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"The Shitty Gas Station at the Edge of Town"

Saumyajeet_Singh
14
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Synopsis
Tucked away at the edge of town, past the old railroad tracks and where the streetlights stop working, there’s a run-down gas station that’s open all day, every day. It looks like any other forgotten gas station in the middle of nowhere—with dusty shelves, strange snacks, broken lights, and a creepy smell that never goes away. But this place is anything but normal. Strange things happen here. There’s a gang of weird, possibly mutated raccoons living in the crawlspace—led by Rocco, a huge raccoon who likes to chew on car tires. There’s also a mysterious man known as the bathroom cowboy, who sometimes appears in the restroom, handing out balloon animals or singing songs that give people strange feelings of peace. The only full-time worker is the narrator, who spends most of their time behind the counter, dealing with broken equipment, strange smells, and even stranger customers. From a drunk who says he insulted the devil, to an old lady who insists her never-seen children were taken during a storm, to a farmer whose animals grew human faces—everyone around here has a bizarre story. Whether it’s the eerie silence of the woods downhill, the strange folks who wander in from the forest, or the way things just seem… off—this gas station is more than just a place to fuel up. It’s a mystery, a warning, and a strange little world of its own. If you ever stop by, be careful. The weirdness might follow you home
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

 At the edge of town on the downhill side, beyond the abandoned

 railroad tracks to nowhere, past the point where the streetlights end but

 before the world disappears beneath a twisted canopy of oak and black

 willow trees, there's a shitty little gas station open twenty-four hours a day,

 seven days a week.

 There's nothing really special about the place. If you were to go

 inside, you would probably see the same boring components of any other

 perfectly normal gas station across the forgotten backroads of God's

 country: Shelves packed with off-brand chips, cookies, potted meats, and

 pickled curiosities. Walls decorated with beer advertisements and windows

 filled with broken neon signs. A notice board covered in dozens of missing

 persons posters. A pot of coffee brewing in the corner where that bloodstain

 keeps reappearing no matter how many times we clean it up. The steady

 mechanical hum of a frozen drink machine that hasn't been serviced since

 the Reagan administration. Random pockets of icy cold air that seem to

 move about of their own accord. And of course, that family of mutated

 raccoons living in the crawlspace behind the grease trap.

 Well, we think they're mutated anyway. At the very least, they're

 inbred to the point of genetic deformity. The alpha (a muscular, three-foot

tall son of a bitch named Rocco) has been caught multiple times chewing on

 customer's tires. So far, he's been run over on at least three different

 occasions. Yet he keeps coming back, stronger and dumber than ever.

 When it comes to upkeep, the gas station aims for "good enough" and

 usually misses. A faded wet floor sign sits atop a large crack in the

 foundation by the cooler where layers of sticky spill-off have formed a

 miniature tar pit, preserving countless insect corpses as well as the

 occasional small rodent. One of the doors on the cold drink case is held

 together with nothing but duct tape and prayers. And the smoke detector

 may or may not be an old frisbee.

 Year after year the health inspector, through some divine intervention,

 pure laziness, or simple old-fashioned bribery, has signed off on the

 business, kindly turning a blind eye to the "good-enough" fixes and a blind

 nose to that overwhelming aroma that hangs over the gas station. That

lingering smell--a sweet combination of honeysuckle, ammonia, and vomit--has never been positively identified, but the prevalent theory is that it's

 coming from underground, wafting up through the thin fissures in the

 concrete that grow and spread with each year of architectural settling. It's

 strongest right after a rain and tear-inducing if you get too close to the storm

 drains, where even Rocco and his clan refuse to tread.

 Were you to answer nature's call during your visit to the gas station,

 you might see the bathroom cowboy. He's sort of an urban legend around

 here, only ever appearing when you're alone and unsuspecting. Some

 people say he wears a long leather duster jacket, bandanna, jeans, chaps,

 and boots with spurs. Some say he wears nothing but a black Stetson

 cattleman, checkered boxers, and ornate tribal tattoos. Some folks have

 witnessed him handing out balloon animals or playing the harmonica; some

 claim that he sings to them with the voice of a southern angel while they're

 busy doing their business.

 Should you be lucky enough to see the cowboy who haunts the

 bathroom, don't worry. If he's real, he's harmless. And quite polite, to boot.

 Customers have reported a spiritual high after meeting him, and old Bob

 Hoover credits the encounter with curing his gout. Honestly, the cowboy

 doesn't seem so bad, especially compared to some of the other things you

 may encounter.

 If you do go inside, there's a great chance you won't see the cowboy,

 or the racoons, or anything that might register as out of the ordinary. But

 you will probably see me. After all, I'm the only full-time employee, which

 means I'm on the clock more often than not. Most of the time, you can find

 me sitting behind the counter by the cash register. You may catch me

 reading a book because, for some reason, the internet doesn't work way out

 there, and cell phone service is dicey on good days and nonexistent on

 most.

 If you need to make a phone call, you can leave and go up the hill,

 back towards town. (Definitely do not continue any further downhill, where

 the road snakes into the hungry mouth of a wild sweeping forest. Trust me.

 You don't want to know all the reasons that's not a good idea.)

 Alternatively, you can pay me twenty-five cents a minute to use the

 store's landline. That sacred arrangement was cooked up by the owners

years ago and yes, I have to actually enforce it because yes, they do check

 the phone records. I'm sorry.

 We get at least one new person every month wandering back into

 town from the woods (normally barefoot), sometimes claiming they've just

 escaped aliens or monsters or government conspirators or the like, and that

 they have no money but need to make a call and could I please let them use

 our store phone before "they" find them again? But rules are rules, and I'm

 not inclined to lose my job just because you didn't escape captivity with a

 little spare change in your pocket.

 If you're desperate, you can attempt to approach one of our regulars,

 but I wouldn't recommend it. Southern hospitality rarely extends to our

 usual clientele, and an outsider striking a conversation with one of the

 locals may end up being more trouble than it's worth.

 For instance, there's Clive Cornwall, a man who's fond of the bottle

 and always takes the case discount on whiskey. All he ever wants to talk

 about is the time he met the devil down at the local watering hole. He

 claims he insulted the fallen angel's rhinestone jacket, and now he's cursed

 to stay perpetually drunk or face the demons determined to drag him to hell.

 Then there's bitter old Mrs. Meares, who will happily gab for hours

 about her four missing children and how they were abducted one stormy

 night from right under her nose. Just don't ask her for any proof. The truth

 is nobody around here remembers her ever having any kids in the first

 place, least of all Mister Meares.

 And let us never forget Farmer Brown, or his famously short temper

 that he'd lose at even the slightest provocation. The last time he caused a

 scene, it was over the new brand of bulk feed we ordered for him. He

 insisted something must have been wrong with our product because, as he

 put it, all of his animals suddenly had "human faces." Unfortunately, you

 won't be able to ask him for any details. Not too long after the incident, the

 sheriff found what was left of his body down at the farmhouse, still

 clutching a loaded shotgun, with all the doors dead-bolted from the inside.

 As far as I know, they still haven't figured that one out.

 I guess the point I'm trying to make is this: weird things happen at the

 shitty gas station at the edge of town.