Betsy 01 - Undead and Unwed, Mary Janice Davidson
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UNDEAD AND UNWED
MaryJanice Davidson
MS Reader (LIT) ISBN # 1-84360-076-5
Mobipocket (PRC) ISBN # 1-84360-085-4 Other formats: PDF, HTML & RB
All Rights Reserved.
© Copyright MaryJanice Davidson, 2002.
Ellora’s Cave USA & U.K.
This book/e-book may not be reproduced in whole or in part by email forwarding, copying, fax, or any other mode of
communication without author and publisher permission.
Edited by Martha Punches.
Artwork by Kate Douglas.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
EPILOGUE
For Stacy Filkins Sarette,
an old friend and newly discovered jewel in one package.
CHAPTER ONE
The day I died started out bad and got worse in a hurry.
I hit my snooze alarm a few too many times and was late for work. And didn't have time for breakfast. Okay, that's a lie, I gobbled
a pair of chocolate Pop Tarts while waiting for the bus. My mom would have approved (who do you think got me hooked on the
darned things?), but a nutritionist would have smacked me upside the head with her calorie counter.
At a nine a.m. meeting I found out the recession (the one the President has been denying for two years) had hit me right between
the eyes: I had been laid off. Not unexpected, but it hurt, just the same. They had to slash costs, and god forbid any of senior
management be shown the door. Nope; the clerks and secretaries had been deemed expendable.
I cleaned out my desk, avoided the way my co-workers were avoiding looking at me (the ones left, that is), and scuttled home.
As I walked through my front door I saw my answering machine light winking at me like a small black dragon. The message was
from my stepmonster: "Your father and I won't be able to make it to your party tonight…I just realized we have an earlier
commitment. Sorry." Sure you are, jerk. "Have fun without us." No problem. "Maybe you'll meet someone tonight." Translation:
Maybe some poor slob will marry you and take you off my hands. My stepmonster had, from day one, related to me in only one
way: as a rival for her new husband's affections.
I went into the kitchen to feed my cat, and that's when I noticed she'd run away again. Always looking for adventure, my Giselle
(although it's more like I'm her Betsy).
I looked at the clock. My, my. Not even noon.
Happy birthday to me.
* * * * *
As it turned out, we had a freak April snowstorm, and my party was postponed. Just as well…I didn't feel like going out, putting
on a happy face, and drinking one too many daiquiris. The Mall of America is a terrific place, but I've got to be in the mood for
crowds, overpriced retail merchandise, and six dollar drinks. Tonight I wasn't.
Nick called around eight p.m., and that was my day's sole bright spot. Nick Berry was a detective who worked out of St. Paul. I'd
been attacked a couple of months before, and…
Okay, well, "attacked" is putting it mildly. I don't like to talk about it—to
think
about it—but what happened was, a bunch of
creeps jumped me as I was leaving Kahn's Mongolian Barbecue (all you can eat for $11.95, including salad, dessert, and free
refills). I have no idea what they wanted—they didn't take my purse or try to rape me. Basically, they clawed and bit at me like a
bunch of rabid squirrels while I fended them off with the toes of my Manolo Blahniks and screamed for help as loud as I could…so
loud I couldn't speak above a whisper for three days. Help didn't come, but the bad guys ran away. Skittered away, actually.
While I leaned against my car, concentrating on not passing out, I glanced back and it looked like a few of them were on all fours.
Nick was assigned to the case, and he interviewed me in the hospital while they were disinfecting the bite marks. All fifteen of
them. The intern who took care of me smelled like cilantro and kept humming the theme from Harry Potter.
That was last fall. Since then, more and more people—they didn't discriminate between women and men—were being attacked.
The last two had turned up dead. So, yeah, I was freaked out by what happened, and I'd sworn off Kahn's until the bad guys were
caught, but mostly I was grateful it hadn't been worse.
Anyway, Nick called and we chatted and, long story short, I promised to come in to look through the Big Book O' Bad Guys one
more time. And I would. For myself, to feel like I was being pro-active, but mostly to see Nick, who was exactly my height (six
feet), dark blonde, swimmer's build, and looked like an escapee from a Mr. Hardbody calendar. I've broken the law, Officer, take
me in.
Making Officer Nick my eye candy would be the closest I've gotten to getting laid in…what year was it? Not that I'm a prude. I'm
just picky. I treat myself to the nicest, most expensive shoes I can get my hands on, which isn't easy on a secretary's budget. I save
up for months to buy the dumb things. And those only have to go on my feet.
Yep, that's me in a nutshell: Elizabeth Taylor (don't start!), single, dead-end job (well, not anymore), lives with her cat. And I'm so
dull, the fucking cat runs away about three times a month just to get a little excitement.
And speaking of the cat…I had just heard her telltale
Riaaaooowwwww!
from the street. Super! Giselle hated the snow. She had
probably been looking for a little spring lovin' and gotten caught in the storm. Now she was outside waiting for rescue. And when I
did
rescue her, she'd be horribly affronted and wouldn't make eye contact for the rest of the week.
I slipped into my boots and headed into the yard. It was still snowing, but I could see Giselle crouched in the middle of the street
like a small blob of shadow. One with amber-colored eyes. I wasted ten seconds calling her—
why
do I call cats?—then clomped
through my yard into the street.
Normally this wouldn't be a problem, as I live at the end of the block and it's a quiet street. However, in the snow on icy roads, the
driver didn't see me in time. When he did, he did the absolutely worst thing: slammed on his brakes. That pretty much sealed my
doom.
Dying doesn't hurt. I know that sounds like a crock, some touchy-feely nonsense meant to make people feel better about biting the
big one. But the fact is, your body is so traumatized by what's happening, it shuts down your nerve endings. Not only did dying not
hurt, I didn't even feel the cold. And it was only ten degrees that night.
I handled it badly, I admit. When I saw he was going to plow into me, I froze like a deer in the headlights. A big, dumb, blonde
deer who had just paid for touch-up highlights. I couldn't move, not even to save my life.
Giselle certainly could; the ungrateful little wretch scampered right the hell out of there. Me, I went flying. The car hit me at forty
miles an hour, which was survivable, and knocked me into a tree, which was not.
I heard things break. I heard my own skull shatter—it sounded like someone was chewing ice in my ear. I felt myself bleed. I felt
my bladder let go involuntarily for the first time in twenty-six years. In the dark, my blood on the snow looked black.
The last thing I saw was Giselle sitting on my porch, waiting for me to let her in. The last thing I heard was the driver, screaming for
help.
CHAPTER TWO
My next memory was of opening my eyes to pure darkness. When I was a kid I read a short story about a preacher who went to
Hell, and when he got there he discovered the dead didn't have eyelids, so they couldn’t close their eyes to block out the horror.
Right away I knew I wasn't in Hell, since I couldn't see a thing.
I wriggled experimentally. I was in a small, closed space, which was an intriguing combination of soft and hard. I was lying on
something hard, but the sides of my little cage were padded. If this was a hospital room, it was the strangest one ever. And where
was everybody? I wriggled some more, then had a brainstorm and sat up. My head banged into something soft/hard, which gave
way when I shoved. Then I was sitting up, blinking in the gloom.
At first I thought I was in a large, industrial kitchen.
Then I realized I was sitting in a coffin. Which had been placed on a large, stainless steel table. Which meant this wasn't a kitchen,
this was—
I nearly broke something scrambling out. As it was, I moved too quickly and the coffin and I tumbled off the table and onto the
floor. I felt the shock in my knees as I hit and didn't care; in a flash I was on my feet and running.
I burst through the doors and found myself in a large, wood-paneled entryway. It was even gloomier in here; there were no
windows that I could see, just rows and rows of coat racks. At the far end of the entry was a tall, wild-eyed blonde dressed in an
absurd pink suit. She might have been pretty if she wasn't wearing orange blusher and too much blue eye shadow. Her brownish-
rose lipstick was all wrong for her face, too. She was so shockingly pale, just about any makeup would have been wrong for her.
She wobbled toward me on cheap shoes—Payless, buy one pair get the second at half price—and I saw her hair was actually
quite nice: shoulder-length, with a cute flip at the ends and interesting streaky highlights.
Interesting Shade #23 Lush Golden Blonde highlights.
The woman in the awful suit was me. The woman in the
cheap shoes
was me!
I staggered closer to the mirror, wide-eyed. Yes, it was really me, and yes, I looked this awful. Well, why wouldn't I? I was dead,
wasn't I? That silly ass in the Pontiac Aztek had killed me, hadn't he?
I was dead but too dumb to lie down. Dead and walking around inside the funeral home in a cheap suit and fake leather shoes. The
funeral must be tomorrow…later today, I amended, looking at the clock. And my jerkweed of a stepmother must have picked out
this outfit for me. And…
I slipped one of the shoes off, looked at the inside.
Property of Antonia O'Neil Taylor
.
The bitch meant to bury me wearing her cast-off shoes! This seemed more of an injustice than being driven into a tree while my cat
watched.
My cat! Who was going to look after the little monster? Jessica, probably, or maybe my mother…yes, probably my mother.
My mother.
It occurred to me that I should seek out my grieving friends and family and tell them I had no intentions of being buried. Then sanity
returned. I was dead. I'd been zombified or whatever, and needed to finish the job the guy in the Aztek had started. Or maybe this
was purgatory, a task set for me, something I had to finish before God opened the gate.
I had the fleeting thought that the doctors in the ER had made a mistake, but shook it off. I remembered, too well, the sound of my
skull shattering. If it hadn't killed me, I'd be in an ICU now with more tubes than a chemistry classroom. Not dolled up like a…
(dead)
…whore wearing cheap castoffs on my…
(dead)
…feet.
All that aside, I couldn't bear to see anyone looking the way I did.
I walked to the end of the hallway, found the stairwell, and started climbing. The funeral home was three stories high—and what
they needed the other two stories for I was
not
going to think about—which should be high enough, since I planned to go
headfirst.
At first I thought the door was locked, but with a good hard shove it obligingly opened with a shriek of metal on metal. I stepped
outside.
It was a beautiful spring night—all traces of snow from the storm had melted. The air smelled wet and warm, like fertility. I had the
oddest feeling that if I were to scatter seeds on the cement rooftop, they would take hold and grow. A night had never, ever
smelled so sweetly, not even the day I moved into my own place.
As I stepped onto the ledge, I ignored the not-inconsiderable twinge of apprehension that raced up my spine. This wasn't my last
night on earth. That had been a couple of days ago. There was nothing to feel sad about. I had been a good girl in life, and now I
was going to my reward, dammit. I was
not
going to stumble around like a zombie, scaring the hell out of people and pretending I
still had a place in the world.
"God," I said, teetering for balance, "I'm coming to see you now."
I dove off the roof and hit the street below, headfirst, exactly as I had planned. What was
not
in the plan was the smashing,
crunching pain in my head when I hit, how I didn't even lose consciousness, much less see my pal God.
Instead I groaned, clutched my head, then finally stood when the pain abated. Only to get creamed by an early morning garbage
truck. I looked up in time to see the horror-struck driver mouthing…
(
Jesus Christ, lady, look out!)
…something, then my forehead made brisk contact with the truck's front grille. I slid down it like road kill and hit the street, ass
first.
When I stood, brushing dirt from my cheap skirt, the driver slammed the truck in reverse and got the hell out of Dodge. Not that I
could blame him. But who ever heard of a hit and run garbage truck?
CHAPTER THREE
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