Lucy's Fur
by Timothy
Whitfield
Nicky
Adams knew the story well enough. He was only in high school when
it happened, but it was something he knew he’d never forget.
The year was 1990 and Lucy’s Fur was his all-time favorite metal
band. He had all their CDs. He taped their Headbanger’s Ball
videos and watched them incessantly. He wore their t-shirts at least
five days out of the week. He saw them live on three different occasions,
opening for AC/DC, Judas Priest, and then the ultimate gig with Slayer.
They were going to be “the next big thing” in heavy music.
But then, on Halloween night, 1990, in some tiny backwater burg in
the middle of Iowa, the music abruptly stopped.
Lucy’s
Fur committed suicide. On stage. In front of five thousand moshing,
screaming, diehard fans.
As one, the four members of Lucy’s Fur, during their third and
final encore after a thunderous rendition of their latest hit, To
Hell And Back, drew swords and began chopping each other to bits.
At least that was the report the following morning on MTV News.
Nicky felt sick to his stomach. He stayed home from school for a week.
He refused to wear the t-shirts, to watch the videos, to even play
their music. He brooded in singular silence. He felt lost, without
purpose.
Worse, he felt betrayed.
A few days later, the venue in Iowa in which they played their “requiem
concert” burned to the ground. Arson was suspected but no arrests
were made.
As the weeks went by, conflicting reports began to surface in the
various metal mags. Hoax! declared some headlines. Publicity
Stunt! spouted others. Lucy’s Fur Spotted At Daytona
Beach Soaking Up The Sun!
Nicky didn’t know who or what to believe.
Years went by and the rumors slowly faded. Lucy’s Fur was eventually
forgotten. Maybe they were dead and gone after all.
Nicky’s musical tastes evolved over the ensuing years. Opeth,
Sentenced, and Katatonia were the new lords of dark music, exporting
their flair for the macabre from Sweden and Norway and points beyond.
American metal was dead. In Nicky’s heart, it had died that
cold, dark Halloween night back in ’90, impaled forever on melodious
swords.
Fifteen long, silent years ago.
So when the news broke that Lucy’s Fur were reuniting and releasing
a brand new CD, Nicky’s head nearly exploded.
He didn’t know whether to cry or rejoice. On one hand, he felt
duped, cheated, lied to. But on the other hand, he was tremendously
excited. His all-time favorite band had risen from the grave so to
speak. And he waited with bated breath for the new album.
Of all days, it was released on Halloween, 2005, exactly fifteen years
to the day of that fateful, heartrending night in pisstown Iowa. Nicky
was at the record store before it even opened. He wanted to be the
first to buy the new recording. And he was. He even dug out and wore
one of his old Lucy’s Fur tees. It didn’t fit him anymore
and his beer gut was left exposed to the chilled autumn air, but he
didn’t care. He had the new Lucy’s Fur in his grubby little
paws.
He raced home, nearly crashing his car a few times. He was nearly
trembling with excitement by the time he reached his tiny apartment.
He even called off from work so this day could be dedicated solely
to Lucy’s Fur. Nearly all the feelings of betrayal were gone
by the time he walked into his apartment and set the unopened CD atop
his stereo.
Only nervousness clawed at his fragile psyche now.
What if the CD sucked? What if it wasn’t the Lucy’s Fur
he once knew and loved? Even worse, what if it was a bunch of poseurs,
assembled by the record company bastards to make a quick buck on unsuspecting
fans?
Nervousness festered into anger. He suddenly wanted to throw the CD
away and not even listen to it. Forget about them. Do they deserve
his forgiveness after all these years?
“Screw you guys,” he said aloud to the sealed CD package.
“I’ve moved on, so should you. Go back to hell where you
belong.”
Nicky picked up the CD. In his haste, he realized he never even read
the album’s title yet. Squinting at the odd, gothic lettering,
he read, Back From The Grave. The cover was a drawing of a creepy
cemetery with four open graves.
Nicky slammed the CD down and swore under his breath. Was this some
sort of joke? A ruse for the record company to fleece Lucy’s
Fur’s fans?
Or had the band really returned from the proverbial grave?
Nicky went to the kitchen and got himself a beer. He normally didn’t
drink this early in the day, but this was a special occasion if there
ever was one.
Downing half the beer as he walked, Nicky returned to the living room.
Without giving himself any more time for doubt or second-guessing,
he picked up the CD and quickly tore off the cellophane wrapping.
He opening the case and popped out the disc. It felt light and cool
in his hand. The label was a dark crimson with black lettering Flicking
several switched, he powered up his stereo. The drawer to his CD player
slid open and Nicky placed the CD in the tray and closed it. The disc
would start playing automatically. A knot formed inside his gut. The
music started off slow, a bass rumbling. Soon, tribal drums joined
the bass and then an ungodly heavy riff from an electric guitar. Nicky
cranked up the volume until he could feel the thumping of the bass,
not just hear it. The distorted guitars were so loud; he nearly didn’t
hear the knocking at his door. He lowered the volume just slightly
and went to the door.
The girl standing in the hall had a silver spike through her lower
lip. That was the first thing Nicky noticed. He then noticed she had
several piercings: her right nostril, her eyebrow, each ear sported
several loops and chains. Above the waistband of her low riding jeans,
he navel flaunted some sort of studded gargoyle pin. She wore a girly
pink tank top, her arms bare. One shoulder was covered by a tattoo
of a tiger’s growling head with ruby eyes. She had long, black-dyed
hair. It was hard to fathom her age with all the added trappings,
but Nicky figured her to be about twenty-five or so. Definitely not
jail bait.
“Ooooo,” she cooed, smiling, her lips too red, too moist.
“Is that the new Lucy’s Fur? I loooooove them.”
“Yes,” Nicky said, too dumbfounded to think of anything
else. Who was this girl? Did she live in the building? He never saw
her before and he’d been living her for ten years.
“Ooooo,” she said again. “Can I listen to it? How
is it? Is it any good?”
“I don’t know,” Nicky said. “I just bought
it. It just came out today.”
“Neat.” The girl brushed past him, nearly knocking Nicky
down, chains dangling from the seat of her pants, jingling as she
went. Nicky eyed her with a mixture of suspicion and annoyance. She
had a nice ass.
“Want a beer?”
The girl twirled, her face a beaming, pale mask. Her dark eyes bore
holes right through him. “That’d be super, Nicky.”
“How do you know my name?”
“I live right down the hall, silly.”
“You do? I don’t recall seeing you around before.”
She
shrugged, obviously bored with this line of conversation. Nicky went
to the kitchen and grabbed two beers from the fridge. He handed one
to the girl, and popped the other open for himself.
“What’s
your name?” Nicky asked.
“Lucy.”
“Well,
that’s an odd coincidence.”
The
girl looked at him, a blank expression plastered on her face.
“Because
we’re listening to Lucy’s Fur.”
The
girl’s face suddenly lit up. “Oh, yeah! Right! I didn’t
think of that.”
Nice
ass but a little slow. To Nicky that meant a possible easy lay.
He
turned up the volume on the stereo. The vocals were growling now,
piercing and dark. If these guys were poseurs, they were doing a hell
of a job imitating the real thing. They sounded awesome.
The
girl, Lucy, sipped at her beer and swayed slightly to the music, her
eyes partly closed. Maybe she was on drugs. That would explain a lot.
“Want
to sit down?” Nicky asked.
“No,
I’m fine. Great stuff, eh?”
Nicky
could only assume she meant the music and not the beer.
“Sounds
great.”
Lucy
swayed some more. Then she asked, “Mind if I take my top off?”
Nicky
nearly choked on his beer. “Um. Whatever you want.”
“It’s
hot in here.” Lucy sat her beer down and quickly pulled her
tank top over her head. She wore no bra. Her breasts were small and
perky. Nicky could see a tiny trail of sweat between them. He looked
away.
“I
think I’ll sit down,” Nicky said. He walked over
to the sofa and sat at one end. Lucy had her back to him. Her long
black hair brushed over her pale skin as she swayed to the music.
Her low-slung jeans accentuated her hips, her ass round and tight.
Nicky drained the last of his beer, the music barely audible to him
now. Something else was getting him excited at the moment, drowning
everything else out.
Lucy turned and faced him. “This music is getting me hot,”
she announced.
“Me too.” Nicky couldn’t think of anything else
to say.
“This
is really sweet of you, you know, letting me come in here and all.”
Nicky
grinned, no doubt looking like a fool. “No problem.”
Lucy
stepped closer to him, her breasts bobbing. “I can repay you.”
“Not
necessary.”
Lucy
slowly dropped to her knees as if preparing to pray. “I insist.
It’s the least I can do.”
Nicky’s
mouth went dry as the girl scooted forward until she was firmly planted
between his knees. She then reached out and began to undo his belt.
As
if in a trance, Nicky helped her unbuckle his jeans. Within seconds,
he had his pants and underwear rolled down to mid-thigh.
“Ooooo,”
Lucy cooed. She reached out and jostled with his member, which easily
grew rigid within her grasp.
Closing
his eyes, Nicky fell into a near swoon. He could feel her moist lips
on him, her soft fingers expertly bringing him to full attention.
Within his own pounding bloodbeat, he drifted––
“Feel
my fur,” a woman’s sultry voice said. No, that’s
not quite right.
“Feel
my fury.” That’s it. Fury. And pain. Lots of
pain.
Nicky’s eyes snapped open. Looking down, he could see the swollen
head of his penis jutting out from the girl’s torrid grasp.
It throbbed, painfully so, purple at first and then turning a dark
crimson. Finally it exploded, literally, showering Lucy’s hair,
her grinning face, her pale throat, with dark, boiling blood, like
dark red lava.
Nicky raised his hands as if in supplication or to ward off an attack.
It was then he noticed the kitchen knife gripped in his own tight
fist. The blade was red and dripping with thick blood. Realization
rushed in. He had somehow punctured his own dick.
The music from the stereo grew louder. Lucy stood, straddling his
outstretched legs. She was covered in blood. She was smiling, licking
at her lips, too red, too moist.
“Ooooo,” she cooed, swaying slightly, blood dripping from
her naked torso. “I loooove this song.”
Nicky recognized it as well. It was Lucy’s Fur’s biggest
hit. To Hell And Back. It was the song they committed suicide to so
many years ago. Why would it be on their new album? Of course. A bonus
track. A remix. Artists do it all the time. They remix old songs,
give them a new feel, a new angle, a more modern beat. This one was
cleverly turned inside out. Instead of the band chopping themselves
to bits during it, now it was geared toward the fans. How thoughtful
of them.
Somehow, Nicky found the strength to stand. The bombastic beat of
the music was eating away at him, consuming him, controlling him.
Using the blade of the knife, he sliced open his swollen beer belly,
just below his navel, just above his ruptured penis. The wound quickly
gaped open, spilling his guts onto the floor, his intestines uncoiling
and writhing at Lucy’s feet like a frenzy of albino snakes covered
in blood and slime and mucus.
Then the darkness came and the last thing Nicky Adams heard on this
earth was a girl named Lucy saying, “Ooooo, Nicky, Lucy’s
Fur rocks!”