We donât take kindly to outsidersÂ
around here, pardner,â said the grizzled and sunburnt face.Â
â... Darryl Choi?â I said. But it couldnât be.Â
âNow thatâs a name I havenât heard in a long time,â the man tipped that face up at me and I saw his familiar dark eyes clearly under his dusty cowboy hat.Â
âYouâre dead,â I blurted. The cowboy stood and drained his sarsaparilla.Â
âThis outsider botherinâ ya, Smokes?â the bartender said, polishing a glass behind the gas station counter, which had been apparently repurposed as a saloon bar. There were still vape cartridges and 5-hour-energy drinks on the shelf behind him, gathering dust next to bottles of unlabeled brown liquor and oil lamps.Â
âIâm not an outsider,â I argued. âThis is my hometown. I took your niece London to prom, Mr. Jarocki.â The bartender narrowed his eyes at me.Â
âNameâs Ben Wiley Sr to you,â he said, frowning under his huge white handlebar mustache. âNow, your moneyâs as good as anyone elseâs, kid, but after you quench yer thirst, you better take that steel horse you rode in on and ride along yonder, if you know whatâs good for yeh.â
âYonder?!â I said. âWhat the hell is going on? This is Massachusetts. Is this a bit?â
The five other cowboys in the gas station, who were all sitting around makeshift tables that had been hammered together from pieces of the Holiday station shelving, stopped their card game and glared at me. One of them reached for his sidearm.Â
Darryl clapped his hand around my shoulder.
âSettle down, boys,â he said. âThis here fellaâs kin, he just donât know it yet. Sit down, pardner, and Iâll tell my tale.â
âI just came in to pay for gas. The thingy wasnât working outside,â I said. âIâm actually late to my momâs memorial service right now.â
âOh, donât worry about that, son.â
âItâs my momâsââ
I sat down. The plastic chair squeaked. Mr Jarocki brought me a stein of sasparilla.Â
âFolks âround here, yâsee⌠we ainât afraid oâ death no more,â Darryl said. He lit his pipe. Red embers lit his dark eyes. âI met death. Heâs a ten-cent man.â Darryl stared through the Holiday station windows past the gas pump and toward the horizon of Peabridge, Massachusetts.Â
In 2016, Darryl Choi had been crushed to death by a semi on his way home from UMass Amherst. He was the first friend I ever lost. His death had hit me hard. We werenât as close as I was with some of my other friends, but weâd cut class a couple of times to vape by the creek and trade Yu-Gi-Oh cards. I didnât think he could grow facial hair, but he had a lot of it now.Â
âYâever heard of Pet Semetary?â Darryl asked.
âYeah, I saw the movie,â I said. âAnd the remake.âÂ
âWell, turns out, we got one of those.â
I stared incredulously. If I hadnât been at Darryl Choiâs funeral, I wouldnât have believed him.Â
âBasically, it works just like in olâ Steve Kingâs account. You die, they put you in there, you come back wrong. First time they tried it with a person, it was Christina Elspeth, the old schoolmarm.â
âOh no, Mrs Elspeth died?â
âIt donât matter now,â Darryl grunted. âListen. They put the schoolmarm in the cemetery and the next day she was crawling back all fulla murderous rage nâ such, same as the dogs nâ cats nâ fish, but worse. Spoutinâ all kinds of vileness. So her husband shot her in the head.â
âNot before she cut him real good across the belly, though. The olâ fella bled out right quick in his flower garden. So they buried both of âem in the Semetary-whatsit again, on account of the headstone already beinâ paid for.â
Mr Elspeth was my youth pastor. He always snuck us leftover communion bread and weâd eat it with marshmallow fluff. I didnât even know he had a gun.
âSo another day passed, and, well, the two of âem sprung back outta that dirt mound. Mr Elspeth had come back âwrong,â just like his missus before himâ all evil and such. But Mrs Elspeth came back even wronger. Turns out, thereâs a step down below âevil.â Iâm talkinâ downright⌠well, sorta like those red fellers we used to play at killinâ as youngsters in that movinâ picture game.â
âI donât know what the hell youâre talking about, Darryl,â I said. âCan you drop the cowboy accent?â
âFolks call me Smokes these days,â he said. âSmokes Barlow. Wilbur Lee Barlow if youâre a lawman.â
âIâm not gonna call you Wilbur Lee Barlow,â I said.
âNaw, youâll call me Smokes, like everyone else,â he replied smoothly.Â
âResident Evil?â I said.
âThe red zombies from Resident Evil, is that what you were talking about earlier?â
âAnyhow, the two of âem went on a killinâ spree round here. And I guess word got out about the cursed boneyardâ everyone and their mother, I mean the ones who survived, hoped maybe their kin would be the exception to the rule. So more nâ more bodies went in the mound, and each of âem came out as evil as the last. âCept for Mrs Elspeth, who came back worse for wear.â
âThey put her back? Again?â
âWell, see, the headstone had been paid for. So Mrs Elspeth comes back and sheâs still spittinâ hellâs worst curses and hankerinâ for a stabbinâ, but now sheâs also sort of a mad scientist sort. So she breaks into the hospital nâ starts grafting peopleâs limbs togetherââ
âHang on. What the hell do you mean sheâs a mad scientist sort?â I said. âShe was a music teacher?â
âWell, see, thatâs what Iâm tryinâ to tell you. Sheâs running around, hair all crazy, in a stolen lab coat, rantinâ and ravinâ about man playing god and splicing DNA and such, creating humanityâs next evolution and such. So eventually the hospital staff knock her out and toss her back in the hole. Next time she came back, she was a 19th century venture capitalist named Montgomery Prescott III who aimed to turn Peabridge into a factory town.â
âSorry, when did this all happen?â
ââCourse, by this time, her husband was on his third resurrection too, so Prescott was a force to be reckoned with with the power of science behind him. The two of âem did a bang-up job whippinâ this place into shape, corralling all the zombies nâ throwing em in the hole, yâknow, for science, and to see if they could monetize it. Prescott Mining & Scientific Enterprise un-buried all the dead from the regular olâ graveyard and tossed âem in the hole, myself included. Then, when they came back, they put all those evil folks to work in the mines, or in the lab.â
âNow those mines were dangerous, of course, with all the coal dust and gas leaks⌠Prescott didnât give a damn about safety. Lotta folks died. But theyâd just bring âem back. A couple weeks in, though, and there were about twenty Montgomery Prescott IIIâs and about a hundred mad scientists running around, and it turns out, Monty Prescott works for no man. Each of âem enlisted a squad of mad scientists and started their own enterprise. Wasnât too long before they started assassinating the competition. At this point, weâd all just gotten used to throwinâ people in the hole.
âTurns out, after Prescott, you come back as kind of a Dracula. Now I wonât go into all that businessâ you know âSalemâs Lot?â
âNo? Is that a gang?â
âWhat about that there Catholic picture show up there on the Netflix, the one on the island, put together by that Irish feller? Michael somethin. OâFlanagan.â
âMike Flanagan? Midnight Mass?â
âThere ya go. It was all pretty much like that.â
I looked around at the gas station. Other than the restructuring that had transformed it from a regular Holiday gas station into a cowboy saloon, it looked like this place had been through waves of disasters. There were bullet holes all over the ceiling, a massive rusty brown stain that someone had tried to scrub out with lye on the linoleum, burn marks on the walls with strange curling imprints of what looked like vines and needlesâŚÂ
âIâm guessing that âeveryone is vampiresâ didnât last long,â I said.
âIt just ainât sustainable,â Smokes shook his head. âVampires always think itâs a smart idea to make everyone vampires, but, see, it just donât work out. What do they eat? Turns out, they donât. They starve. Then itâs back in the hole.â
âSo things carried on like that for awhile. At a certain point, we were just chuckinâ people in there to see if there was an end point, yâknow, how far this thing goes. Turns out, it goes Evil, Mindless Zombie, Mad Scientist, Montgomery Prescott III, Master Vampire, Ghoul, Skeleton Warrior, Skeleton Jazz Musician, Man-eating Plant, Plant-eating Manâ or a Vegan, I guess youâd call him, and a real sonofabitchâ Haunted Ventriloquist, Haunted Dummy, Haunted Mummy, Christian Family Vlogger, âEdna,â Evil Cowboy, Zombie Cowboy, Plant Cowboy, âEdnaâ again, then just regular olâ pure Cowboy.â
âWhat comes after Cowboy?â I asked.
âNothing,â he said. âItâs just Cowboy all the way down after that.â
The cowboys playing poker glanced up at me through clouds of tobacco smoke. I recognized some of these people from around town. Or, rather, I recognized who they used to be.
âSo⌠my momâs memorial⌠sheâs not really dead, is she?â I said, a wave of hope and relief overwhelming me. âI thought Iâd have to say goodbye to her today. But sheâll be back, wonât she?â
Smokes only smiled sadly.
âYou wonât find fuel for your steel carriage, pardner,â said Smokes. âIâll give you a ride to the cemetary.â
I followed Smokes out to the parking lot, where several horses were hitched.Â
âWhere did you guys get all these horses?â I asked.
âOh, where thereâs cowpokes, thereâs horses,â he replied. âThatâs a rule of nature.â Smokes fed the horse an apple and stroked her mane before bidding me to climb on behind him. I held onto his waist, which was pretty weird for me because we were never close like that, and we galloped off up the highway toward the middle of town.Â
We passed the elementary school, which had been covered in radiation warning signs and barbed wire. Then we passed the old Coney Island restaurant, which had been converted to a one-room schoolhouse. Main Streetâs restaurants, law firms, and tattoo parlor had been replaced by a Dry Goods store, an ox stable, a wagoner, an apothecaryâ the barber was the same, but it looked like he also pulled teeth now.
The park that I played in as a kid had been bulldozed to hell, and in its place was a brown dirt yard with scattered mounds and holes all clustered near the center. A new sign hung over the entrance on a wooden board: Lazarus Mound Cemetary.
âI guess we coulda been more creative,â Smokes said. âBut itâs too late for couldas, I reckon.â
A group of cowboys, clad in black, stood over a dirt pile. They held their hats to their chest as the eulogy was read. Smokes followed me to my motherâs fresh grave. I dropped my bouquet of flowers on top of it.Â
âFamily only,â said one of the cowboys, glaring at me.
âUncle Matt, itâs me,â I said. He twirled his goatee and grimaced, revealing a new gold tooth.Â
âItâs Billy âCobraâ Nash these days,â he said. âDidnât recognize ya, son. I sâpose you want to say a few words,â he gestured to the mound.
âWell, I would,â I said, âBut Iâm pretty sure sheâll pop out halfway through.â
âThatâs no way to talk about your poor dead mother,â said Great-Grandma Tess, who I hadnât seen since 2004, when she died from stroke. Except she wasnât Great-Grandma Tess. She was a short old man with a long rabbity mustache and two guns on either side.Â
âLet the kid grieve, Slim,â said Cobra.
The sun set on us. The resurrected cowboy versions of my family members became hungry and bored, and set up a small campfire where they heated up coffee and beans, and spun some yarns. I asked questions about the cowboy economy and how it could sustain itself in this Massachusetts town that didnât have that many cows, and they responded by cussing me out and telling me to get lost, city boy. I said I couldnât be a city boy because I was from here, and they took away my beans.
Finally, after about an hour, there was rustling from the mound.Â
âHere she comes,â said Cobra.
The dirt shuffled and ran down the side of the mound, a miniature landslide. Finally, a gloved hand emerged. Then an arm. A dirty, dusty head, crowned in a cowboy hat, burst from the pile, coughing.Â
âWell, butter my biscuits, if it ainât The Cheat, just in time for dinner,â said Slim, hands on his hips.Â
My mom, who was now a dirt-covered cowboy named The Cheat, clicked his boots together to dislodge some stones from his spurs.Â
âHowdy. Miss me, fellas?â The Cheat rasped, spitting pebbles into the fire.Â
âMom?â I said. The Cheat looked me over.Â
âThey call me Vernon âThe Cheatâ Maddox now,â my mom said.
âWhy Maddox?â I asked. âMom, what was wrong with Nguyen?â
âAinât a cowboy name,â said Mom.Â
âA cowboy canât be Vietnamese?â
âListen, kid,â said The Cheat, clapping me on the arm. âIâve had a long day, and to be frank, I canât abide a city slicker like you before I get my brew. Gotta fill up on beans nâ coffee or Iâll be skinner than a jazz skeleton in two shakes of a lambâs tail.â
I watched my mom walk away toward the fire, greeting the other cowboys like old friends.
âItâs like she didnât even recognize me,â I said, broken.
Smokes patted me on the shoulder.Â
âThat ainât your mother no more, pardner,â he said. âSame as I ainât Darryl Choi.â
âWhatâs the point of raising people from the dead if theyâre not themselves?â I said.Â
âI reckon youâve missed the essential theme of the Pet Semetary premise,â Smokes said. âThe point is, itâs a curse, not a blessing. To the living, at least. Mister Stephen King said sometimes dead is better. And here in Peabridge, we reckon he was right.â
I heard a metal click. I turned around to see Smokesâ shotgun pointed square at my forehead.
âWhoa,â I said. The cowboys at the fire turned to watch with dim interest, including my own mother. âDarryl, hey, put that away.â
âDead is better. But you know whatâs best? Cowboy,â he said. âCowboy is the best there is.â
âBest there is,â said the cowpokes around the fire in eerie unison.Â
âWait, wait, waitââ there was a bang. My vision filled with red, and then there was nothing. I saw and felt and heard nothing as Smokes watched my limp body fall backwards into the hole. He kicked dirt over me casually. He holstered his weapon. He sat down around the fire, next to the others.
âHow many bullets ya got, Smokes?â asked The Cheat through a mouthful of beans.
âNot enough to get him all the way through,â Smokes replied, lighting his pipe. âBut enough to get him past Dracula, for sure.â
âThatâs the one you gotta watch out for,â The Cheat said. âIâll stand vigil with ya, pardner.â
âYou go home, Maddox, wash that dust off, tend to your herd. Be on the lookout for Ednaâ word is sheâs still at large in places,â Smokes said.Â
âSheâll come around,â said Slim. âThey always do.â
The campfireâs embers rose up to the cloudy, dark sky. Smokes leaned back and tipped his hat low over his eyes.
âThis townâs got room for plenty more cowboys,â he said. Around the fire, a dozen pairs of black, gleaming eyes turned toward the Lazarus Mound, waiting.