Cherreads

Chapter 5 - Chapter four

 When I got to work, I had about ten minutes to spare before I was

 scheduled to clock in, so I spent that time cleaning myself up and changing

 in the bathroom. I'd made a habit of keeping a box in the storage closet

 with a spare toothbrush and a change of clothes for days like this, and I took

 advantage of that fact more times than I could remember.

 I clocked in and grabbed a countdown sheet to take over the till from

 Miguel, the part time cashier with severe halitosis. It was his first week with

 us, and so far, he seemed to be doing okay. I asked him if I had missed

 anything exciting while I was gone.

 "Yeah," he answered, "That deputy stopped by and left you this."

 He handed me a rolled-up brown paper bag. Inside I found an old

 Nokia flip phone and a used paperback novel about robots on the moon. I

 made a mental note to thank old Tom the next time he came in.

 "Cool. Anything else?"

 "I got a weird phone call earlier from a guy named Farmer Junior."

 That was Farmer's oldest son, another local who was quickly turning into a

 real nuisance. "He asked if I knew anything about the 'hand plants.' When I

 told him I didn't know what he was talking about, he hung up on me."

 "Yeah, the Brown clan aren't exactly known for their social graces."

 "Also, one of the customers said he saw a half-naked man in the

 bathroom wearing a cowboy hat and juggling knives."

 "That happens."

 "Oh, and one more thing," he took off his nametag and handed it

 over, "I'm going to have to tender my resignation effective immediately. I

 can't take all these customers trying to put thoughts into our heads without

 our permission. This place is evil, and I need to get out before it's too late."

 This was a little surprising, but not completely unexpected. "Thanks

 for letting me know. We're going to miss you, Miguel."

 "My name is Rico."

 "Really?" He made a pouty face at me, and I looked at the nametag in

 my hand, which confirmed that he was indeed correct about his name.

 Oh, that's right, Miguel was the one with severe body odor.

Rico clocked out and left. He never gave us a forwarding address and

 never picked up his last paycheck and, as far as I know, nobody ever saw

 him again. I went into the back room where we post the schedule and

 penciled in my name next to all of his shifts for the upcoming week.

 When I got back to the counter, I noticed that somebody had left a

 stack of pamphlets next to the register. The image printed on the front was a

 simple black and white logo for the "Universal Fellowship of Mathmetists."

 Without giving it a second thought, I tossed the entire stack into the garbage

 and turned my attention to the bag that Tom had left for me.

 Not surprisingly, the phone didn't get reception way out there, and

 was effectively nothing more than a brick with a clock on it, but the book

 was a real lifesaver on a boring day like this. I'd already made it to chapter

 three before Antonio snapped me back to reality with a simple "Hey, Jack."

 Antonio was another one of the many part-timers on the gas station's roster.

 For some reason I'll never understand, the owners were always very wary

 about hiring any more "full-timers." Instead, they liked to hire transients,

 drifters, hitchhikers, passers-by and runaways looking for a few days' work.

 As a rule, I tried not to get to know them. Like Rico and Miguel, they

 would come and go after a few days, or sometimes a few weeks, rarely long

 enough to form any kind of meaningful relationship.

 But then there was Antonio ("Tony" if you're lazy), who by that point

 had been working with me for almost a year--a very solid second place for

 longest-term gas station employee. He started as part of the prison work

relief program from a neighboring county, tending the grounds and

 unloading trucks twice a week. He earned the owners' respect after

 becoming the only one of twelve prisoners who didn't disappear during a

 freak snowstorm last December (I never got all the details, but that story

 falls under the none-of-my-business category). Tony did his time, and after

 his release he came to work with us on a more permanent basis.

 On any normal work day, he would show up three times (morning,

 afternoon, and night) for each of his two-hour shifts, part of a super-special

 arrangement with the owners. And even though the store was never clean,

 and delivery trucks only come twice a week (exclusively during daylight

 hours following the so-called "bear attack"), I never bothered to ask what

 his official job was. In return, he never pried into my personal life. It was a

 solid relationship built on mutual respect and privacy, and at some point

along the way it dawned on me that he was probably the closest thing I had

 to a friend.

 I put my book down and said, "Hi."

 Usually, our conversations end after the first "Hey," or "Morning,"

 but that day Tony was a little more talkative than usual.

 "So, uh, I noticed that Tom was hanging around earlier. Everything

 alright?"

 "Oh, yeah. We got robbed again last night."

 "Dude, for real?"

 "Yeah."

 "Man, that sucks."

 "Yeah."

 "You alright?"

 "Why wouldn't I be?"

 "I don't know, man." He looked around the room. Something was

 clearly on his mind, but I had no idea what and no inclination to ask. After a

 moment, he turned back to me and said, "Well, if you need somebody to

 talk to about it, let me know."

 "Thanks," I responded.

 He left me to my book, and the rest of my shift passed without

 incident.

 ***

 After I had finished up and clocked out, I decided to stretch my legs

 and take a long walk into town. I had already spent eight hours sitting

 behind a counter, and nine hours sitting inside of a car, and I was getting

 worried that if I sat too much longer my butt would develop bed sores.

 The bank was already closed, so I wouldn't be able to get a new debit

 card until morning. Same thing for the electronics shop, so I was stuck with

 the paperweight phone for the time being. But there was one problem I

 could take care of right away. I needed a new book to read.

 As I walked up the hill and into town, I could feel the bright afternoon

 sun on my face, baking the earth around me, turning the thick, humid air

 into something comparable to hot soup. I was a couple blocks from the

 bookstore when the bottom of the sky fell out, and in a matter of seconds I

was drenched to my socks from the spontaneous rainstorm. A red truck sped

 past and swerved to hit a mud puddle next to the sidewalk and splash me.

 As it drove away, I could hear laughter coming from the cab and saw a hand

 extending a middle finger out of the passenger side window.

 At least they didn't throw a beer bottle at me this time.

 I live in the same small southern town where I was born and raised.

 It's the kind of place where, for fun, people do Civil War reenactments in

 the summer and meth in the winter. The kind of community where folks

 don't take too kindly to (fill in the blank). The kind of town where people

 wear t-shirts to funerals and bookstores are an anomaly, and the only thing

 keeping New Pages from shutting its doors for good was the owner's side

 business of selling marijuana out of the back room.

 We called him "Brother Riley," a leftover affectation from his days as

 a youth minister, before he opened his own book and records shop, "New

 Pages," which the church leaders immediately deemed "corrosive to the

 moral fabric of our community." There was a big to-do about it, ultimately

 culminating in an emergency meeting where they voted unanimously to

 excommunicate with prejudice.

 He had a long blonde ponytail, John Lennon glasses, and the start of a

 beer gut, and when he saw me walk into the store, drenched from head to

 toe, he didn't hesitate to say, "Hey man. You look like shit."

 "Yeah, plus I'm wet," I responded.

 That place always smelled like an old book--musty, yet inviting. The

 air and atmosphere were as warm as a campfire in winter, and even though I

 knew it was only a matter of time before the business folded from

 community pressure or financial necessity or the inevitable drug bust,

 coming in here always felt like coming home.

 I tried not to drip too badly while Brother Riley headed into the back

 room, leaving me alone with the racks of beguiling merchandise. While I

 waited for him to return, I remembered the doctor's instructions and did a

 quick scan of the bookshelves for any blank journals, but I was immediately

 distracted by that box set of fantasy novels I'd been looking at for a while. I

 still had a little cash left over from my emergency rainy day fund and

 couldn't imagine a more appropriate scenario than this to spend it.

 Before I realized he was back, Brother Riley pushed a beach towel

 into my arms and said, "Looks like the devil's been beating his wife again."

I looked out the window for a second and responded, "Yeah, I guess

 you're right."

 In case you're confused, that's an expression where I'm from. When

 the sun is out, and the sky is clear blue, and there isn't a cloud in sight but

 somehow, it's still pouring down raining, we say that the devil is beating his

 wife.

 "Need any help finding anything?" he asked.

 "Well, actually, I happen to be in the market for a journal."

 "What, like a word journal?" He squinted his eyes at me like I had

 somehow offended his sensibilities.

 "Exactly."

 "Well shoot, man. You may as well save your money and do a blog

 instead."

 "A blog?" I asked.

 "It's what all the other kids are doing these days. It's like a real

 journal, only with the added perk of judgmental strangers telling you how

 they feel about it every step of the way."

 Honestly, that prospect didn't exactly sound appealing, but I was

 willing to give free a shot.

 He pointed me in the direction of the old desktop he kept in the corner

 for public use, next to a coffee-stained blue bean bag chair and a laminated

 sign that read "Absolutely no porn! (looking at you, Kevin)."

 If I hadn't been stranded there, waiting for the rainstorm to subside, I

 probably wouldn't have gone through the effort. But with nothing else to do

 to pass the time, I decided "Why not?"

 I took a seat and spent the next hour building a bare and mostly basic

 website (I'm not very artistic). Then I made my first blog entry:

 "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..."

 I've put a lot of thought into everything that happened since this

 moment. I've carefully reconstructed the events, restacked the dominoes,

 and walked backwards through all the deaths and explosions and demonic

 incantations, and I've consistently come to the same realization.

Everything leads back to this seemingly innocuous instant.

 Everything to come could have been completely averted if I had never sat

 down at this computer. Never built this website. Never told my story to the

 world. As I finished my post and clicked submit, as the winds changed and

 doom began its unholy voyage to our town, I wondered silently to myself if

 anyone would ever even read my story.

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