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Nicholas Day - At the End of the Day I Burst into Flames

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Nicholas Day At the End of the Day I Burst into Flames
  • Book:
    At the End of the Day I Burst into Flames
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    Bizarro Pulp Press
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    2018
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    978-1-947654-80-8
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At the End of the Day I Burst into Flames: summary, description and annotation

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These are his final moments. In the little city of Wood River, Illinois, a man nicknamed Firecracker knows the end is near. The fire is coming, just like it came for his father, his grandfather, and who knows how many men. After all, folks in those parts have a short-term memory when it comes to history, and lots of stories have a tendency to go to the grave. Maybe the fire was always there. Maybe it came along when the oil refinery went up in 1907. Who can say? Sometimes, a yarn like this is as close to a history book as a Midwest community and its people are apt to get. When it happened to his father, the doctors only called it an accident. But Firecrackers mother had a name for it: spontaneous combustion. Firecracker knows there is no way to escape this Act of God, so he retreats into his memories. Past and present become one and the same. The veil of reality pulls away and Death arrives in time for one last conversation, where Firecracker comes to terms with the mysteries of his own life, and realizes that some questions are not nearly as important as the moments which spawned them. From the first line of the tale that sees his eyes explode tomoments and pages laterhis whole body being consumed by flame, Firecracker experiences his life and loves through a succession of memories, reveals his friendship with Death, and talks about the men in his familys unfortunate predisposition. This is a yarn about life and death and spontaneous human combustion.This is a tale of a man with a fire inside him. At the End of the Day I Burst into Flames is a horror story about how beautiful love can be.

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Nicholas Day

AT THE END OF THE DAY I BURST INTO FLAMES

To all of you who have felt the fire inside yourself

My eyes explode I feel inferno in my bones like my father before me Ill - photo 1

***

My eyes explode.

I feel inferno in my bones, like my father before me. Ill be flame soon enough. And Ill be ash shortly after.

I have a story to tell before this happens and it is happening soon. Going to be blunt when I want to be. May wander a bit as stories do.

As life does.

And death.

***

In the lateness of a white, Midwest winter, I broke the red doors latch.

Few students, and even less faculty, were present at the high school, as it was well after regular hours. The two of us, she and I, we were part of the high schools freshmen thespian department, painting sets in advance of that years musical. She was not my girlfriend, only someone I considered a close friend.

Inspiration, the kind inherent to youth, took hold of me and in turn I took hold of her. Up two flights of stairs, quickly and quietly, unobserved and not missed by anyone else. The door was small, the latch was weak, and once broken I led her out onto the rooftop of the school. The lone street lamp may as well have been some meager candlelight.

The sky was black. Snow fell like so much static, cold ash from some unseen fire in Heaven. I taught her the Box Step. I did not know it then, but our intimacy would begin and end with that silent waltz.

Years later, we are separated by decades and decisions, lovers and children. We are separated by life. Our dance is now a memory, fleeting, although the setting remains vivid, as does her smile.

I can no longer remember her name, but I love her.

***

I think about suicide a lot and I think about love.

I think about the fact they were basically sacks of gooey, communicable chemicals hardwired to survive through sloppy DNA exchange. I think to myself.

Its a system

And any system can be beat if we just fight against what the system wants. I think about suicide and I think that suicide is winning.

But then I remember, individually, we are all dying anyway. Its going to happen. We committed suicide the moment we passed through a membrane from another dimension.

Then, I think.

The system wants us to die

Living is the only way to beat the system.

So, I think about suicide but I dont do it.

Eventually, I come around to the third option, which is that there is no system. Never was. Im fighting with myself. And thats the one, thats the really depressing revelation. I am my own enemy.

I am the system

I think about love.

Every time I think yeah okay, Im going to do it.

Right?

Its time to finally kill myself. But I almost immediately remember love. And love is so addicting.

Love brings me back.

And Im not talking about love in some sentimental way. Im talking about chemical compositions, like if it were possible to put music in a syringe and then stick it in your arm and feel the ebb and flow of notes pulsing through your veins before music takes an aural shit all over your brain.

Im talking about love-as-opiate.

And Im so weak, so wrecked and dependent, so addicted, that I cant even fucking kill myself. Its depressing. Love is rubbish. If I could just kick the habit, you know? Id like to have control over my life.

Of course, I am getting well ahead of myself and this melancholy mindset is due to the fact I am about to die in the same terrible manner as my father, and his father before him, and so on.

I am a lot like my father.

Got the fire inside me.

Time slows to a crawl when Death walks in. Were friends, Death and I. Weve met on several occasions but almost always by coincidence, like co-workers who see each other in the parking lot before they go into the big building and do what they do in different rooms, on different floors.

Death, as it turns out, is a librarian of sorts.

And hes come to collect my story.

I think about love.

And I dont want to die.

***

I have a wife and kids. They dont know the fire is coming and I havent told them. Dont need the ones I love to see me as a ticking clock. No reason to mourn before Im dead. Cant imagine anything worse than becoming a ghost before its time.

Been chewing the inside of my cheek a lot more, lately, thats for sure.

Cigarette is lit and I puff away. Smoke too much. Always have. Shouldve quit years ago, kick the habit.

Kick the habit

Worthless phrase, really. So easy to say yet so hard to actually do. It isnt like saying, Kick the dog. You can readily do that given you have a dog and at least one foot.

A habit like smoking may as well be a possession. Got to get a priest if you want a proper exorcism. Want to know how I feel about priests? See if you recognize this quote:

Fuck the police.

That I temper the anxiety caused by my imminent immolation by lighting up cigarettes is a black humor that isnt entirely lost on me. Fight fire with fire, as my great-great-grandmother had been fond of saying. Lately, though, the smoking has gotten out of hand. Understandably so, given the circumstance.

My wife and I, were rarely intimate anymore. Emily, God rest her soul. I mean, God rest her soul for putting up with my lacking libido. I dont want to make it look like shes dead. Of course the sex would be bad. And gross. What would the kids think of me if that were the case? I can see Robbys third-grade teacher inquiring about life at our house.

And how are your parents, Robby?

To which my brown-eyed, stout son would reply, Mom is dead but Dad doesnt mind because now they have alone time whenever he wants and Mom never complains.

My son talks like that, you know? Real fast, in exploding sentences. The boy has absolutely no time for a comma in his speech. He will make a great public speaker. I could have been one of those.

***

I came to my hometown of Wood River to reminisce. I actually live in Edwardsville, about an hours drive southeast. Edwardsville is a lovely town, a college town, actually. The community has a really nice public high school, too, one of the highest rated in Illinois.

But Wood River, thats where my roots are, you know?

Now, maybe, I ought to take a second to set the sceneif you dont mindto paint a picture in your head, a portrait of the town where I was born and raised and within whose borders I will most certainly die.

First, imagine a metal erector set built by giants. It buzzes with florescent light, belches enough smoke to dwarf the clouds in the sky, and pisses fire so bright that nighttime becomes nothing more than a perpetual evening. Add to that the smell of sulfur. Now, surround this vision with little suburbs full of modest homes, mostly vinyl siding, but pockets of brick in the older neighborhoods. You see green trees, wide yards, lots of trucks and big garages. During the summer, you hear the almost choral hum of a thousand air conditioners working in unison. In the winter, well, I dont really know how it sounds. I stay inside.

It gets too damn cold.

The city is kind of like me in that we both started out as one thing and, over time, we both became something else. You see, Wood River, the part that I grew up in, used to be called Benbow City. At the time, it was hardly more than a green spot on the state border, nothing much more than a humid floodplain along the Mississippi River. Like me, the fire was hidden inside, waiting to be let free.

Then, Standard Oil showed up and that all started to change.

The Wood River Refinery was built in 1907 and, shortly after, a fellow named A.E. Benbow founded his city pretty much right across the street. It wasnt nothing much more than a place to get drunk, gamble, and fuck, but man alive was that town making some money. Once upon a time, Benbow was,

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