I looked down at the Ironman watch on my wrist. It read 9:17
PM. It had been exactly twelve hours since my awakening. Exactly
twelve hours since the fade in of the opening scene. Somehow it
seemed like a lifetime ago.
I gathered my legs underneath me and began a mad sprint
toward the Intercoastal Bridge ahead. All around me a crowd
was beginning to gather; on both sides of the bridge, on the
water below, and even in the air above me. No doubt my bizarre
adventures of this day would make for the perfect sound bite, the
ultimate in exploitive fodder for the eleven o’clock news tonight.
This is it I thought—the big push, the rousing climax, the great
showdown. This is what will put the asses in the seats and keep them
coming back for more. I was more than up for the challenge.
I reached the base of the bridge at full throttle. My blood
streaked legs of sinewy flesh began to quiver from sheer exhaustion
as I stepped up into the steep grade of the pavement.
It was steeper than I had ever remembered it. It was much
too steep. Each step I took sent a burning wave of searing lactic
acid into my thighs and hamstrings. It felt like I was pulling a
two ton trailer.
At first I just thought it was me. I had been pushed beyond
the limits of any human endurance I had known. I was delirious.
Reality and hallucination now co-existed in the carousal
of imagery, sound and smell that comprised my unstable state. I
could not be sure of anything anymore. I only knew that all of
this had to end. And it would end. It would end here at the crest
of this bridge.
This is where I would make my last stand.
I could see the swirling reflections of red and yellow lights on
the rising pavement before me. Intermingled with the approaching
scream of the sirens, I could hear the clicks of shotguns being
cocked to fire and the yell of a bull horn demanding I halt, raise
my arms and drop to my knees.
Never—I am not giving up—not now—not ever.
I spent the last eight years of my life on my knees with my
hands up in the air, letting everyone and everything have their
way with me. I was a defeated warrior who walked around in a
passionless stupor; a zombie, a pod person in a functioning coma
induced by one emotional beating too many. I was the whipping
boy of every thoughtless, hate-filled soul within spit ting distance;
a human receptacle where self-centered agents of evil could deposit
their angst; a walking, breathing tackling dummy available for
every angry prick with an attitude that passed by and needed to
unleash some frustration.
Fate had kicked my ass and I had taken a seat on the bench.
But no more—
Never again—
I have returned from the land of the living dead, and I am
now here to stake my claim.
As of twelve hours ago I became the man in charge...