Still dark as she makes her way up the dirt road, gravel crunching underfoot, each child’s hand in her own as she steers them around mud puddles, keeps them clear of the underbrush along its sides, the briars and possible snakes, to wait with them where the dirt road intersects with County Road 10.
Soon enough the school bus appears around a bend in the road, blinking amber lights becoming blinking red lights, and a sign extends out from the side of the bus, STOP, even though there are no other vehicles on the road this early, no other houses within a half-mile. The doors fold open, and the interior of the bus is dark, darker than the pre-dawn night outside, all except for the area around the bus’s driver, old Ms. Thompson, her face witch-lit by the green glow of the dashboard lights.
“Good morning, Ms. Tasha,” the old woman says.
“Morning, Ms. Thompson,” she answers back reflexively, the same as she did back when she used to board the bus, back when the not-quite-so-old lady used to drive her to school.
The bus driver says her good mornings to the children as well and Kendra speaks right up, answers the lady right back, just like she has been taught, but she has to pop Jay-Bird on the back of his head, remind him of his manners. He is a shy boy, she knows, and she instantly regrets her harshness, but she has no time for foolery. Not this morning.
She gives them each a kiss, and to make up for things, to say that she is sorry, she gives Jay-Bird a brief hug. “You are a good boy,” she says and pushes him onboard, up the bus steps, after his sister. She feels exhausted already and the day only just begun. Loving her children is the hardest thing she has ever known.
They wave to her as the bus pulls away and she makes herself stand there and wave back, a smile on her face the same as any other morning, like she has nothing to do but go back to the house, clean up the breakfast dishes, do laundry, and try and see to the rest of the chores before her shift starts at the diner down by the interstate, but it is hard. The moment the bus is out of sight, once it disappears around a bend in the road, she turns on her heels and hurries back the way she came.
She does not quite run, but walks fast, walks hard. She wants to run. She struggles to reign herself in, to not give herself over to abandon. She’s afraid of what would happen if she did. She has to think of the life she has built, is trying to hold onto now that James has run off, left them without so much as a word. The house that is hers, the car. And, she has to think of the children. Always, and forever it seems, she must consider the children.
She loves them. God knows she does. But, sometimes it is hard not to feel… burdened by them. Hard not to think, to her shame, how it would feel to not be burdened by them, about how things might be different without them. How then she might be free.
Silly thoughts and no time for them. She shakes her head to clear them away. She has to find a way to care for her family and to have what she desires.
And, maybe, just maybe, she has.
The yard in front of the house no more than churned up Florida dirt, and she can’t help but frown as she crosses it in long, quick strides. She always wanted a green, grassy lawn. Lord knows, she tried to grow one, every spring buying a new mix of grass seed. None of them ever took, though, or not for long.
She gave up this year, thinking the place, in its own way, cursed. Nothing can flourish here, she had thought, not a marriage, not a soul. The only thing to do, she had decided, was to be like the stunted weeds that sprang up in place of the grass. Best to let grow what would grow and let that be enough. To be content with what she had. No point in dreams of lush, green lawns.
Nothing beautiful, she thought, will grow here, nothing good.
Now, she knows better.
The front screen door has barely slapped shut behind her before she is through the house and out the backdoor. Never mind any of the hundreds of chores she never seems to have time enough to do. She has no intention of seeing to any of them. She barely gives the eggy plates on the dining table or the greasy skillet on the stove so much as a passing glance.
There is a cardboard box to the left of the backdoor, snugged up against the outside of the house. The box does catch her eye, does cause her to pause, to consider. She puts her hands on her hips and stares at it. She stares hard. Emotions skitter across her face like the anoles that skitter across the back porch. Fear, hope, revulsion, joy. Sadness. All there and gone in an instant. Finally, her expression settles into one of firm resolve.
She bends down and scoops the box up, tucks it firmly under one arm, and recommences her march, down the back steps, across the backyard, and to the tree line. The rising sun shines through the trees and seems to beckon her onward.
There is a trail there, there has always been a trail there, but over the last few days, her feet have defined it, the passage of her body, walking back and forth along it, has pushed the vegetation back, opened the trail up. It snakes its way into the pine flatwoods, weaves through the palmettos, constantly disappears and reappears beneath her feet. At first, it had been hard to follow, she’d had to pay close attention or risk losing it, but now the way is as clear to her as a city sidewalk.
About a half a mile from the house there is a sinkhole and the trail goes around it, skirts its crumbling, limestone edges, and she stays well to the far side of the trail, away from the sinkhole because she has on intention of falling down into it. She’s seen pictures of other kinds of sinkholes in Florida. Ones filled with clear, blue water, icy pale on the surface, deep as cobalt below, but that’s not how this one is. This one is marshy, full of thick, muddy water and choked with cattails and vines.
She used to imagine what might be down there at the bottom of the sinkhole, what could be there. No telling, she had thought, it could be something new, something never before seen by mankind. She had seen news reports about new species being discovered in places just like the sinkhole. It happened all the time.
Sometimes, in the evenings, she had come out, sat by the the sinkhole, and hoped to see… something. Had hoped, period. For something, anything, new to come into her life. Even if it was not beautiful, even if it was just some sort of foul spider or lizard, blind and pale, crawled up from beneath the waters of that cancerous, rotten hole in the earth, she would not have cared. Not as long as it was new to the world, her world.
Nothing ever did crawl out of the sinkhole. Eventually, she had chided herself for indulging in such childish fantasies. For thinking anything could or would ever change in her life. She had felt a fool for thinking there was even any point to looking for any change in her life, for anything new, and had given up.
Now, as she passes by where she used to sit, she smiles. I was right, she thinks. I was right to look. I was! If I’d only known… I was only looking in the wrong place!
On the far side of the sinkhole, the woods close in, become more jungle-like. The relatively open environment of the flatwoods, with its pines and palmettos, is replaced by one dominated by scrub oak and ty-ty, waxed myrtle and sweet bay. There is a swamp not far off, she knows, what the local crackers call a “bay.” She does not know how big it is, only that it stretches on and on into the depths of the forest, for miles and miles.
She has never entered the swamp and she is not about to. Where she is going lies at the swamp’s soft, putrescent edge, and even if she did not know ever twist and turn in the trail like the back of her own hand by now, she would know that she was close to her destination.
She can tell by the smell. Not of the swamp. But, of it.
Even from a fair distance, she can smell its aroma. There is a certain muskiness in the air, as if a skunk had recently passed that way, but with a richer, more complex scent. The smell grows stronger as it leads her to its source, just as it first led her from the edge of the sinkhole, days ago now. It is heady and sweet. Rotten but aromatic. The smell makes her drool with hunger. She wants to feast. She wants to vomit.
The smell effects other parts of her body than her stomach. She grows dizzy from the powerfulness of the scent. She feels parts of her body loosen, moisten. Good, God, she wants to fuck.
Her heart pounds in her chest. She cannot reign herself in any longer. She begins to walk fast, faster, to almost run. Limbs and low-hanging vines scratch her face, grab at her shirt. She battens them away with her free hand, the one not clutching the box, but does not really care about a few scratches, does not feel the sting of a few scrapes. She is focused, intent on her destination.
Finally, she stumbles into a clearing at the edge of the swamp and collapses to her knees, head hung low, her eyes closed. She has arrived.
This close, the smell is so thick the air almost has a physicality to it. It feels like a wet, woolen blanket wrapped around her. The smell is so strong that it makes it hard to focus, to think.
She remembers the one time she smoked pot in high school. She feels like she did then, like she is somehow behind herself. Like she is watching herself think, feel, react to everything that happens, only a few seconds after it has already happened. Like she is catching up, getting closer to now, but never quite. Like she has lost all control of her actions. Like she can only watch and wait to see what happens.
She opens her eyes, slowly raises her head. It is right before her, the source of the horrid, wonderful smell. She smiles a sloppy grin and raises her arms in exaltation.
It reminds her of a massive aloe plant, only different. Thick, fleshy leaves are mounded up around the open, central core of the plant. Spiky protrusions line the edges of the leaves, but they seem soft and not thorn-like at all. The leaves themselves also look soft, flaccid even, and not rigid like those of an aloe or any other succulent plant she knows of.
She could touch the leaves, find out for herself how they feel, she is close enough now. She wants to. She wants to stroke the plant, maybe even lick the plant, but does not. Even in her present, altered state, she knows that might be dangerous.
She can sense that the plant wants to be touched. It practically oozes sensuality, the likes of which she has never before felt, not alone nor with another person. Certainly not with James. The plant hungers for affection. Hungers for her. Still, she must be careful. Who knows what the cost of such a love might be?
As she watches, a stalk rises from the inner folds of the plant, grows from out of its hollow core. The leaves begin to quiver and subtly writhe like tentacles as the stalk inches up, up, up like a periscope, until it looms above her. The growth slows, stops, and the stalk becomes rigid. Purple veins that mottle the green skin of the stalk begin to pulse. The bulbous tip at the end of the stalk twitches, enlarges, opens up and spreads out like wings. A flower begins to bloom.
She gasps at the showy display. Her grin becomes an open-mouthed expression of pure delight, of awe. Magenta-colored nodules begin to form beneath the flower. Is the plant fruiting? She believes so. What would such fruit taste like, she wonders? She has to know. The anticipation she feels is tantalizing. Her nipples throb, painfully, wonderfully. Without realizing it, she begins to grind her hips in time with the pulsing veins on the stalk of the plant.
The petals of the flower fan out like the tale of a peacock. The nodules become larger, but also darker, more ripe. She is lost in the thickening miasma, the rare, sweet, stinking atmosphere surrounding the plant. She can feel the aura of the plant, a field of energy that extends beyond its physical form, weak, but, she is certain, very much there, penetrate her, touch her guts, her heart, her womb. There is a feeling of rising within her, of quickening. She…
It is gone. The feelings within her. The anticipation. The stalk above her droops. The flower petals, only moments ago a snowy, virginal white, develop a dingy, yellow tinge. The visible pulsing of the thick, knotted veins lining the stalk slow, stop.
Panicked, she tries desperately to think of what to do. The same thing happened the day before. At first, she had thought the plant was no longer aroused by her, that it found her unattractive, unsavory. That it had rejected her.
She had felt crushed emotionally, dejected. Then she had seen how wilted the plant looked, how… tired.
Clearly, the plant was attempting to bond with her, but, just as clearly now, it does not have the energy to complete its alien intercourse. She does not think it has to do with the environment in which it grows. The plant gets plenty of sun. It rains in Florida almost every day this time of year. And, the soil along the edge of the swamp is black and rich. What then?
She looks at the box beside her, the one she brought from the house. She dropped it in her haste, forgot it. Noises come from inside. The plant obviously has needs unlike those of normal plants. Maybe it hungers for more than light, water, and soil. For more than affection. She has heard of carnivorous plants. Maybe that is it. Maybe it is hungry. Maybe it is starving.
She pulls the box over to her, pries open the flaps she crisscrossed to keep it sealed.
The kittens inside look up at her expectantly. She found them in the ditch up by County Road 10, their mother run over, her eyes wide in final surprise, her innards a long, pink, ropey smear on the asphalt. She thought to keep them as pets for the children, pest control for the house. They mew softly to her. They are hungry, weak. They have come to think of her as their mother. They expect her to feed them.
She lifts them from the box by the napes of their peach-fuzzed necks, one to each hand. Their eyes are still the grey-blue, soft flannel color of eyes only recently opened to the world, not yet darkened by experience. She stands and carefully, warily, walks up to the plant.
She keeps a cautious eye on the stalks that sag above her head, on the meaty, twitching leaves, as she holds the kittens out at arms length. Without thinking, without giving herself time to feel, she drops them into the basin-like orifice at the center of the plant.
She hears a splash as one of the kittens hits the bottom, followed the other. Then nothing. No sounds from the kittens. No reaction from the plant. She narrows her eyes, furrows her brows. She frowns. She lean close to the plant, peers over the humped, sagging tentacle-like leaves, into the plant’s secret core. Only darkness. Maybe she was wrong, maybe…
The kittens scream out in piercing, tortured agony. She gasps, draws back, but before she can do more than that, before she can even think to step back or turn away, the plant comes alive. It lives.
She is blown back, hurled from her feet by an explosive, wind-like release of unchecked power. She lands heavily on her back and the breath is knocked from her lungs. Her eyes close. Everything goes black for a moment. When she opens her eyes, the world is darker than it should be, darker than it was only moments before. The clear blue sky that had come with the waking day is gone.
She groans and lifts her head. The plant is there, massively erect. Every bit of it quivers and writhes, an undulating mass of movement. It is filled with light. Neon colors surge through glowing leaves and up the throbbing stalk like pink, green, blue, and red arcs of electrical current. Above, the flower is in full bloom and lit like the sun, casting a dazzling spray of the purest, whitest light.
Ecstatic energy, almost visible in its intensity, flows out of the plant in waves and washes over her. She throws back her head and moans. She spreads her legs wide as she lies prone before the plant. The energy enters her, fills her. More desire than she has ever known builds within her body.
Enraptured, she still has enough presence of mind to notice that the world around her has grown darker still. She glances to her left and no longer sees a familiar landscape.
There are plants there, out in the shadows cast by her plant’s radiance, but they do not belong in the pine flatwoods or swampy scrubland of Florida.
It seems like there is something wrong with them, these plants. They seem unfinished, not fully realized. It also seems to her, and she does not know why, that they, these plants that look like an artist’s sketch, or like they were drawn by a child, have all turned her way, noticed her. That they want her to notice them.
It seems like they need her to make them real.
Before she can explore the thought any further, her plant demands her attention. The snaps of colored light now move through the plant more quickly. She moves her hips in time. She watches as the fruit below the flower ripen into heavy, hanging berries. They swell and swell. They are going to burst, spatter her with their juice. She cannot contain her desire. She wails and pleads for what is to come. She and the plant are about to be rapturously transported to another world, she knows this now, to its world, a new world. She is almost there, she is about to…
The lights go out. She finds herself lying in the dirt, bucking her hips before a wilted, sickly thing. She blinks.
Above her, there is only blue sky. The morning is quiet, mostly. Birds twitter in the brush. Emotions coarse through her. Disappointment. Anger. Sadness. She wants to scream, but she does not. She smiles. It is okay. It will be okay. She is calm. She picks herself up, dusts off her sweat-slicked skin.
She looks at the plant, and then back the way from which she came. Towards the house, towards her life. The life she has scraped together and fought for, has desperately tried to hold onto. It does not seem to mean much to her right now, after what she has experienced. For so long, she has wanted something, anything new in her life. Anything to make her feel again, care again. The plant has given her that, and more. Not only has it brought something new to her world, it has brought a whole new world to her. A world just for her.
She wants to go to that world. She will go to that world. The plant only needs to be fed something bigger, offered a more substantial… Sacrifice. It needs the energy of more than two flea-bitten kittens to power it, to allow it to climax and open the way to the world she glimpsed. She knows this to be true.
And, what is to stop her? Who is to care if she up and disappears?
The children. In her excitement, she forgot her own children. She has always wanted the best for them, the best she could manage, anyway. Her head hangs down. She can feel tears burning her eyes. She wants, no, needs to experience all of the delights the plant has to offer, all that it promises, but she has to think of the children.
She loves them, God knows she does, but sometimes it is hard to not feel burdened by them. And, really, what does she have to offer them? What will become of their lives but more of the same misery she has known? She has done all that she can for them. Maybe they would be better off without her.
And, anyway, what have they every done for her? When has anyone of anything ever done anything for her? Only one time. Only just now.
She looks at the plant. It looks more unhealthy than ever, but she knows that it can be healed. It just needs to be fed. It just needs to mate. She is decided. She will be the plants provider, its lover. She will go to her new world. This time, though, she has to make sure she provides the plant with enough nourishment. She does not know if it will survive another anticlimactic exchange. She does not know if she will.
Her thoughts are a jumble. She must hurry. First, she has to make sure the children are cared for. She does not want them to suffer. She does not want to leave them to fend for themselves. It would be best, she thinks, if she had never had them. If they did not exist. Then, she would only have to worry about finding a sacrifice large enough to sate the plant’s hunger. But what?
The thought fills her mind. It is awful. It is perfect.
Always, and forever it seems, she must consider the children.
Boyd Logan (he/him) is a career forest/park ranger and outdoor adventurer by day and a horror-loving nerd by night. He has traveled and lived in most areas of the US but has now settled permanently in the Southern Appalachians.