Read The One Percenters Online

Authors: John W. Podgursky

The One Percenters (11 page)

Most people are as crucial to the fate of the world as paper doilies.

Then there’s the remaining one percent. We’re nature’s goalies. I’d name you some people who were on this list, but I fear it’s too dangerous. They were people who were ahead of their time. Most of them you would despise because their ideas weren’t quite
right
. At least not from a sociological, let’s-all-get-along mentality.

Biologically speaking, though, their ideas were genius. They were structured to eliminate harmful elements. The changes they created came either passively, as a result of biological mutation (the old standard), or through ideas, which are essentially as biological as genes themselves. Ideas are what make people people. I
will
tell you one thing: the person you’re thinking of, he wasn’t a one-percenter.

Mutation drives diversity, which is good. If a creature gets too comfortable in its makeup, nature will catch up to it. Diversity means resistance to disease, decay, and destruction. Generally. The real trouble is when mutation takes an ugly wrong turn.

That’s where we one-percenters come in. We clean up the mess when nature “makes a mistake.” We put out the fire. Nature’s relief pitchers. I realized this
Page 74

after Cristen’s unfortunate demise.

Until I hit the pillow at home, I wondered how my mind could have frozen as it did. How could I have allowed myself to take the life of a good friend and lover? The dream provided the answer. I was working for a greater good than myself. I was working for the human race as a whole. Representing, as the young folk say. And it was time now for me to fulfill my destiny and discover the true meaning of life.

Page 75

Chapter Sixteen

Cristen was essentially a good person. She was fun and intelligent and caring. But she had bad genes.

I guess I figured this out the same way those bastards sense my submissiveness when they head toward me on the sidewalk. It’s not logical or rational. My foreknowledge concerning Cristen’s future effect on the world came instinctually. She was the first; she took the longest to figure out. The others wouldn’t fool me so well. I hung on with Cristen for a long time because I resisted and because I had been in love. I vowed not to make that mistake again. I didn’t want to admit my place in the world, but the dream was far too strong to fight. Business has to come first when you’re a savior.

And let there be no mistaking it, that’s exactly what I am. I felt confident. I had fate on my side. I was careful, though, especially in the beginning. I could not be certain that the fact that I was a force of good necessarily made me less expendable. Even at only one percent of the population, there was still a hell of a lot of us, going purely by numbers. I didn’t know how far nature would go to protect me. What I had learned now, finally, was the reason behind my superb intelligence. I would never own the world, but I would help define the parameters of its existence.

The best part was that there were others out there who felt just like me. I wondered how to meet them. I wondered if I would now recognize my coworkers by sight. My dream was a revelation, and I couldn’t be sure what else had changed in my life or in my capacity for power. Suddenly I felt immune to the smaller issues and tribulations that worry normal people. Liquor could no longer hold me hostage. Cigarettes could not cancer me. Why would nature waste resources to kill one of its own? The only thing I had to fear was my own kind, and possibly my own mind should I not keep it together. The alcohol helped there, too.

Page 76

I needed to look the part. Someone in my prominent position should not look like a businessman.

I wanted to look like an agent of nature. It was necessary for me to become objective, transient, and unnoticeable. I traded the loafers for sandals. I cut my hair very short. I took to standard blue button-down tee-shirts. It was no time for pride in one’s self. My own ego had to take a back seat to the welfare of society at large. We had grown too big for our britches, and I was the atom bomb that never was. I was part of the
P\

pièce de résistance
in a changing and mysterious world.

To whom did I owe this great honor? Is this why I suffered as an ugly and unpopular kid and then as an ugly and unpopular man? Was it all just to create a sense of discipline and objectivity within me? I felt sure of it. Suddenly I felt terribly empowered. Everything began to make sense. I stayed in the apartment for two days, and then I packed a bag.

Normal possessions were useless and irrelevant to me now. The rules had changed, and items such as photos, knickknacks and thingamajigs would only weigh me down. I spent one full night cradling my most precious and longest-owned possessions. I needed to get it out of my system. Finally I packed my bag with the items that would serve me and my objective: booze and cigarettes. I needed to stay calm, and—short of prescription drugs—smokes and booze are the best tranqs you can get. I first packed a large duffel bag, but I felt this would slow me down too much. There might be people after me. Some might not understand. There are a lot of naive fucks in the world—the same people who are locking normal people in asylums and buying thirty-dollar underwear.

The bees are now in Arizona, and they sound eerily familiar.

I also packed a gun. It wasn’t mine, as you might have surmised by now. Jill insisted we keep one in the house, just as her father had kept one in the McIntyre residence. Jill’s mother had been attacked in the home before the children were born, while her husband was away. After that time, a firearm was the rule. I had
Page 77

only seen Jill hold the gun during the moving process, and I’m not even sure she could shoot straight. But it made her feel comfortable. I must say, though, it’s truly surreal mentioning a pure dove such as Jill in the same sentence as a means of violent death.

I took the gun along because I also had to be able to protect myself, especially now. It was about time that a young man learned to fire when fired upon. Talk about a rite of passage. Still, the weapon felt alien in my grip.

People like Jeffrey Simons do the rest of us a terrible injustice. These bastards do things for kicks, and suddenly all the world’s people are labeled liars, crooks, or killers. Murder is only murder when it robs the world of innocence. These are all very fine lines.

The difference between sex and rape, after all, is both nothing and everything in the world. The penetration is there, but. .the intent is not. And it all comes down to intent. Simons had selfish, evil intent. The work my brothers and I do is done to weed out the sick, the weak-gened, the ill-minded. We are here to act in nature’s stead now that the political, over-structured world has tied its hands.

We are the panacea, and we are not to be denied.

Not by you or your laws or your military. You can’t scare us off with weapons, and you can’t weird us out with poetry slams. We will not be intimidated by women’s groups or animal rights activists or vigilante justice.

Move aside, citizen, lest ye become an innocent victim.

Do not step in the crossfire, Samaritan, for there will always be another bullet. The apocalypse is upon us, and heaven knows we are your only defense. Fuck Jeffrey Simons and his self-minded fanaticism.

Jill would understand this. She understood everything. She was a force of good in a way that I could never dream. She was out planting flowers, damn it. Where’s the harm in that? But she could only do so much, and that is truly the ironic part. Try as she might, she could never change the world. Her good deeds caused smiles; they didn’t save lives. Goodness is pansy power. Real power lies in science. Never mind what people tell you; penicillin still cures more
Page 78

people than love.

Love soothes the soul, but leaves the body flat.

I remember when she would cry. She didn’t do it often, which might come as a surprise. She was all things feminine, but she didn’t cry often. I think it’s because she never held back her emotion to begin with, she never bottled up. Thus, there was no need for this great release from time to time. Crying, after all, is just a physical defense, and maybe a form of communication, though I doubt that very much. I saw Jill cry at funerals and during two mushy movies. Other than that, I can’t recall. Maybe I’ve already mentioned another instance.

Hell if I remember. I have been writing for an awfully long time now, and I’m still waiting patiently.

There is nothing that tears at a man quite like seeing a woman cry. It is draining and frustrating and leaves you feeling helpless. When Jill did cry, it was truly a sight to behold. Her iridescent eyes would wince, and her nose would tweak like that of a rabbit.

It hurts to see a woman cry, but the beauty contained in the shine of her eyes and the curl of her lips would almost make you wish she’d cry more often; it was that moving a sight.

Page 79

Chapter Seventeen

I took to the woods, for two reasons. First, I felt sure that they would soon discover Cristen’s body. Some snot-nosed brat would be out with his snot-nosed friend. They’d be hunting or fishing or shooting up at the lake. By that, I mean they’d be “shooting” up at the lake, not “shooting up” at the lake. English sucks. One of the lads would have the misfortune of tripping over her fish-bitten corpse. It’s always the same. Joe and Jack Dumbfuck are out on an innocent hike when they happen to come across a decaying body. They ponder the situation (i.e. search the body for money and jewelry) before finally placing an anonymous call to the police.

It’s funny what we do anonymously. It’s the ultimate cop-out, but it does a lot of good for the world.

It would happen soon, I was sure of it. Those woods were heavily used, and wasn’t like I’d made any extra effort to conceal what I had done. We only conceal that which we are ashamed of, like little dogs who piss the carpet.

The second reason for my escape into the woods was equally practical. I was now a force of nature, and I thought it only right that I be closer to my benefactor.

I no longer wanted to subject myself to the influence of my global society—a society that has practiced genocide and held slaves. Think about that for a moment. Fewer than 200 years ago, slavery was a state-sanctioned institution. It was the norm. How can I ever take seriously the moral statements of any people who would hold their own as captives? It perplexes me to consider the fact that some folks consider humans to be basically good creatures. I spit in those people’s faces.

So I took my bag of treats and I ran far, far away.

It was time to get down and dirty. It was time to do my duty.

Page 80

Chapter Eighteen

I can’t say that the decision was an easy one. My first thought was of Mrs. Edwards, the wife of that asshole teacher I was telling you about. Like I said, she deserved it. I went as far as to ascertain her last known address, or at least the last known address I had the ability to get my hands on.

Two things stopped me. For the first part, there was a good chance she’d be dead by now. And even if she wasn’t, she’d surely be old, frail, and feeble-minded.

There’s no challenge in that. She’d probably be offering me cookies even as I slipped the noose around her wrinkly, crusty neck. I shudder at the thought of old peoples’ necks.

Secondly, and ultimately more important, was the integrity of my new position. There is a certain amount of honor which needs to be maintained when one is given a measure of responsibility. I wasn’t about to take such a position for granted by striking down some balding idiot just because he cut me off at a green arrow. No, more thought would be necessary. For a while, I considered random acts of terror. Perhaps allowing fate to decide things with a simple flip through the phone book. Somehow, that didn’t suit me. I’d have as good a chance of knocking off a strong, glowing force as I would have of taking out some lowlife, parasitic bloodworm.

The narcissism factor was admittedly a challenge.

I had always been ugly, weak, slow-minded. Here was an opportunity for cold revenge, the dream of every small boy ever to be picked last in a gym-class roundup.

I even came up with a fantasy. I imagined eyeing a well-built, smart-looking man at the grocery store. .

some slug who would no doubt have garnered favor in the locker room. I’d follow him and his waspish, one-too-many-times-under-the-knife, dye-streaked wife back to their million-dollar home and hold them both
Page 81

at gunpoint. At that time I’d force the wife to strip, and have relations with her while the strapping beau stood by, watching impotent and red-faced. Yeah, I’d get her all turned on, too, you bet I would.

I’d tie him to the banister, naked but for a pair of his old lady’s best pink skivvies. That’s the way I’d love the cops to find him: shamed, powerless, and beaten at his own game of humiliation. Maybe I’d leave him his wife’s fingers to remember me by. And two nipples for good luck. Milk the situation, so to speak. Pardon me, I’m not much of a funnyman. I am here to tell a story for posterity and for whatever help it might afford you in future assessment of the world at large. Sometimes in school, I’d be mocked for my attempts at wit. We all have to try, because if we can’t make the people around us laugh, what good are we? What good are we even if we can?As it was, I took the high road and maintained my own quiet honor.

Paul Stark was my choice instead.

He wasn’t a C.E.O. That would have been too easy a choice. Rather, he was a guy in the wrong place at the wrong time with a stupid look on his face. I should have made a choice based on fact and reason, but I did not. Rather, I went on instinct, and when considering a decision involving primality and livelihood, perhaps this is the perfect way to heads/tails it.

Other books

El diablo de los números by Hans Magnus Enzensberger
Time Untime by Sherrilyn Kenyon
Dream a Little Dream by Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Jala's Mask by Mike Grinti
Happily Ever After by Harriet Evans
Overnight by Adele Griffin
Playing for Julia by Carroll, Annie