Hannah had platinum blonde hair, natural aqua blue eyes, and that winning smile; the very reason she became an actress in the first place.  Those lips could boast sexually prowess, heartfelt emotion, and conniving bitch.  The problem, after ten years of riding the white pony, Hannah lost that inner actress and never reclaimed it, though according to her agent, it was simply her time to move on from the business because the business had moved on from her. 

Hannah wasn’t his girlfriend, but instead an old friend who exchanged romantic niceties
from time to time.  She didn’t want marriage, because she’d done the marriage dance three times, and she had finally said enough.  They had a special bond together.  She had participated in what Brock called the legacy of Gene Richards.  She had partied down at his father's mansion alongside Brock and his sister until they had successful dismantled each of their own successes.  Hannah called herself a rehab queen.  They were each other's liaisons into sobriety.  Best friends.

Brock dragged along his a
irport bag on wheels.  Reaching her, Brock hugged Hannah close.   “What a surprise.  I didn’t expect you to be here.  Seriously.” It would’ve been a long trip in a public bus, since he didn’t own a car, to lower Beverly Hills.  “How did you know I was going to be here?”

“I called Ryan,
and he dished the details."  She worked a strand of blonde hair from her the edge of her mouth with a finger.  “And here I am.  I have really good news.  But first, let’s get out of this place.  I hate terminals.”

They walked to the pa
rking garage three levels down and reached the Honda Civic parked in the orange level.  After storing his bag in the trunk, Brock plopped down on the passenger seat, and Hannah took the wheel.  After driving out of the airport, then getting onto the interstate, they had a decent drive ahead of them.  During that time, Hannah shared an exciting piece of good news.

After hearing it, Brock asked, “So w
hat’s the movie you're going to be in called?"

Hannah
tried not to laugh.  “It’s called
Dust Devils
.  It’s about these insects in the Sahara Desert who grow to the size of dogs, but they’re like mites, but with teeth, and they can fly, and they can eat a person in two seconds.  It’s a straight to cable release, but hey, it’s work.  I’m playing a bug specialist and an adventurer.  They say I get to wear my boots and spurs like back in my old western movie days, and unlike those macho westerns films, I get to wear the guns this time.  Two six-shooters.  I’m the man this time.  I’m shooting my phallic pistols at the monsters and slaying the evil.”

Brock was genuinely happy for he
r.  “How did you get the job, you star you?”

“A new agent contacted me, and he said there’s a market for aged actors an
d actresses to be in b-movies.  It's mostly science fiction and horror flicks, but they pay—they pay, Brock!  I need this.  I could be doing tampon commercials, and I’d still be ecstatic, though I about shit myself when I learned I get to wear spurs again. I loved being in westerns.  There's something so romantic about it.  Horses and leather and hot grizzled men get me hot."

Brock suffered a pang
of concern.  If this movie landed her other gigs, would she drop off of his radar now that she wasn’t completely washed up anymore like him?
  You selfish prick, be happy for her.

He sweetened his words to cover up his
thoughts.  “So when do you start working?”

“I fly out to
New Mexico in two weeks.  That leaves me time to get into character."

The next two months would be hell to survive
, he remembered.  Brock needed a plan and fast.  He did his best to keep it from showing on his face, but he’d never been an actor or TV personality like his father.  He was a son riding his father’s success, those coattails extended for decades.  He judged people of their talent without having a talent of his own. 

You’ve been sober two years. 

That’s no cakewalk. 

And you’re working on your book.  You’re not on your way to a casket anymore.  If that’s not talent, then America sucks balls, and who’s the biggest cock sucker?

Concern bogged down Hannah’s voice.  “Tell me what’s wrong?”

The
air he sucked in was ice cold.  Brock was shaking.  It was a residual habit when he craved cocaine in the past.  She touched his wrist and caressed it, then she put his hand against her chest.  She kissed his hand, leaving the rouge lipstick imprint on his skin.  It had been her signature when she was an A-star actress. 

“Don’t think I’m leaving you, Brock.  I’m working, yes, but,” she forced modesty, “it’s a three week shoot.  I’m practically being paid nothing.  I’m excited over a bug movie.”

Brock tried to be happy for her and leave it at that.  “You just want to wear your cowboy outfit again so you can get dolled up and
purdy
.”

Hannah smiled. 
“We’re celebrating tonight.  I’m not abandoning you.  I’m calling you, texting you, sending your postcards, photocopying my ass to you, everything.  Brock, it’s going to be fine.  We're going to be fine.  You're not going to slip, Brock.  You're too strong now for that."

He wasn't so sure, but he played along anyway.
  This was Hannah's moment, and Brock wasn't going to ruin it. 

 

 

 

 

DATE TONIGHT

 

 

Hannah dropped Brock off at his apartment in lower Beverly Hills.  His residence was in the middle class sector far enough from the movie studios and Hollywood for a man like him to afford rent.  Brock proceeded up the steps to the third floor and arrived at his apartment.  Considering how modest the apartment was, nobody would think the son of the famous Gene Richards lived here.  He was hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt, including rehab bills and back taxes.  Being a talent scout wasn’t the most lucrative job in Hollywood, especially for a b-grade celebrity, but he was surviving and keeping his nose clean.

Once inside, he checked his machine for
messages. 

There
was one from Ryan.

"
Hey man, I just wanted to see if you got back safely.  Keep in touch.  Tell me how you’re holding up.  I’m thinking about you, man.  Don’t give up.  I believe in you.  Call me
."

Brock
unpacked his dirty clothes, took the journey downstairs to shove quarters into the washing machines and started the laundry.  Brock returned to his room to shower and slip into more comfortable clothes.  He was too tired to do much of anything, so he lazed on his bed reading a novel about a man who finds out he has eight different children by eight different mistresses.  It wasn’t long before he drifted to sleep, and he didn’t wake up again until Hannah called. 

“This is y
our wake up call, handsome.  You still up for getting plowed?  I'll come by at eight."


Let's open the bubbly and drink ourselves into a coma!  I’ll see you at eight.”

 

Brock was the type of person to be inspired by deadlines.  He had two hours before Hannah arrived.  Hurrying downstairs, he fished out the laundry from the washing machine and switched it over to the dryer.  He vacuumed the apartment, opened up the windows to let in the breeze and filter out that not-so-lived-in-apartment-smell.   He checked the automatic feeder on his zebra tetra aquarium.  Changing into khaki pants and slipping on his running shoes, he ventured out to the grocery store for basic food supplies, but first, he checked his mail box on the first floor.  Twenty envelopes were stuffed in the slot, junk mail and bills mostly.  He tucked the collection under his arm, and when he turned to leave, Carlos Miloh, the building's superintendant, was sweeping the front steps and greeted him.

“Brock, when did you get back?"

“This afternoon.”  He thought on it a second.  “We’re paid up until the end of the month, right?”

Carlos was five feet tall with sun burnt sk
in darkened to a fine Mexican gold.  He wore a dirtied top and black jeans.  He was the kind of man who took pride in the upkeep of his building and worked with his two sons, both teenagers, to perform the hard work of maintaining the building.  He knew of Brock’s job and was very interested. 

“Yes sir, we’re square.  D
id you find anybody talented?”
“A kid who could blow farts out her ass like a bean curd champion.  Other than that, it’s mostly singing and dancing.  Same old."

Carlos
scoffed.  “Ah, anybody can sing and dance.  Me, I can outrun immigration and speak English better than some of your born and raised Americans.  Now that's talent."

Brock
enjoyed how good of a sport Carlos was about Mexican stereotypes.  “I’m keeping my eye on you.  You’ve got flair, pal."

             

Brock piled the mail on his kitchen table and then went back out to hit Hinkley’s Market two blocks from the apartment building.  He passed the Beverly Hills Open Air Park and watched the Frisbee golfers, joggers, dog walkers, and the late picnicking couples on the way.  For all the fear of lapsing on his sobriety, the clean air, the activity, seeing healthy people live, all of it was cleansing.  Hannah was coming over in an hour.  Today was going to be fine, he thought.  He was going to be okay.

Hannah was with him during
his rehab.  They fought through the tough times together, becoming better friends at the end of it, but Angel, his sister, didn’t survive rehab very long.  She broke out after the first week, and two years later, she was a ghost to him.   If Angel had died, he wouldn’t know it. 

He went from one high to a drastic low thinking about
his sister. 

Look her up.  She needs her brother.
  I’m the one who was right there with her feeding her cocaine.  We had all that inheritance money, and we partied it all away at Dad's mansion.  We destroyed that place.  We destroyed each other.   

Face i
t, Angel hates you.  She'd never talk to you again.

The last thing Angel said
to him before she left Brock at the rehabilitation clinic was, “
I hate you, Brock.  Thanks to you, I’m a goddamn coke head.  Thanks to you...thanks to you, I'll always be this way.
” 

He had apologized to
Angel so many times in his head, if only he could locate her and actually say what was on his mind.  Their mother Brock called the black widow.  The woman took her part of the inheritance and bolted out of their lives. 

Brock
arrived at the store, forcing himself to think about his grocery list instead of his family.  He purchased enough supplies to last him two weeks and returned home.  By then, he had ten minutes before Hannah showed up.   

 

 

 

 

ANGEL RICHARDS

 

 

Angel Richards couldn't understand the method by which she was hanging by the neck.  She had bled a great deal from the collection of wounds her body had suffered, though she felt no sensation.  No pain.  No agony.  Nothing.  She smelled mold on the walls and something else she couldn't place.  Something very wrong.  The mysteries in the room kept her searching for what had happened to her being suspended in the air by the neck.  Silence for the past few hours, she kept trying to speak but what came out of her throat was useless air.  She wasn't even breathing.  Somehow, she was still alive, thinking, and processing information.  But how?  What had the man with the golden axe done to her?             

Th
e axe attacker was a juggernaut of a man standing at 6 '4.  He was as wide and hulking as a grizzly bear and just as fearless.  The man with the golden axe stank of blood, sweat, and other people's fear.  Angel had been running from the axe man, but how she got here in this room, the memory was fuzzy.  She tried to fight her restraints, but with no sensation or ability to move, it was pointless. 

The distant thud of steps from upstairs indicated someone had entered the house.  Angel could sense the house tense up upon the arrival.  The doors, the windows, the floorboards, the foundation all
stiffened.  One step at a time down a staircase, she knew it was the man with the golden axe who was coming.

Angel
could sense the shadows shift when his bulk entered the room.  The shape pivoted towards her.  Closer he came.  Close enough, Angel could see he was carrying another body over his shoulder.  He dropped it onto the concrete, though it didn't make the sound it should've, as if it was softened by other bodies already on the floor. 

That's what she was smelling. 

Death. 

Rotting bodies.

Hacking up snot and spitting it up against the wall with a piggish grunt, the man with the golden axe went to work.  He was busy with many tasks to accomplish at once and balancing various methods on how to go about them.  Turning on the light, the bright amber beam filled the room, blinding her like a camera's flash.  Slowly, the details of the room registered as the blotches in her eyes faded.  What she witnessed would've sent her legs running up the stairs to prevent the man with the golden axe from harming her again.  She would've screamed, how she would've screamed, if only she could escape this place, if only she had never come to this town, if only she wasn't a severed head hanging from a meat hook.

BOOK: Coin-Operated Machines
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