I am sucking up dead roaches with an industrial vacuum cleaner. I can hear the armor of their bodies clinking against the metal tube as they disappear from the floor. Every night, in every unoccupied room, I sprinkle white powder around the scarred baseboards and the next day I come to vacuum. Usually there’s just a smattering of insects to be sucked up, but sometimes, like now, there are piles of them. It never ends; there are always more.
I flip the switch and the roaring dwindles to silence filled by the slap of tennis shoes on concrete. A flurry of skinny children scuttle past the open door. I roll up the cord, preparing to lug the bulky contraption to the next room. I step out under the awning and spy Randy’s long white Cadillac pulling into the lot. I roll the vacuum along on its little pocked wheels, kicking it along to the sound of a woman yelling and a baby crying.
This next room, seventeen, has just a smattering of dead bugs, and since the beds don’t need changed, I’m back outside and on to the next one. It’s much bigger than the other rooms that families live in, and as far as I know they don’t charge much more for it. But then, I don’t handle the money, I just suck up the bugs.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Flash Fiction - Roach Motel
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2 comments:
For a second there, I thought you were experiencing what I have to go through later in the Spring every year: the Ladybug invasion. I leave the vacuum in the room and go in periodically and get piles of them. They smell. They are not ladies at all, they are bitches.
Our ladybug population has decreased dramatically. Maybe they all moved to your house (and maybe they'll move away in a year or two).
Thanks for stopping by; I'll be over to catch the next outdoor adventure later (love, love, love the mushroom eyes).
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