Morning Kill by Nancy Carpenter

Nancy takes writing seriously, attending workshops facilitated by published authors such as Barbara DeMarco-Barrett, Bret Anthony Johnston, Diana Wagman, and Dennis Palumbo. In her day job, she is a consultant, writing and editing internal communication for businesses, which has little to do with the her four completed novels, but a lot to do with the discipline of and satisfaction received from writing.

Morning Kill

One shot from Raid meant to kill flying insects and the spider rappels along a radial of his web, manufactures another filament (it should be his last), and plummets towards the rosemary hedge like a shimmering bauble from a shattered chandelier.

Incensed, he struggles under the weight of chemicals, beads clinging to flaying legs glistening in the backdrop of the sun. I appreciate his efforts as he fights to hold onto the thread, to life, greased as they both are with a compound of Permethrin and d-Trans Allethrin.

His intake of oxygen, now surely laborious, is wasted on appendages extending and retracting against the still air. I blast him again, watch with respect, imagine the decisions he must make, the synapses of his multiple brains strategically positioned in all those joints, snapping. To continue the silent churning, or to drop further into the asylum of the hedge. Is he allowed to know this option exists, or does he still desire the sanctuary of his web, sparkling and alluring like a thousand diamonds on a Tiffany necklace?

Another discharge of toxic ingredients and he grows still. I move in for a closer inspection, my hand solid on the gate, and blow on his sleek body. He rotates, bulb-like, star-like, bulb-like, star-like, his legs limp or stiff, impossible to determine. I deliver a final blast, satisfied, and place the can on the brick walkway where viscous dollops of the lethal ingredients, the size of inconsequential coins from third world countries, have assembled.

I go through the house to the garage to retrieve the broom. Approaching the gate with the sun now to my back, the web is invisible and thus was impossible to see when I first passed through. How easy our roles could’ve been reversed, I the victim, the spider the aggressor, had I not earlier turned, looked into the late morning sun that at that angle revealed the web.

He moves again, and I imagine he’s played possum, staring down the offending nozzle of Raid Flying Insect Spray intended for the common gnat, willing himself to not breathe, jubilant once I abandoned the can. He couldn’t know about the broom, and its fatal arching sweep that separates him from his web, pulling him to the brick, the bristles impaling him, dissembling his body.

I walk through the garage and house a second time, reach the gate, the sun again the back drop, to admire the web, still intact, twinkling under its noxious shroud before consigning it to the shrubs and indifferent brick, never to allow another spider to take residence.

I hide the can of Raid behind the staked “Welcome” sign. Guests will arrive in eight hours.


What the Spider Sees

One shot from Raid and I rappel along a radial of my web, expertly manufacture another filament (less flawless this time), and plummet towards the rosemary hedge. Coated in toxins, I look like a shimmering bauble from a shattered chandelier.

I allow myself a brief and fond memory of that web I built after scuttling indoors to escape last winter’s rains. I deflowered her newly cleaned crystal prisms floating over a shrewdly curated table setting, and escaped as she screamed in protest.

This time, I need to remember not to breathe.

I struggle under the weight of chemical beads clinging to flaying legs. I’m incensed as I make every effort to hold onto the thread and my life, greased as they both are with whatever, exactly, that shit is.

My laborious intake of oxygen is wasted on appendages extending and retracting against the still air. This is not good. Yet the synapses of my multiple brains homesteading all my joints are still snapping. I waste no time deliberating her motivations or imagining the decisions she must make.

I can’t afford to be shortsighted. To continue the silent churning, or to drop further into the asylum of the hedge, those are my options. Screw the sanctuary of my web, sparkling and alluring like a thousand diamonds on one of her Tiffany necklaces.

I tuck and curl.

Another discharge of toxic ingredients and I grow still, a lesson learned from watching possums. She moves in for a closer inspection, her hand solid on the gate. She blows on my sleek body. I rotate, bulb-like, star-like, bulb-like, star-like, my legs limp or stiff, impossible for her to determine. Confused, she delivers, hopefully, her final blast.

Yes, she is satisfied. She places the can on the brick walkway where viscous dollops of the lethal ingredients, the size of bird poo, have assembled.

She retreats to the house. A beat or two and she exits the garage with a broom. This is not good. Had she approached the gate with the sun to her back, my web would have been invisible, impossible to see when she first passed through. How easy our roles might have reversed, I the aggressor, she the victim. What had made her turn earlier, look into the late morning sun that at that angle revealed my web?

No time for idle contemplation. I move again, newly incensed with the realization she used Raid Flying Insect Spray intended for common gnats on me. I could have stared down the offending nozzle, jubilant once she abandoned the can.

But the broom? I couldn’t have known about the broom, and its fatal arching sweep that now separates me from that isolated filament. The bristles harbor the potential to impale, to dissemble.

Screw her. I ball up again, tumble about in the thicket of bristles, roll into the rosemary until she claims victory.

She walks through the garage and house a second time, returns to the gate, the sun again the back drop. She pauses to admire my web, still remarkably intact, twinkling under its noxious shroud before she consigns it to the shrubs and indifferent brick.

She hides the can of Raid behind the staked “Welcome” sign. An invitation for my return.