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Aaron Ross Powell

Posted on June 1, 2007

The Hole: Part 7

The Hole
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“I don’t know,” he said. “It’s not like there were many left by the time the collections stopped.”

When this had all began, when the first people here and there got sick and the news was treating it like nothing more than another summer cycle of West Nile Virus or the latest strain of flu, the town on Charlottesville maintained its simple status quo. That first month, three elderly residents had contracted the disease and they’d all heard about a dozen more over in Richmond, but old people are always getting sick. It’s not worth getting worked into a town wide panic because a handful old people come down with something–even if that something makes them speak in tongues and slowly go mad.

But as it spread, as more stories came in from across the country and the television news channels put together animated intros, complete with heavy music, for stories about the plague, neighbors started talking about how maybe this was cause for genuine concern. Grandparents were pulled from nursing homes to live with their families. People stopped going out as much and the restaurants, bars, and nightclubs saw business plunge. Authorities told people to be calm and adopt the usual precautions: report any new cases, wash hands, avoid the sick, and only assemble when necessary.

Then the plague hit the children. A little boy in Alabama came down with it but his parents, conservative Pentecostals, thought his babbling was the voice of the Lord and so it was only when the autopsy found the spongy masses where his liver and stomach had been that the world realized the full panic of not just those already close to death being picked off but the youngest generation, too. As more sick children were found, the schools closed and Carlottesville organized food drops so citizens could remain in their homes, minimizing contact even with close friends and extended family.

The hospitals closed when the plague had infected forty percent of the adult population. Television stations went into automated reruns and the news played only recorded messages about new disposal procedures. Anyone dead was to be brought to the curb, where garbage collection had once occurred, and men in trucks came by every other day to pick them up. These men would leave immediately in anyone from in the houses tried to approach, cutting off perhaps the only remaining venue for updates beyond the city. And even that minimal contact ceased.

Two weeks before Clarine got sick, the trucks failed to arrive. The number of bodies being dragged out to the street had diminished greatly, but what small piles there were just stayed there. Elliot and Evajean were lucky enough in that respect to live on a street already effectively depopulated, so the views from their front windows were unobstructed by that sad picture of human remains.

So it had been the middle of July since either one of them had learned anything about their dying world. Now, driving through its outskirts for the first time in over a month, Elliot shared Evajean’s confusion. How could the entire population of a town, even in the reduced size left after the collections stopped, simply vanish?

If you like this, you might want to check out these posts, too.

  • The Hole: Part 5
    He didn’t move, thinking over what she’d said. Was she going to leave? There could be anything out there beyond the few blocks of quiet and calm they’d known these prior weeks. if she did leave, if she did intend to find the Hole, Elliot would go with her. Sitting alone
  • The Hole: Part 54
    As they walked back to the truck, their way bright and easy from the lights the crazies had returned to them, Elliot wondered if that was it. Had the crazies chased them all this way just to tell them that one word? And what the hell did it mean? The crazies had simply walked
  • The Hole: Part 4
    After they’d finished eating and had cleaned up, Elliot and Evajean talked about nothing until the sun dipped low and dark came. She asked if she could stay–”I can’t stay in that house,” she’d said. “I just can’t.”–and he offered her his bed while he took the couch. In the morning, Elliot woke to
  • Part 30
    “I’ll stay here,” she said, bouncing the dog in her arms. “You’re going to pick a fight and I don’t want to be there.” Elliot laughed. “I can behave.” She looked at him, unconvinced. “Really,” he said. “Okay,” she said, “but I’m still going to stay here. Let me know what you unearth.” Evajean took the dog
  • The Hole: Part 70
    “We need to get there, though,” Evajean said. Elliot opened another bottle of water. “You know where this museum is?” There was no confusion. Cassandra had expected the question. “It’s downtown. It’s not going to be easy to get to.” “Still, we have to,” Evajean said. “You certainly do,” Cassandra said. “It’s where you find the journal.” “What journal?” Elliot

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4 Comments

We'd love to hear yours!



  1. Visit My Website

    August 16, 2007

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    Candace said:

    I’m enjoying this story very much.

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242527/ (this links to a movie by the same name, btw)



  2. Visit My Website

    August 16, 2007

    Permalink

    Candace said:

    I’m enjoying this story very much.


    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242527/
    (this links to a movie by the same name, btw)



  3. Visit My Website

    September 11, 2007

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    Xian B. said:

    “would leave immediately in anyone from in the houses”



  4. Visit My Website

    September 11, 2007

    Permalink

    Xian B. said:

    “would leave immediately in anyone from in the houses”



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