Yellow Stonefly. Tim Poland

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Yellow Stonefly - Tim Poland

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      YELLOW STONEFLY

      YELLOW STONEFLY

      A NOVEL

      TIM POLAND

      Swallow Press

      Athens

      Swallow Press

      An imprint of Ohio University Press, Athens, Ohio 45701

       ohioswallow.com

      © 2018 by Tim Poland

      All rights reserved

      To obtain permission to quote, reprint, or otherwise reproduce or distribute material from Swallow Press / Ohio University Press publications, please contact our rights and permissions department at (740) 593-1154 or (740) 593-4536 (fax).

      Printed in the United States of America

      Swallow Press / Ohio University Press books are printed on acid-free paper

      28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 5 4 3 2 1

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Poland, Tim, author.

      Title: Yellow stonefly : a novel / Tim Poland.

      Description: Athens, Ohio : Swallow Press, 2018.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2018032215| ISBN 9780804012072 (hardback) | ISBN 9780804040952 (pdf)

      Subjects: | BISAC: FICTION / General.

      Classification: LCC PS3566.O419 Y45 2018 | DDC 813/.54--dc23

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018032215

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      Prologue

      Randy Mullins knew full well just how lucky he was to have a stable job. As human resources director for the Old Dominion Furniture Company plant east of Sherwood, Virginia, he’d been reminded of his good fortune too many times to take it for granted. He was the one who reviewed the job applications and conducted the interviews with men and women hoping desperately for employment that might at last provide some sort of dependable livelihood. He was the one who filled out the paperwork and conducted the compulsory exit interviews with workers being laid off or let go because a line was being shut down or a portion of production outsourced overseas. His memory was heavy with their faces. He knew how well he had it, with a job he could count on to provide for him, his wife, and their two children. And he knew as well as anyone how quickly that could change. Randy Mullins wasn’t about to take any chances.

      So when his wife took the kids over to Kentucky for a few days to visit with their grandparents, he pursued this particular episode of his occasional faithlessness with the same caution and appreciation he brought to the other aspects of his life. He kept his car a notch below the speed limit all the way to Bluestone Bottoms Adult Superstore, across the state line in West Virginia. Randy Mullins knew, of course, that a world of pornography was readily available online with a few clicks of the mouse, but that would involve credit cards, receipts, a digital trail on the home computer he shared with his wife and children, and the threat of suspect spam in the email inbox of that computer, of a stack of lurid junk mail in the mailbox at the end of their driveway. Thirty-five miles away in Bluestone Bottoms, he wasn’t apt to be recognized, and he paid cash for the three DVDs he selected. He decided against a fourth DVD, entitled Totally Rampant. Three should be more than adequate.

      Halfway home it began to rain, so he drove still more cautiously, decreasing his speed and training his vision directly on the wet pavement unrolling ahead of his low beams. The road shimmered before him in the damp night. The straightaway two-lane now began its shift into the tighter curves of the final twelve miles of the road that would feed eventually into the backside of the subdivision where he and his family lived on the outskirts of Sherwood. Before leaving for Kentucky, his wife had stocked the refrigerator with prepared food, so he’d be properly fed in her absence, including a chicken casserole and Randy’s favorite, her special sausage lasagna. As he slowed further into the curves through the close hemlocks and pines that fed down the adjacent slopes nearly to the road’s edge, something approaching a beatific smile teased the corners of Randy Mullins’s mouth at the thought of his steadfast wife’s casseroles. He’d have some of the lasagna tonight, maybe with a beer, before slipping into his terrycloth bathrobe and settling in with his new DVDs.

      What leapt across the road in front of his car appeared so suddenly, disappeared so quickly, that Randy had no time even to register what in the world it might be before he mashed his brakes. A muscular, tawny flank flashed across the watery blur of his windshield for a split second. Not a deer. Perhaps a large dog, a massive coyote? Before whatever it was vanished into the night, he could see only enough of it to know it was there. And that it had a very long tail.

      The car bucked. Its wheels turned into the curve and fell into a skid across the slick pavement. Randy Mullins’s knuckles grew white wrestling the steering wheel as his car slid over the outer edge of the curve, rasped over the gravel of the road’s berm, collapsed into the two-foot-deep drainage ditch beside the road, and stalled out. He gasped frantically, trying to catch his breath. He seemed to be uninjured, save for a crease of soreness across his chest from the seatbelt harness. The air bags had not deployed. His breathing, shallow and rapid, began to slow gradually. The three DVDs on the seat next to him had flown out of their blue plastic bag and lay scattered on the floor of the passenger side. It was raining harder now. The interior of the car resonated from the rain pelting the roof. What had it been?

      Randy collected the DVDs from the floor, returned them to their bag, and stuffed them under his seat. He released his seatbelt, held his door open with his right hand, and struggled to push himself up and out of the car with his left hand. His foot slipped on the wet vegetation in the ditch, and he fell to his knees on the gravel berm, yanking his right arm out of the way just as his door slammed back down on the tilted vehicle. His smooth-soled shoes slid over the wet gravel and grass and slipped from under him again as he stumbled around to the front of his car to view the damage. All things considered, it certainly could have been worse, but it was bad enough. In the reflected glow of his headlights, fortunately still on, he could see well enough the right front wheel buckled in on a broken axle.

      The rain had soaked through his jacket and shirt to the skin, and he began to shiver as he tried to bumble his way up out of the ditch to retrieve his phone from the car. The odds were slim he’d be able to pick up a signal for his cell phone in this ravine the road snaked through. The damp quiet of the night along the road was broken by the rumble of an engine, then the waxing glow of headlights rapidly approaching the curve behind him. In his rush to be seen and hopefully helped in his moment of distress, he again stumbled to his knees on the gravel at the edge of the road. Groping for the left front fender of his car for support, Randy Mullins pushed himself upright and began to raise his arms to flag the vehicle down. The large, extended side-view mirror of the pickup caught him squarely in the ribs and knocked him to the ground on the edge of the wet road.

      THE truck stopped, promptly but with precision, giving no sign of panic by the driver. For a few

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