Read Toward the Sound of Chaos Online

Authors: Carmen Jenner

Toward the Sound of Chaos (17 page)

“This
interview is done. You wanna ask my client any more questions, you need to go
through me, or you’ll find yourself buried in so much red tape you’ll be
shitting plastic for years to come.”

“This
is bullshit, Jacqueline, and you know it,” the sergeant calls.

“All
I know is that my client remains innocent until proven guilty. You have a nice
day, Murphy.” She smiles sweetly, and a tendril of ginger hair falls into her
eyes. She blows it out of her face and leads me out of the station by my shirt
collar. I’m pretty sure if she hadn’t grabbed on, I’d still be standin’ there,
paralyzed with fear.

Elle
waits out front with Nuke. He pulls on his lead and she lets go. Nuke barrels
into me, lying himself down at my feet, yipping and barking as his tail wags
and he nuzzles into my legs. It isn’t because he’s excited to see me. This is
what he’s trained to do, to comfort, distract me from getting’ caught up in my
head, and take the lead when I can’t.

“Oh
my God, Jake.” Ellie reaches out to touch my face. I flinch but lean into her
before she can draw her hand away. She doesn’t wrap her arms around me, but she
doesn’t pull back. She holds me without restraining me, and it’s just what I
need.

“You
must be Miss Mason?” Jacqueline says.

“Pleased
to meet you,” Ellie nods. “I would have come earlier, but I only just heard.”

“So
did I.” Jacqueline’s lips draw into a hard line. “I gotta say you two, cuddling
outside the station don’t look good. I should be charging you double to get you
out of this one, Jake.”

Elle
pulls away and turns to my lawyer. “But he didn’t do anything. Jake didn’t do
this. I don’t know who did, but I know in my heart it wasn’t him.”

“Well,
that’s sweet and all, but I doubt a jury is going to be impressed with what
your heart tells you.” Jacqueline smiles tightly.

“I
have to go.” I grab Nuke’s lead and start walking through the lot.

“Jake,
let me take you home.”

“I’ll
drive,” Jacqueline announces, heading toward her car. “We can discuss your case
on the way,”

“No!”
I yell, and glance between them. Ellie’s mouth turns down in a frown,
Jacqueline looks impatient. I’d be willing to bet that she don’t hear “no” very
often.

“We
need to go over your case, Jake,” Jacqueline calls, but I’m already runnin’
down N Section Street, and I don’t plan on stopping.

In
my driveway, I bend double and spill the contents of my guts onto the pavers,
while Nuke collapses in the grass. It takes a minute or two for me to catch my
breath, but when I do I can’t stand still any longer. The voices in my head are
too loud. I take a step toward the porch and my left leg gives out, forcing me
to collapse on the ground. I pushed too hard. I ran too fast, too far, and now
I’ll be paying for it for the entire week.

I
just had to get away. I couldn’t stand there in front of her and pretend I
wasn’t dying inside.

I
push to my feet again and carefully climb the stairs, limping as my breath
seesaws in and out of my lungs. Nuke follows, climbing each step as tentatively
as I do, and together we limp inside, shutting the world out behind us. I lock
the doors and draw all the blinds and turn off my phone, and then I head upstairs
to my bedroom and lie on the floor, shielded by the bed and the heavy pants of
my dog’s body alongside mine.

Chapter
Twenty-Seven

Jake

Two
years, nine months ago


J
esus
Christ,” Lucky says, wiping the sweat from his face with the sleeve of his
fatigues. “It’s hotter than a sweaty nun’s cunt out here.”

“You
know that from firsthand experience?” I say, turning my eyes to the buildings
above us, scanning for some sign of life, anything. It’s too quiet. Where are
the cars, the rich scents of kabuli, naan and seekh kabab cooked by street
vendors, the bustle of people through the market? There are no children here;
in every town we’ve been to, from the FOB at Delaram to Sangin to Kandahar to
Barmal, there are children everywhere, trying to sell us bootleg DVDs and
baseball cards, or charging us fifteen US dollars for a contraband bottle of
beer, even if it is some local Afghani shit brewed in a rusted out gallon drum.
What I wouldn’t give for a Red Stick Rye right now. Hell, in this heat, I’d
even settle for a pint of Ben & Jerry’s.

“I
thought the preacher was more your thing, Lucky?” Ace mutters, takin’ off his
helmet and runnin’ a hand over his pink scalp. He’s gonna be burnt to a crisp
out here before Gunner gets done fixin’ the truck. Piece of crap picked a hell
of a time to break down.

Lucky
turns and slams his chest against Ace’s, gettin’ all up in his face. “Shut your
face, limp dick.”

“Alright,
both of you shut the fuck up and keep your eyes open,” I snap, tired of their
bullshit. My head pounds like a motherfucker, and the last thing I want is to
listen to them bitch one another out like an old married couple.

“Yes,
sir,” Ace says.

I
glare at Lucky. He frowns. “Yes, sir. Sorry, sir.”

“Put
your fuckin’ helmet back on, Ace. I don’t need you takin’ a bullet to the head.

“Yes,
sir.” He fits the helmet to his head, and I clench my jaw as Jones strides over
from the other Humvee and lights up a cigarette.

“What
are you doin’?”

“Smokin’,”
he says, as if I’m stupid and need an explanation. Sweat beads over his black
skin. His outer shirt is tied around his waist, and the reflection from the sun
on his white T-shirt practically blinds me.

“Is
no one actually on the fuckin’ job today?” I shout.

“Hey
what about you, Sarge?” Lucky asks, ignoring my mood. “You ever tap any of that
sweet southern Carolina pussy back home? You know, those old-money country club
types?”

“I’m
from Alabama, dumbass,” I say, and take the cigarette from Jones, inhaling the
sharp smoke before coughing it back up.

“You
don’t fuck sweet southern pussy,” Jones says in a Louisianan drawl. “Southern
pussy fucks you. And you don’t mess with those bitches unless you want your
dick cut off, pared open, and arranged in a vase.”

He
isn’t wrong. You don’t mess with southern women, and if you do, you have the
sense not to tell your Marine buddies about it, because she will find out.
They
always find out
.

“Gunner,
I need an ETA on that vehicle.”

“She’s
done.” Gunner slams the hood of our Humvee. “What crawled up your ass today,
farm boy?”

“I
don’t know, maybe the fact that we’re broken down in the middle of the fuckin’
tribal areas one hundred miles out from a known Haqquni stronghold, and
everyone’s actin’ like we’re on fuckin’ vacation.”

“We
ain’t broken down no more,” Gunner says, winking bright blue eyes at me.
“Relax. We’ll be home before you know it.”

“All
y’all get back to the trucks,” I shout to my men. Jones just looks at me. “That
means you, too.”

“You
gotta spring me from that team, Sarge—bunch of pasty-assed, braindead
motherfuckers. I don’t belong with them. Switch me out with Ace; they can
geek-speak to one another in Klingon or some shit.”

“Get
back to the truck, Jones.”

“Come
on, sir. We’re practically neighbors, you and me.”

“Truck.
Now,” I order, and turn my attention to Ace and Lucky who are literally having
a pissing contest against a nearby wall.
Jesus Christ.
It’s like babysitting
a bunch of toddlers.

A
rusted out pickup speeds around the corner on screeching tires and comes to a
halt thirty yards from where we stand. All my men go on alert, their rifles
raised and at the ready. “Hold your fire,” I shout.

An
older man sits in the driver’s seat, watching us as the car idles.

“Sarge?”
Jones says beside me in a warning tone. “He’s going for the glove box, sir.
Permission to shoot the towelheaded motherfucker in the head before he blows
this village sky-high.”

“Hold
your fire, Jones,” I command. I grit my teeth and dart my gaze left and right,
scanning the road and surrounding buildings for an even bigger threat than our
new friend.

“Sarge.”

“Stand
the fuck down, Lance Corporal!” I inch forward as I shout to the Afghani man,
“Put your hands up and get out of the vehicle.”

He
sits and watches. His hands are raised, but the windshield is thick with dust
so it’s impossible to make out his facial expression.

Movement—he
opens the door and steps out. He’s drenched in sweat, that much I can see from
the way his kameez sticks to him, but who the fuck isn’t sweating in this heat?

“Get
down on the ground,” I command.

The
man speaks to us in Pashto. I understand about every fifth word: Allah, glory,
death.

“Ace,
help me out here,” I shout. “What the fuck is he sayin’?”

Ace
takes a step back, his gun still trained on the man as he glances at me.
“Death. Death to all who forsake Allah.”

The
man reaches inside his vest, and I pull the trigger. He hits the ground with a
thud. Blood seeps out across the dust, and the shots ring in my ear.

I
take a deep breath, and my men holler. Jones pats me on the back and exhales in
a rush. “You had me worried for a minute there, sir.”

Lucky
jumps up and down like a chimpanzee on crack. He salutes the dead man by giving
him the finger. “Take that, motherfucker.”

Gunner
chuckles and shakes his head in disbelief as he moves around to the driver’s
side of the Humvee. “See, what’d I tell ya? Home before you know it.”

I
open my mouth to give the command for everyone to get back in the truck, but
Ace takes several steps toward the body and the world rocks on its side. The
blast is so sudden, so quick that one second Ace is walking toward us, the next
he explodes in a cloud of dust and red. I’m on the ground, thrown away from the
truck. My whole body screams with white-hot pain. Dust and what I’m sure must
be blood cover my face.

I
cough and crawl through the desert sand until I stumble on one of my brothers.
Jones. He chokes on the blood bubbling up out of his mouth. I crawl closer,
unable to move faster for the pain. The dust hasn’t settled, and I can barely
see a thing save for his dark skin and bright red blood against it.

“Hang
on, Jones,” I shout. I assume I shout, ’cause I can’t hear a fucking thing.
Where
are the rest of my men?

I
reach out and grab Jones’s shoulder. He begins convulsing, and I hold him down,
tryin’ to pry his jaw open so he won’t swallow his tongue. “Don’t you fuckin’
quit on me, Jones; we still haven’t given you that transfer. You wanna die
beside those Klingon cocksuckers?”

I
don’t even know if the rest of the team are still alive. I can’t see past
Jones’s shoulder, and I can’t hear jack-shit. The fitting seems to have slowed
but his brow is caked with sweat and blood, and the dust around us is as thick
as Lucky’s skull.

When
a bomb goes off in Afghanistan, all that’s left is dust and fear, because you
can’t see a fucking thing, and adrenaline plays tricks on you. It makes your
blood pump faster, it makes you feel alive when you should be dead, and it
masks the pain completely. It’s when the pain starts creeping back in that you
have yourself a problem, and me? I’m getting real close to having a problem.

Jones’s
breath comes in pants, too fast for him to be taking in oxygen that might do
him any good. His eyes go wide, and he stops convulsing—he stops breathin’
altogether.

“Jones,”
I yell. My head swims and I pat my hand down his chest. His abdomen is soaked
with blood, but beyond that, there’s nothing—just wetness and a gaping maw of
flesh and bone where his stomach should be. The kid was ripped apart.

My
stomach clenches, and I’m about to lose my guts when my nerves all clamor at
once. The signals are all messed up. I try to move my feet, and my arm
twitches. I can’t move my left arm for the pain.

I
stare down at the blood seeping through my fatigues. Nausea rolls over me
again. I go down like a ton of bricks. I’m numb, flat on my back in the dust,
hurt, bleedin’, and too damn tired to keep on fightin’ so I close my eyes.

Chapter
Twenty-Eight

Ellie

S
pencer
had a bad night. So bad that I’d spent the entire evening consoling him in his
bed, in mine, and at one point in the kitchen when he decided the beds and the
couch were too hot. He’d wet himself at school yesterday, and the other kids
had made fun of him. I’d gotten a call to come pick him up right after Jake
left his lawyer and me standin’ in the Fairhope police department lot,
scratchin’ our heads.

I’d
been worried sick all night and hadn’t slept a wink. I felt like hell. My son
needed me. Jake needed me. There was never a question of who needed me more, or
where I should be. I would always put Spencer first, but it didn’t stop the
guilt from practically suffocating me. I didn’t know how to be everything they
both needed, and I was terrified of letting either one of them down.

As
I expected, we hadn’t seen Jake at the park this morning, and the second I’d
dropped Spencer off at school, I headed for Sea Cliff Drive. All morning I’d
had this niggling feeling in my gut. There was something terribly wrong, I just
knew it. It’s why I sat in my car staring up at that big house, too scared to
go in. Too afraid of what I might find.

A
gust of wind hits me as I walk up the front porch steps. I knock, but there’s
no answer. I turn the knob, and push it open the remainder of the way and head
inside. My legs tremble as I climb the staircase and make my way down the hall
toward his bedroom.

I
carefully push open the bedroom door. Jake sits on the edge of the bed, his
eyes squeezed tightly closed, a pistol in his mouth. I gasp and cover my mouth
with my hand. He doesn’t look at me.

Nuke
barks and scratches at the other side of the bathroom door. He’s desperate to
get out, to reach his owner. That’s what he’s supposed to do, to save Jake, and
he can’t do that because Jake has locked him in the bathroom.

“Jake?”
I whisper. I don’t know where he is right now, but my Jake, the Jake I know
isn’t seated on the edge of the bed. This is Jake the Marine. This is the Jake
that frightens me, the one I never cared to meet again. I sob, “Jake, honey,
put the gun down.”

His
eyes snap open. He looks at me as if he doesn’t know me. His hands are steady;
they don’t tremble like mine do.

“Honey,
you’re scaring me. Set the gun down, please?” I beg through my tears. “You
don’t want to do this.”

He
removes the gun from his mouth, and blinks several times, as if he’s confused.
The first sob is a loud guttural cry, after that, his face contorts in pain,
but no sound comes from his mouth. I’ve never seen a man so ruined, so broken.
My heart squeezes, but I don’t go to him because his hand is still on the
trigger, and one wrong move and Spencer might not have a mamma no more. “It
hurts so fucking much. I just want it to stop. Why won’t it stop, Elle?”

“I
know, honey. I’m here, but I can’t help you while you’re holding that thing.” I
nod toward the Glock and ease closer to the bed. It takes a beat for him to hit
the magazine release and disarm the gun. Jake hands me the clip and pulls the
slide release back violently. A shiny gold bullet pops out of the ejection port
and he catches it midair, checks the barrel, and releases the slide. It’s
second nature to him, like knowing what angle I have to cut a client’s hair on
in order to create perfect layers. He passes the gun and the single bullet to
me, and I place them both in my purse.

My
voice tremors as I say, “Why is Nuke locked in the bathroom?”

He
don’t answer; he just stares at a spot on the carpet by my feet. Now that I can
breathe again, I survey the room: tangled sheets, half-empty bottle of whiskey
on the nightstand, and a tiny orange bottle of pills. “I’m going to let him
out, okay?”

I
open the door, and Nuke about knocks me over in an effort to get to Jake. He
nudges into his owner’s lap, but he may as well not be there for all the
attention Jake pays him.

“You
need to stop shutting this dog out. I know you’re hurting, but you’re not
letting him do what he was trained to do.”

“I
don’t want to hurt no more, angel,” he slurs. “I don’t wanna be the one left
behind. I’m done. I can’t do this no more. Those men were my brothers, and I
couldn’t save them. I couldn’t save Gunner or Jones. I couldn’t save any of
them.”

“No
one could, Jake.” I say, softly. “You know that, in your heart you know, but
suicide is not the answer. You’re stronger than this.”

“I’m
not like this ’cause I want to kill myself, Elle. I’m this way because I
can’t,” he shouts and rakes a hand through his hair, pulling so hard I’m afraid
he’ll scalp himself. “I got nothing to live for, and yet I still can’t pull the
trigger. It isn’t war that destroys you—it’s the guilt. It’s being the one left
behind, the one saved. That’s what they don’t tell you.”

“You
got nothin’ to live for? What about us?” I yell, quickly losing my temper.
“What about Spencer and Nuke? I know what you went through wasn’t fair, but—”

“Not
fair?” he says incredulously, his voice pitched low and angry. I think I
preferred the shouting. “They butchered my men in front of me; they blew half
of ’em up, and tortured the others until their bodies gave out. They made me a
monster, Elle. What’s not fair is that they didn’t finish the job before those
Green Berets found me. That is what’s not fuckin’ fair.”

I
inhale a shaky breath, tryin’ as best I can to keep the tears at bay. “You
don’t mean that.”

“Yes,”
he says through his teeth. “I do.”

I
stalk over to the nightstand and pick up the bottle. He grabs my arm and pulls
me to him. “What are you doin’?”

“You
can be as mean a son-of-a-bitch as you want, but all of this is the whiskey
talkin’,” I say, wrenching out of his grasp, “and I will not stand by and let
you drink yourself to death.”

He
laughs. “Darlin’, I’m already dead.”

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