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Love - Kill Town, USA

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West Orange is one of New Jerseys most loved communities, and the remarkable stories from its past reveal why. Civil War general McClellan lived here while he ran for president against Abraham Lincoln in 1864. Amos Alonzo Stagg, the Grand Old Man of Football, grew up in town. Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt discovered their romantic interest for each other here. West Orange also had its share of intrigue. An alleged love affair between two star-crossed residents led to murder, with as many subplots as a dime store romance novel. Discover the stories of the future mayor who escaped the Nazis, the town employee who fired the first shot of World War II, the railroad tycoon, the hometown Olympic champion, Liberaces early rise to fame and more as local history columnist Joseph Fagan tells West Oranges most fascinating tales--;Collection of stories about West Oranges past--;1. SURVIVING ARTIFACTS PROVIDE A TANGIBLE HISTORY -- The Long Journey Home -- John Crosby Brown -- Mrs. Edison and Mrs. Roosevelt -- 2. KEY ROLES OF TRANSPORTATION -- The Eagle Rock Hill Climb -- Moving a Mountain -- The Cable Road -- The Eagle Rock Trolley -- Two West Orange Train Stations -- 3. MURDER AND TRAGEDY -- Sentenced to Death by Hanging -- Murder on the Mountain -- Tragedy at Home -- 4. WINGS OVER WEST ORANGE -- 5. TRUTH CAN BE STRANGER THAN FICTION -- Beauty and the Beast -- Wild West Orange Justice -- Fateful Decision Launches Legendary Career -- Path to Stardom Passes through West Orange -- Romantic Interest Discovered in West Orange Impacts History -- 6. THOMAS EDISON : ICONIC IMAGE OF WEST ORANGE -- 7. THEY LEFT THEIR MARK ON US -- The Grand Old Man of Football : Amos Alonzo Stagg -- Cast a Long Shadow : Brian Piccolo -- Sink or Swim Brings Olympic Glory -- The Railroad Tycoon of West Orange : Leonor Loree -- The Killing Fields of Cambodia Come to Eagle Rock -- The Last Surviving Slave of Essex County -- 8. GENERAL GEORGE MCCLELLAN: THE UNTOLD WEST ORANGE STORY -- 9. CALL TO DUTY -- Where Sonny Goes, History Follows -- West Orange Mayor Escapes the Nazis -- West Orange Boy Salutes Eisenhower -- Father Follows in Sons Footsteps and Joins Navy.

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Kill Town, USA

by Joseph Love

/body>

Kill Town, USA (Manuscript) Copyright 2010-12 by Joseph Love

Kill Town, USA (Cover Art) Copyright 2012 by Jeff Stiver

All rights reserved by contributors.

This eBook is not protected by DRM (Digital Rights Management). However, selling or profiting from the distribution or reproduction of its content is still illegal. Share it, dont rip it off.

This novella was made available to the public through funds raised on Kickstarter.com. The author would like to thank the following backers for their significant contributions:

Joey Barnard

Bradtv

Kevin Cumesty

Kade Goodspeed

Ben Handy

Jodi Heavner

George O. (Pete) Love

Allen Mooney

Gail Mooney

Cindy DeGeorge Nance

Adam Rains

Alyssa Riedy

Ashe Smith

JoAnn Smith

Sissy Story

For Anna and Willa

I KILLED MY FIRST BEAR WHEN I WAS EIGHT , killed maybe half the population in Quinn Valley by the time I was sixteen. Ive trapped snapping turtles with little more than broken brooms and shoeboxes. Ive handled snakes, raccoons, and an otter I found in the roots of a swamp oak once. Not much Id say I was afraid of. But I never had such a fear as when I saw that half-dead bear in North Carolina.

I worked accounting for Major Meat, Inc., supplier of beef, poultry, pork, and all sorts of hybrids, byproducts, and synthetic meats to forty percent of all the restaurants, groceries, and fast food joints in the country.

I didnt do payroll. I did beef. Pitted slaughterhouses against each other to drive down costs. Forged counter-offers to drive up prices. Im the reason your crunchy taco costs twenty-nine cents, and why you pay twenty bucks for a New York Strip. You know what New York Strip costs? Twenty-nine cents. Taco meat? Free. Scraps from the slaughterhouse floor.

That said, you couldnt catch me saying a word against Taco Toros tacos. A little chili powder, sour cream, and shredded lettuce and I still ate the things.

There are some people who would kill to get the information I handled. Or write a big check. Nick Tolchik was the man with the big check and a thousand questions. A year back I got an email from Tolchik asking to meet me and talk about meat. He was some sort of bestselling muckraker, but Id never heard of him. He emailed me weekly. Then, daily. He called me on my direct line after only a month. I gave in when he said he was in town and could meet me on my lunch break. He never mentioned anything about money.

We met at The Big Ass Bar, where we sat dwarfed by the big ass bar made of hickory slabs. I showed him my work folder: the food bill for the largest mass-consumer in the world. Technically, that information was public knowledge. He gawked at the red scribbles, green plus signs, and the huge margins of blue ink detailing marketing minutiae. The thing that got him was the table for canned taco meat. By replacing half an ounce of meat with shredded tendons in every ten-ounce can, Major Meat got a six-figure bump in profits every month. Tolchik was so excited to read it he wrung his napkin through his waxy fingers until I thought theyd bleed. He wrote me a check and slid it under my nose. I looked at him like hed shit all over the big ass bar.

The next week I had a voicemail played aloud in front of my supervisor. Tolchik called the wrong number. He left a message on the wrong phone. I was given a month of unpaid suspension. I didnt argue. Thats what you do when you work for someone, you dont argue. You dont complain. You take their money twice a month and you keep your mouth shut. But a month is a long time. I cashed Tolchiks check and sent him an email telling him about the suspension and asking about the book. He said my folder gave his book a brand new angle. Gave it the angle. Tolchiks agent got him out of his first contract, put the book up in a last minute auction, and had the publishers scrambling to sign him. The book was going to destroy Major Meat, Inc.

When my suspension was up, I stayed with Major Meat almost another year. They took away my office and gave me catch-up work to do. Payroll. I expected to get canned any day. When the economy tanked, I knew it wouldnt be long. Then, Tolchiks book came out in September. Major Meat stock dropped every day. On October 1 st , a security guard met me in the lobby with a small bankers box full of my things. On top was a hardback edition of Tolchiks book, Major Murder: How Big Meat is Killing America .

Good thing, though. On October 15 th , Major Meat recalled two thousand tons of toxic beef. A week later, it was three thousand tons of pork. Nearly two million patrons of Taco Toro, Big Wiggly Burgers, and Venni Vetti Beefy were placed in intensive care. Millions of pounds of meat were recalled weekly. By the end of the month, Major Meat was bankrupt. About half the patrons died from the beef. The rest went comatose.

And I went on vacation.

Even though I grew up in Quinn Valley, Georgia, just a few miles from the Appalachian Trail, I never spent much time hiking. I loved hunting, fishing, and camping in the valley. I grew up hearing how the Trail was for hippies and how they were turning Quinn Valley into a tourist trap. Hikers clogged up parking lots while they stayed on the trail for days at a time. They came like birds in the spring and summer, and like birds they got out of there by the first frost.

For years, Dad could only find seasonal work. He hated the onset of winter. Bear and tourist seasons were over and his arthritis flared up pretty bad. He tried to make money by selling firewood. In a place like Quinn Valley, people dont pay for firewood. Winters were the worst. By the time the first snowfall came, you could hardly get Dad to eat anything.

Worse, there was no way hed leave the house to work. I went to work when I was old enough and I stayed away from the Trail. But the Appalachian Trail is an inspiring thing. Two thousand miles of the hardest terrain, isolated from simple conveniences. When Major Meat laid me off, I was happy to be out of work and to have free time. It meant I could finally hike the Trail. I was happy to see the winter. Happy to wake to snow and frost, to shit in the woods, to go without. To carry a knife and rations and sleep on hard ground.

Ive been face to face with black bears, and black bears dont bother me. But what I saw a month out on the trail was just the shell of a black bear. Inside that shell was something dark, depraved.

I met a lot of hikers once I started the Trail, and I didnt believe their stories about recent bear sightings. After all, you might see a bear in winter if it had been a hard summer or fall. I thanked all the folks with long, dirty hair and bead necklaces and rolled my eyes as they walked away. A bear in winter is a weak, unthreatening thing.

Still, I slept naked to avoid casting the smell of food into the forest. In the mornings, I basked in the frost and drank my coffee before I dressed again. I only dressed when I was ready to carry on. Thats something you learn early. Always enjoy the stillness, the rest, even in winter.

But the bear came. At three-thirty one morning, sound asleep, I woke to the tortured silence of night. Bears whisper when they walk. Their huge paws gently shake the ground. I felt the shaking of the frozen dirt. I heard the screaming quiet of his stealthy gait.

I slept naked, but not without my hunting knife. The fourteen-inch Gerber All-Or-Nothing. With only the knife, I slipped out of my sleep sack and stood in the opening of the shelter. The frost and moon made the ground shine. Thats when I saw the bear. Its black body trudged toward the fire pit from the right side of the shelter. It turned to me, eyes silver like the frost. We were alien to each other.

In the silence, there was a sound like running water. Fast and steady. In the faint moonlight, I saw something wet covering its face. I hate to say the thing was even a bear. It was beyond animal.

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