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“Ghostbox” by Rich Meneghello

Ghostbox

Rich Meneghello

MONDAY

Have you ever thought about what’s going to happen to all those big box stores now that they’re all closing down? One day there’s a Circuit City in the Market Square Shopping Center and the next day it’s boarded up and empty. One day you shop at a Linens N Things at the Meadowbrook Crossing and one day you can’t anymore because it’s just an empty shell. The Borders at the edge of town is gone, too, and you used to love going there. But now it’s a vacant hole in the middle of an even-more-vacant parking lot. The companies that own them have a public name for these places: “dark stores.” Like they’re just temporarily dark, like the one night a week a Broadway show gives it a rest, as if soon they will be light again once everyone gets their act together. But inside the industry, out of the eyes of the public, we fixers call them something else: ghostboxes. Because they’re dead and empty and haunted, and even though I’m coming to town to flip a switch so one isn’t dark anymore, that light won’t last. Not really. Once they’re dead, they’re dead.

There aren’t many too many fixers like me out there. At least, not many good ones. It’s a tougher job than it looks, it requires just the right touch. See, what I do is figure out what should be done with the ghostbox once it’s dead. Sometimes I get hired by the city if it owns the property that’s gone to shit, but mostly I’m on retainer for the corporate giant that shut down the store but is still on the hook for the taxes. You can’t just knock down the building and start over, no way. Not anymore. The environmentalists will be all over your ass for creating waste and the big carbon footprint. Plus who’s going to pay to acquire that land and then build something else there? It would be like building a house over an Indian graveyard. No ma’am, there is no market demand for something like that, none whatsoever.

Instead, you gotta get creative. You have to breathe an afterlife into that 100,000 square foot monstrosity, figure out how best to reclaim that large single room, twice as big as a football field but with no windows and bad lighting, so that a few more dollars can be squeezed out of it. The lazy fixers take the easy path: they find some two-bit hustler who wants to open an indoor go-cart track. They work out a deal with a company that’ll make the ghostbox into a roller-skating rink in the summer, a Halloween haunted house in the fall, a ghetto ice-skating joint in the winter. They negotiate with a guy who’s going to cram a call center into a corner of the space and work the phones 24 hours a day. Not me. I’m an artist. That’s why I’m the best goddamn fixer alive and I have 17 jobs lined up after this one.

Usually I like to spend a whole week in town so I can get a feel for things, get a better sense of what will fit best in the ghostbox. That’s something most fixers don’t do. But even though I’m booked to be here through Friday, I really won’t need a full week for this job. I used to live here, before I went full-time on the road as a fixer four years ago. I know all about this place: where the kids hang out, what the old guys talk about at the diner, where the moms in yoga pants spend their afternoons, all that. In fact, I already have a pretty good idea of what I’m going to pull together to fill the old abandoned Bed Bath & Beyond in Crescent Hill Plaza. No, the only reason I’m going to spend five days in town is because Julia still lives here.

TUESDAY

It’s 2:00 in the afternoon and it’s just me and some guy from the city zoning commission standing in the empty parking lot outside the ghostbox. These guys like to do their business over the phone or, worse yet, at their crappy depressing government office. But I insist on making my meetings with them a site visit. Getting them out there standing next to the hulking, decrepit old store often does wonders to move the process along.

“I’m just not seeing it, Mr. Chambers,” he says, shaking his head with a tight little expression on his face. “I don’t see how your employer expects us to negotiate down the missed tax payments and allow you to just waltz right in here with some fly-by-night subtenant. I don’t see why we’d allow that sort of – ”

My phone rings, interrupting him. Normally I keep it on vibrate, that’s the professional thing to do. But today is different. I look to see who was calling, then look up at him while pointing at the phone and say, almost apologetically, “I gotta take this.”

“Well – ”

I don’t stick around to hear what he says. I answer the call while walking away a few steps.

“It’s certainly a surprise to hear from you, Jules,” smiling and smooth and calm as can be.

“Really? Cause you left me four messages this morning.”

“I wasn’t sure if your voicemail was working. I wanted to be sure you got my message.”

“Oh, I got your message,” she says with her sarcastic laugh, “and the next three messages too.”

God, it’s good to hear her voice again. I tell her so. “God, it’s good to hear your voice again. How long has it been? Like three or four years?”

She sighs. “What do you want, Patrick?”

This is going great. I’m surprised she called me back so quickly, and I’ve already kept her on the line longer than I thought I would. “Well, I just thought you would want to know that I’m back in town. I’m going to be here all week.”

“Oh my God, are you for real?” she says, but not in a happy sort of way. This isn’t going so great.

The zoning guy interrupts me, he had walked over to where I had wandered. “Mr. Chambers – I have a meeting at 2:30 so we really must –”

I scowl and turn my back on him and cover my free ear with my hand.

“Listen, Jules. I’d like to see you, really. It’s been too long,” and just like that I was talking into a dead phone because she had hung up on me somewhere around “I’d like to see you.” I wasn’t too worried, I had known it would take a little work. I realize I am smiling.
“Mr. Chambers, please. Unless you can convince me…”

I turn my attention back to him and listen to him for a few more minutes, letting him vent and get his point across. I nod a couple of times, too, showing him that I am listening and acknowledging what he is saying. Just as he’s gathering up some steam, I hold up my hand and start talking over him.

“OK, look. Here’s the deal. The city’s going to approve this. I know it, and you know it, so let’s stop bullshitting each other. For one thing, you’ve got so many vagrants and meth heads crawling through this shit heap that I’m surprised your car hasn’t been broken into in the five minutes we’ve been here. I know the other tenants around here are bitching about it and threatening to leave town unless you do something, so I know you want to fill this space like now. So here’s what’s going to happen. I’ll find a subtenant for this space by the end of the week and they’ll agree to pay 20% of what Bed Bath & Beyond was paying in monthly taxes.” He opens his mouth to talk. “Nuh-uh-uh – I’m not done,” I say, holding up my hand again with one finger extended like I was telling a kindergartner not to interrupt. “They’ll move in within two months and this disgusting blight will be gone and your other tenants will calm the hell down. You’ll be the big hero because you even brought in some new tax revenue. Meanwhile you’ll let us pay down the outstanding tax payments within three years at zero interest. You can issue a press release about how you reclamated this land and did it in an environmentally friendly way and all that horseshit and no one will complain about the taxes. The voters will love it.” He starts to say something else but I continue, just a little louder. “And if you don’t approve the deal, have fun explaining how all this fell apart. My people are in bed with the holding company that owns the Times-Courier, and they’ll start a 10-part series about how corrupt you are and how the rest of your zoning commission are incompetent fuckwits if I give them the word.”

I pull a business card out of my pocket and hold it out to him.

“I’m going to be here the rest of the week finding a subtenant that works for this space. Call me by Thursday to tell me we have a deal. My cell phone number is on here.” He doesn’t move, so I slide the card into his jacket pocket and pat it for good measure.

I always include my cell phone number on my business card. That’s the professional thing to do.

WEDNESDAY

Nothing much happened on Wednesday. Well, the zoning guy called me late in the morning. I let it go to voice mail and then listened to his message right after. Of course the city agreed to the deal. In order to save face a little he told me that they would need to approve the tenant that I found for the space to make sure it was consistent with the city code and appropriate in all respects and blah blah blah. That afternoon I started working to finalize the deal with the new tenant I’d lined up.

Oh, and Julia agreed to meet with me. That’s the big news from the day. (I’m trying to do that thing where you say, “It was your pretty average day, I just hit the lottery, that’s all” or “Things were pretty dull today, except for discovering life on Mars, you know.” I’m not really good at expressing my feelings, so I sometimes try to downplay the really good or really bad things.)

We’re going to meet up after work tomorrow night at the Valleyview Game Center. It’s set up where the old Woolworth discount department store used to be. It was the first ghostbox I converted here in town right before I took to the road. It’s now one of those places where adults can go to play around. You know, bowling in one area, video arcade in another, mini-golf over here, karaoke over there. Just like one of the kid fun centers, but with alcohol. I’ve scouted it out two straight nights and each night it’s been pretty crowded with the after-work happy hour crowd, pretty lively. It’ll be perfect.

How’d I get Julia to agree to meet with me? Consider that a trade secret. Let’s just say I’m a pretty persuasive guy when I need to be.

I will say this. I’ve found that the best way to sell is to do more listening than talking. Figure out your customer’s pain point and then explain to them that you are the person who can solve that particular problem. I’ve never understood this: how can you sell a pen to someone if you don’t know whether they even need a pen? No, it’s better to sit and listen and listen some more and then once you know what it is they need, you transform what you are selling into that very thing that’s going to solve their problem. So with Julia, I know she’s perpetually lonely. She just is, that’s her thing. She’s the kind of person who can be at a party and feel sad because she thinks she’s alone. I remember once we were on a romantic getaway weekend and strolling down the street at dusk after dinner, and she looked up at this building with apartments or condos or whatever. All of a sudden she just started crying. She told me that at first she thought the dozens of glowing lights in the windows of the building were beautiful, but then the more she thought about it, the more she started to feel sad because she imagined all the people in those apartments were doing things that she wasn’t doing. She felt left out, she said.

Another example: I’ve always been a pretty sound sleeper. Near the end, when things weren’t going so good, Julia and I would tend to fight with each other in the evening. That was our special “argument time.” She’d be all wound up from work and then the cooking and cleaning and whatnot, and I’d come home from working late, and then we’d fight. Anyway, I was always able to fall asleep just fine, but she had this thing where she couldn’t sleep after we fought but would just lay there in bed, wide awake most of the night. One morning I woke up and she looked awful; she hadn’t slept a wink. She told me that never in her life had she felt lonelier than she had that night, laying there next to me, waiting for me to wake up. That morning was the last time I’d seen her. I left town that afternoon.

Long story short, Julia’s a lonely person and I’m going to solve that problem for her tomorrow night. But I’ve probably said too much already. I didn’t get to be so good at my job by just giving away all my secrets.

THURSDAY

“I’ve convinced quite a few churches to take over ghostboxes. That always cracks me up.” I smile broadly to show how good-humored I am over the whole thing and Julia takes the bait.

“Are you serious? Churches?” she says with a laugh.

“Oh, yeah. You go down South or into the Midwest and they treat their religion in a lot more of a functional way than the rest of the country does.” I tick off the reasons with my fingers. “Those empty stores can fit a whole lot of people, they have a ton of parking, and because there’s no windows, it’s pretty easy to regulate the temperature. That’s really important when most of your customers are old people.”

“I don’t think they call them customers,” she says, sipping at her drink. “Congregants.”

“Right. Congregants,” I say, and then I laugh.

We’re in the biggest bar area of the Game Center, right near the stage where karaoke is being sung poorly but quite gamely by a group of office workers with a fairly large crowd around us. ‘Love Will Keep Us Together’ by Captain and Tennille.

We stop chatting for a minute and watch the performance. Jules turns to me and smiles. “Woof,” she says.

“I know, right?”

“You’d never catch me doing that,” she says, clearly wanting to do that. “So, you’re only in town through tomorrow, huh?”
“Here’s your hat, what’s your hurry?” I say, good-naturedly.

“No,” she says, laughing, “I didn’t mean it like that.”

“It’s OK. Yeah, just through tomorrow. I have a flight to Reno at around noon.”

“Going to turn a Kmart into a synagogue?”

I can’t tell if she’s being critical or not, so I just let it slide and act like she’s being playful.

“Ha-ha. No, this time I’m working with a 75,000 square foot abandoned Ross Dress For Less. This will be an easy sell, though, I think, I should wrap it up in a day. I already have a commitment from a community college to convert the store into their new satellite campus.”

“Now you’re screwing with me.”

“No, swear to God! I’ve done a bunch of community colleges and trade schools and that sort of thing. Huge market out there for that, and no one wants to build anything new.” I tip back my beer and the song ends; there’s applause and cheering from the crowd. Julia joins in for a minute, turning towards them and giving a few whoops. I enjoy just looking over at her while she’s distracted. I missed looking at her.

She turns back to me and could probably tell I was looking at her. She just smiles and looks down. “Well, I’m glad everything is going well for you, Patrick. I really am.”

I’m about to say something back to her when the karaoke announcer yells into his microphone, “It’s 6:00 o’clock, and that means that our Challenge Hour is about to begin! If you get challenged to sing, you can’t refuse, or you’ll face public humiliation and the scorn of your peers. Are you ready!”

By the sound of the yelling and hollering, the crowd is quite clearly ready.

“Our first challenge victim is – oh, right, this is a special one. We received this request two nights ago from someone who wanted to make sure they were first tonight. OK, is Julia Pershing here?”

Julia’s head pivots towards mine and her eyes are enormous.

“No you didn’t,” she says.

“Yes I did,” I say. I raise my hand and yell over to the announcer, “Here she is!” The crowd cheers.

A few minutes later and she’s up on stage, looking pretend-terrified but happy to have the attention. She’s got a pretty good voice and she knows it. The announcer queues up the song: “Here it is, Julia! Your challenge song – ‘I Want You Back,’ by the Jackson 5!”

The bass line begins and the guitar intro starts and the crowd is yelling and Jules is laughing at having to sing in a young-Michael-Jackson-falsetto. But once she starts to sing the words, she realizes what I’m trying to say to her and she gives me a look. Just for a second, but it was definitely a look. For the rest of the song, though, she doesn’t look back at me at all.

***

We’re on the first hole of the mini-golf course, and she’s trying to knock her ball through a five-foot plastic white whale.

“So this is supposed to be Moby Dick,” I tell her. She looks up at me. “The guy who owns this place has an English Lit master’s degree from UCLA. Each golf hole is secretly supposed to represent some great work of literature.”

She’s trying to gauge whether I’m pulling her leg. “Shut up.”

I hold up my hands defensively to show I’m telling the truth and explain: “English Lit degrees aren’t really worth a whole lot these days. You gotta do what you gotta do. And this guy is cleaning up with this place, trust me.”

She shrugs and lines up her putt. “Call me Ishmael, bitch,” she says as she knocks the ball towards the whale’s mouth.

***

We’re on the third hole, trying to navigate an area marked by undulating hills and crests (“Valley of the Ashes,” I explain. “Gatsby”), when Julia asks me about my job. “Do you like it?” she asks.

I stop my swing and look up at her. “Do I like it.” A long pause. “Well, I’m good at it.”

“That’s not the same thing,” she says.

I decide how to answer her question. “Want to hear my personal favorite conversion I pulled off? I single-handedly put together the deal that saw an old ghostbox that used to be a Kmart in Austin, Minnesota turned into the national Spam Museum. Seriously – look it up if you don’t believe me!” She’s laughing now, and I’m on a roll. “This godforsaken town in the middle of nowhere, 15 miles north of Iowa and 100 miles from anything worth a damn, is now the home of a 67,000 square foot monument dedicated to a canned meat product. Hundreds and hundreds of people visit that each day. That deal alone would get me into my industry Hall of Fame if there was one.”

She’s laughing still, but she asks anyway, “Right, but do you like it?”

I heave a sigh. “You know what I like? I like seeing the results of what I do.” I spread my arms out wide and point around the Game Center with my golf club. “Like this. I like looking around and seeing what these things can become. I don’t know, I guess I think everything deserves a second chance.”

She ignores that one and turns around and putts her ball away.

***

The sixth hole looks just like your classic mini-golf windmill.

“Don Quixote,” she says.

“Bingo.”

After we finish the hole, I say to her, “You know, it’s still sort of a secret but I can tell you now. I finalized a deal today to turn the old Bed Bath & Beyond in Crescent Hill Plaza. By October, it’s going to be the first indoor dog play park in the city. People can take their dogs there and let them run around with other dogs out of the rain and snow, and there will be a day care area, too.”

She nods and says, “Hm. That sounds good.” Nothing more.

I’m a little surprised at her reaction. For the first time all night, I’m thrown off a bit. “Y-yeah. It will be good. Real good. You can take Lucy there, she’ll love it. I know you always hate to walk her in the rain.”

“Lucy’s dead, Patrick.”

“Oh. Oh. Oh, I’m sorry, Julia.”

“She died two years ago. She was an old dog.”

I’m an idiot. “Really, I am so sorry.”

She just nods a few times. “Yeah, well. She died. I have a new dog now. Max. I got him as a puppy last year.”

“Oh. Well, there you go! You can take Max. I think they’re gonna call it ‘Dog Town’ or something like that. You’ll love it.”

“Yeah. It sounds great.”

***

The eleventh hole is a tribute to Romeo and Juliet. You have to walk up a short flight of stairs to a fake balcony, built cheaply like on the set of a play, and then knock the ball down a spiral ramp until it spills out onto the green.

Julia’s up on the balcony and knocks the ball down while I remain down on the ground. She looks down over the balcony rail to see where the ball spits out, and after seeing it carom off the wall and within inches of the hole, she takes a dramatic bow.

I slow-clap a few times and she raises her head.

“Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair!” I call up to her.

“Wrong story, buddy. You’re mixing your literary metaphors.”

“Really?” I say. “I thought that was part of the same story.”

She looks down at me over the balcony rail with mock sternness. “You have an annoying habit of making me wonder whether or not you’re serious just about every time you say something.”

“Hey, Jules. I want to move back to town. I want to be with you again.”

The playful smile on her face melts into something that is technically still a smile, but not really. “See?” she says. “Like that.” She shakes her head slowly. “Patrick. Oh, Patrick. We were having such a good time tonight.”

“I know. I know! And that’s the way it could be again. Don’t you want to have fun like this again?”

“You really think a night playing mini-golf is real? Look at this place! I’m standing on a goddamn Shakespearean balcony. This isn’t reality. There’s no bedroom back here, you know.”

A mother and father and their two young kids are at the beginning of the hole now, waiting their turn to begin. “Umm – are you guys almost done?” the father asks.

“Give us a minute,” I say. I turn back up to Julia. “No, look, I know this isn’t real, but that’s not what I mean. I mean us, together. Isn’t this good? Don’t you want this again?”

Now she looks angry and her voice is raised a little bit and things are getting a little awkward. “YOU LEFT ME, PATRICK. You just picked up and left and you were gone and I was left with nothing. NOTHING. Did you really think I was just going to sit around and wait for you to come back into my life? Did you think I just put everything on hold waiting for you?”

“Jules, I’m sorry. Really. Come down, we’ll talk about it.”

“No. I don’t want to come down.”

“Julia, honey, this nice family wants to play this hole and they can’t until you come down.”

“Well they can PLAY. THROUGH.” she says loudly.

I look over at the family and smile. “You can just play through.”

The father says thanks quietly and they line up to play.

I look back up at her. “Julia, I’m different now. I figured out what I want. I don’t want to do this anymore. I just want to be here with you.”

“You are unbelievable.”

One of the kids putts his ball and it hits me in the foot. “Sorry there, champ,” I say. I tap it with my club towards the hole. “There you go.”

I look back up at the balcony. “Julia, I love you. I’ve always loved you. I’ve never stopped loving you.”

Now she looks pissed. “You think you can say that and then I’ll let you fuck me tonight, is that it?”

The mother and father look over at me. I half-shrug and try to laugh, pointing up at the balcony rail. “Heh. Romeo and Juliet, you know?”

They pick up their balls and grab their kids by the shoulders and hustle off onto the next hole, leaving me and Julia alone once again.

“Jules, please, come down.”

“I’ve figured it out. I know why you’re so good at your job. Because you’re a – what did you call it? A ghost town?”

“Ghostbox,” I correct her.

“Ghostbox!” she yells. “A ghostbox. You’re a ghostbox, Patrick. You came into my life with such promise and you were wonderful and you said you’d be different and you said you’d be there. I started to rely on you! I got used to you being there. You were a regular part of my life, and even though you had problems, that was OK, because we all have problems. I have problems. I was so upset when the Barnes and Noble closed down. I really like books and it sucks to have to look at everything online. I had to change my whole life when they left! Barnes and Noble wasn’t perfect and they had a crappy mystery section but I still liked going there. And then one day, just like that, you were gone!”

“I know. I know.”

“You were gone. You were gone! Just an empty space. And I was left having to figure out a new way of doing things without you.” She’s crying now. Her voice had gotten quiet.

“Julia, I am – so – sorry. I messed up, and I hurt you. I know that. But I want a second chance. I – I’ve changed. Look, you know what I do? Transforming things? I can do that, too. Me. I can be better.”

“Patrick.”

“No, really! If I’m a ghostbox, if that’s what you think I am? Well, I can change. I’m the best at it! Really!”

She has her head down now, resting on the balcony rail.

“Jules, look at this place! It’s great now, isn’t it? It’s like me! It’s all different. It’s better. It can be better, I promise.”

“It’s not real,” she says softly, head still down.

“What?”

She picks up her head and looks at me. She’s not crying anymore. “I said it’s not real. This won’t be here one day. It’s all just temporary.”

“I’ll be here. I promise.”

“You’re leaving tomorrow. You’re going to Reno.”

“Not if you say so. Not if you say you want me to stay.”

“Just leave, Patrick.”

“You mean, leave as in tonight leave? Or tomorrow leave.”

“Please. Just leave.”

“Jules, listen. OK. I’ll leave now. I will. I’ll let you come down from there whenever you want. But if you want me to stay for good, just call me tomorrow before noon.”

She doesn’t respond. She’s looking at me but she looks numb.

“Just call me before noon, that’s when my flight boards. If you call me before then, I’ll quit my job, I’ll stay and move back to town. We’ll take it slow, we’ll figure it out together.”

“Goodbye, Patrick.”

“You have my number, Julia. Please call.”

FRIDAY

I’m sitting at the gate and it’s five minutes before my flight is supposed to board. I have my phone in my hand and I look down at it every few seconds to make sure it’s on and still working.

Dealing with ghostboxes is tricky business. You can’t really recapture the magic, not really. Things will never be the same there. You can’t take a blown-out retail store and turn it into another new retail store. That won’t work, the customers won’t like it. Like you can’t take a JC Penney and turn it into one of those buy-it-for-a-dollar stores. The customers will be walking around looking at shadows and expecting things to be the same as the previous store, and they won’t be. They won’t be the same and people will get angry. Instead, if you want it to work, you have to transform it completely. Listen, you might not believe me, but you have to trust me. I’m the best goddamn fixer alive.

I look down at my phone.

~~

© 2015 Rich Meneghello

“Getting the Boot!” by Bill Richardson

Getting the Boot!

Bill Richardson

Uncle Bill

Anchor Point, Alaska

Hi folks,

Here’s hoping all’s well with everyone. I thought I’d share an adventure I had a week ago.

What had started out as a simple shopping trip turned out to be some adventure. As you know from the ex my lists are very short as I don’t like being in crowds. The sooner I can purchase what I need the sooner I can get out of a store.

Well anyway, a discount department store down the street was having a sale on wooden railings and since I’m a building a small stage for that new bar next to Dad’s liquor store, I thought I’d check out what might be available.

Sure enough there was a huge crowd in every aisle. I struggled to stay focused and slowly worked my way directly to the wood area.

My design plans were for a low rail barrier across the front of the main stage to keep the audience from sitting on the edge. I wanted the railing to have a flourish to it, but for it not to be real fancy, and it had to be strong wood. And I wanted to be able to fasten it real well so it could take quite a bit of force if people leaned against it.

So I spotted a balcony rail of oak that was 16 foot long. Can you believe that? A 16 foot oak balcony rail was being sold in a discount department store? For real!

Just as I reached over and grabbed the rail a little old lady stomped right on my foot and yelled, “You can’t have that. I want it.” I’m sure glad she was wearing Xtra Tuff boots or I would have been in some real pain.

Now get this:

I tried to explain that I had it first, but she insisted that since she was much older than me; smaller by two feet and about 100 pounds less weight; and that her retirement income was barely making her life bearable, she deserved to have this particular item!

I almost let her have it verbally, but then something about her demeanor made me stop and ask, “If your income is barely enough to live on, why do you want to buy something like this?”

“Sonny,” she said. “I don’t really need it. I just wanted to talk to someone and you seem like a good choice. Go ahead and take it. What’re you going to do with it?”

“I’m building a sound area for a new bar down the street. This railing will work great to keep people from sitting on the stage edge.”

“Sound stage in a bar? Why?”

“Lots of people like to sing. They think they sound more professional I guess, and maybe karaoke helps them.”

“Well young man you have a very nice voice. You should try singing ‘kerry okee’, or ‘kare okay’, or whatever they call it. I’m going to go stomp on some more toes. You have a nice day.”

She just smiled and walked away. That woman was strange. I don’t like strange.

So anyway I got the railing and had to keep from hitting people with it as I got to the checkout stand.

At the car I really wondered what I was going to do next. As you know my ex left me with that little old Volkswagen Beetle. Ever try to tie a 16 foot board onto an 8 foot long car?

Finally, I got the job done, but the rig looked like a jouster without a horse!

I’ll cut to the chase. The railing job went fine. I tested it several times by banging into it. It held strong.

The first night the bar opened there was a huge crowd. Now I stayed way off to one side to keep an eye on the railing until I was sure it was going to do its job.

Along about midnight I decided to go home when I noticed that the next singer was that little old lady from the discount store. She was dressed to the nines in a long white dress with pearl necklace and earrings.

When she started singing the place went quiet. What a beautiful voice! And can you believe she sang “These boots are made for walking!” Just as she finished she looked directly at me, grinned, and kicked her foot up into the air. She was wearing her Xtra Tuff boots!

Well, time to go. Write when you can and enjoy your journey!

Love ya’,

Uncle Bill

© 2015 Bill Richardson

“Nameless” by Ashley Ellingson

Nameless

Ashley Ellingson

She drifted through the aisles, running her fingertips over family-size packages of paper towels and flimsy beach cover-ups. The air held a hint of disinfectant but it was still overpowered by mustiness. Her shoes squeaked on the linoleum. She shifted her heavy tote bag from one shoulder to the other as she gazed at neon sale signs pointing to rows of plastic dishes. Other shoppers ignored her and she wondered if she was real. She didn’t feel human. She was a former human. An ex-human.

In the baby aisle, a yellow onesie caught her eye. Blue elephants were stamped on the cotton. She picked it up and then put it down. She picked it up again and walked quickly to the cash registers. The cashier barely looked at her during the transaction. As she walked outside into the drizzly rain, she shoved the onesie into her tote bag.

A man stood near the curb next to a box of wriggling puppies. “Free puppies,” he said, smiling at her.

“No, thanks.”

“Come on,” he said, picking up a puppy.

Even though she didn’t want to touch it, she reached out. The puppy looked up at her with mournful eyes and licked her chin.

“I can’t,” she mumbled, looking at her feet.

The man took the puppy from her arms and when she raised her eyes, he was staring at her quizzically. She knew he was looking at her disheveled hair or her blotchy complexion.

“I’m Ethan,” he said. He was young, she guessed. Barely twenty-one.

“I have to go.” She walked away, wrapping her scarf around her neck.

“What are you doing tonight?” Ethan called.

She turned around. He was grinning, his smile so bright that it seemed to cut through the mist.

“Why?”

“Let’s go out.”

She nearly grimaced. “Why?”

“C’mon. Meet me at Jasper’s on 15th. 7:30. We’ll sing karaoke.”

“I don’t sing,” she said, walking away.

“I’ll be there at 7:30,” he called as she retreated.

She was there again the next day, wandering from aisle to aisle, examining plants and birdfeeders. Her shoes were different and they didn’t squeak, but without the noise she felt invisible. The store employees averted their eyes and gave her a wide berth as she passed. She came to the baby aisle, and this time, she picked up a small plastic rattle. Shaking it gently, she listened. It sounded muffled and far away and she wondered if the rattle also wasn’t real. She checked out, the cashier wordlessly taking her crumpled money, and dropped the rattle into her large tote bag.

Ethan was outside again but his box held fewer puppies.

“It’s you,” he said, smiling like she was a friend.

“I don’t want a puppy.”

“Are you sure? There are only a few left. They need homes.”

“They need good homes,” she said, turning away.

“I didn’t see you at Jasper’s.”

“I don’t know you. Why would I go there?”

“Because it seems like you need some fun. I’m fun. And I’m a good listener.”

“I don’t need fun,” she said. “Good bye.”

“I’ll be there if you change your mind!”

Her apartment was dark and empty. She turned on every light and sat in the armchair, her bag on her lap. Sitting there, she barely held a coherent thought as the afternoon passed languorously. As she often did, she pictured molasses oozing from the bottle, a state she feared her mind was approaching. Nonetheless, when she finally stood, it was to shake out a few pills from the bottle near the sink. She took a drink of water and checked her watch. Ethan would be at the bar. She didn’t want to go but she found herself opening the door and locking it behind her.

Jasper’s was quiet but it was also the middle of the week. Christmas lights were strung from the ceiling and the wooden bar was dinged and scratched from years’ worth of drunken patrons. She sat on a stool with a torn vinyl seat. A dank smell permeated every surface.

“It’s you!”

She turned to see Ethan approaching.

“I didn’t think you’d show,” he said, sitting next to her.

“I didn’t think I would either,” she said, hugging her bag to her chest.

“What are we drinking?” he asked.

She shrugged.

“Two vodka tonics, please,” Ethan said to the bartender, sliding money across the bar.

“What are you going to sing?” she asked once they had their drinks.

“Not sure what I’m in the mood for. You?”

“I told you I’m not singing.”

“Your loss. It’s good for the soul,” he said with a wink.

“Is that supposed to be some sort of platitude?” she asked.

“I wouldn’t dream of boring you with such banality,” he said. “Besides, that would be presuming that I know something about you.”

“If you don’t want to bore me, then you’d best start singing.”

“The pressure!” he exclaimed, finishing his drink in one swallow.

Amused despite herself, she watched him on the small stage. He sang a song she recognized but couldn’t name, something upbeat with a Motown feel. Ethan spun around energetically, gesturing at her with the microphone during parts of the song. She nearly smiled, suddenly realizing she couldn’t remember the last time she wanted to do so. Surprised, she finished her drink.

“How was I?” he asked when he returned.

She clapped slowly. “Not bad. Not good, but not bad.”

Ethan laughed. “I’ll take it. You’re up.”

“No.”

“Just go look. See if there’s something that speaks to you.”

“Okay, fine.” She didn’t know why she was humoring him. Rising to her feet, she placed her tote bag on the seat and went to the stage. Quickly, she flipped through the karaoke book even though she had no intention of singing. As she returned to her seat, she was shocked to see Ethan rummaging through her bag.

She rushed over and pulled the bag from his hands. “What are you doing?” Anger flashed through her, nearly cutting through the deep fog. “That’s mine.”

Ethan looked stricken. “I’m sorry. I was just curious. Why…why do you have that with you?”

“What?” She took a step away from him.

“You know. That club. Or bat. Whatever it is.”

“It’s not a bat. It’s a rail. A rail from a balcony.”

He frowned. “Why? And what’s with all the baby stuff?”

His face wavered before her eyes and she blinked slowly until her vision cleared. She clutched at her drink with a shaking hand but there was nothing left but melted ice.

“The rail is from my husband.”

“Your husband.”

“Yes. I used to have a husband. He killed himself last year.”

There was a long pause.

“He tied a rope around this railing and jumped off our balcony.”

“I see,” Ethan said. “And the baby clothes?”

“We used to have a baby.”

Ethan nodded.

There was another pause.

“I have something for you,” Ethan said. “Follow me.”

She did follow, not knowing what else to do.

A puppy sat outside the bar next to a bowl of water. Ethan untied the puppy. “This is the puppy you held yesterday. Take him, please. You’ll give him a good home.”

“What’s his name?” she asked.

“Whatever you want. But how about you give me your bag? I’ll keep it safe.”

Her brain was slow and fuzzy but it seemed like it might be a good idea. “Ok.” She held it out to him. Ethan took the bag and gave her the puppy in return. His fur was impossibly soft.

“See you tomorrow at the store?” Ethan asked.

“Ok.” She turned, feeling the puppy’s heart beat lightning-fast against her chest.

“Hey, what’s your name?” he shouted.

“I’ll tell you tomorrow.”

© 2015 Ashley Ellingson

 

“Between the Whiskers” by Nikki Hyson

Between the Whiskers

Nikki Hyson

“Attention Wal-Mart shoppers. The time is now—”

I sighed, breath ruffling my whiskers. Everything was a joke with this one.

Cass, manager of Bailey’s Discount Emporium, didn’t take it as lightly. “Matt!”

The redhead brayed loudly, hand not quite covering the phone he held. Echoes of his amusement rolled over the sales floor, penetrating my hidey hole. I couldn’t help it. My lip curled, tail twitching.

Not that he’d notice. Matt seemed to only focus on the ridiculous and the sublime. The later often secured me a bite of sardines on crackers, so I was willing to forgive the audible intrusion.

“Sorry.” Patting a hand to the air separating him from my frustrated girl. “Sorry.”

Cassandra. Cass. Never Cassie. My girl. She sucked in what should have been fuel for a long suffering sigh, swallowed it, and shook her head. “Just make the announcement. Correctly.”

Turning his back to her, presumably to stem the possibility of further laughter, Matt lifted the receiver back to his mouth.

Curious, I raised my head from two immaculate, white-tipped paws. Would he be able to resist a repeat performance? Even though Cass only brought me to work one night a week, I paid attention. I listened. Statistically, the odds weren’t in his favor.

Before a word could be uttered, Cass snatched me from the bookshelf behind the cash register. Cuddling me close, she dropped a kiss to the velvet between my ears. Her fingers reaching the spot only she could find, my engine fired. I purred. She swayed slowly from side to side.

“Attention shoppers. The time is now 7pm and we are closed for the evening. At this time—”

Jen neared, “Cass, where do you want me to set up the scanners and such?”

I nearly hissed at the intrusion, but the younger woman was an ally. Against Him. They all were. I made sure of it the day Cass tried to hide her bruises with a too baggy sweater. One perfectly timed rub to lift the sleeve cuff and—

Cass, blessedly, didn’t stop her ministrations. “Let’s clear off that table. Stack the dishes with the rest of the china. And did you order enough food?”

Jen, a quiet girl who petted me only when she thought no one was watching, nodded. “One cheese, one veggie, and a supreme. They said we could be the last order.”

“Good. We’ll just take home the leftovers.”

“—and thank you for shopping Bailey’s Discount Emporium.” The intercom clicked off.

Cass surveyed the sales floor from her vantage point. I loved that about her. If there had been a mouse, she’d have found it. But there wasn’t. I already checked.

On a rainy Tuesday night there weren’t any customers either. Satisfied, she found Matt’s eye. “Lock up. Check the bathrooms to be sure.”

She set me down reluctantly, fingers still ruffling my fur as she pulled away. “Okay, Pyewacket. We’ve inventory to do. Behave.”

I couldn’t help a smirk. I loved her, but did she really think I could behave? Clearly she needed to watch more of those videos scrolling down her social media page. Cats leaping from the shadows to scare the daylights out of dogs and humans alike. Hilarious.

“Tick tock, folks. Huddle up!” Cass rifled through the pages Jen had laid out. Nodding to herself, she shuffled them into separate groups.

Wood fibers scratching together, my ears instantly twitched. It was noted. A swift crumple crunch of loose leaf and my back arched, tail curling. Just before a different paper ball thwacked me in the back of the head. Spinning, I glared death to the one who’d dared. Matt. Of course. Hissing curses unknown to mortal man, I snatched the offending projectile and fled to my lair.

Some time later the aroma of food penetrated the depths of my favorite area in the store. Furniture. My sofa was still here. And I was sooo comfortable. But, I knew that delicious siren song of smells. Pizza.

They’d taken a break near the karaoke machines and musical instruments; a section of the store I little understood.

“Come on, Cass. Can we?” Matt asked, setting his paper plate on the floor and nudging it my way. I knew from past inventories he never left that much cheese on his crust. Penance? Glorious cheese. Crouching low, I stalked my prey.

Cass laughed. A real laugh. The first since Him. I couldn’t help but look her way. “Alright,” she said. “But only three songs, and then we get back to work.”

Matt moved. To clear the plates? Panicking, I pounced. And ran. But not far. There would be more. Five minutes later, when the karaoke machine hummed loudly to life, I doubted my decision.

Matt slipped the mic from its stand. Oh. He meant business. Would this be a new declaration later? He seemed to change his mind almost weekly. I want to be a writer. I want to be a pilot. Backing up under the folding chair, I dragged my kill a few feet into the shadows.

Music started, not too loudly, but that was a lie. It grew in volume. Quickly. Still, the guy had some moves and his singing didn’t raise a hair. Must be on key. I scooted a little forward to make sure no one was moving to pick up the plates yet.

The other two only watched. Cheering, laughing, but neither girl moved to join him at the machine.

In the silence after the fourth song, Cass’ phone made one of those weird chimes that always makes me want to push it in the swirling water bowl while she’s in the bath. Chirping in her hand, I can do little.

Cass tilted it to read the message, smile vanishing before she finished. From here I can see the bruises on her wrist, even after all these days, and a growl rises up my throat. Him.

Whether she can hear my growl or feel my gaze, our eyes meet. Her other hand falls to cover the green smudges on too pale skin.

Jen, chair scooted close, glanced from the phone to my girl. It was Jen I made sure saw the bruises. And it was Matt I sought out when Jen hid in the stock room to cry over it.

Jen understands. She knows. “Greg?” She flinches. “Still?”

Yes. Greg. Him. Still. So many of Cass’ girlfriends talk about “the one that got away”. I don’t understand the tears. Be glad. This one. This Ex, as her mom calls him, won’t stay gone.

Chewing my crust I pretend it’s Him. My whiskers twitch. Yes. My girl has bruises from that night. That night she cried out for help and I was there. He had her; back pressed against the balcony rail.

But I was there.

And his face isn’t so pretty anymore.

A knock on the glass door.

Matt slid the mic back in the stand. Leaving the girls to tidy up, he stepped away from us and towards the front door.

Cass interceded. “I’ve got it, Matt,” she said, moving towards the darkened storefront. The first time she’s slipped into shadows since—.

Matt lets her, but keeps walking towards the door, pausing only at the register. Jen, flanking the other side, waits for Cass to get the keys. Neither friend says a word. They wait and watch. Just like I follow her up to the door, one shoulder nudging her shin. It won’t happen again.

Tall, dark in the shadows, a white smile reveals the intruder’s identity. James. I feel my girl relax. She unlocked the door.

Water sluicing from him, he stepped onto the welcome mat. Too wet for my taste, I leapt back hissing. He only smiles; indulgent with me and sheepish with her. He’s been hanging about almost as long as I have. Since before Greg. I know him. He’ll walk us home. Stay until her door lock clicks.

Maybe. One day.

If he be worthy.

He’ll remember I like barley grass.

Shedding the bulky raincoat, James lets Cass claim it. Only to stop her, “Wait.” Fishing in one pocket, “Don’t want to crush it.” And then the other. “I got that stuff Pye likes. Barley grass?”

© 2015 Nikki Hyson

“Alone” by Shijia Zheng

Alone

Shijia Zheng

Her voice made me happy.

That was her first thought when she heard that person sing, saw her open her mouth for the first time. Sarah didn’t think much about her when she first met her. Actually, no, she never really acknowledged her existence before that moment; she was just a relative of a friend before that. Sarah didn’t so much as look up when she stood in front of the screen and selected the song. She had been gloomy over her mother’s illness, and her friends’ attempt at cheering her up seemed to be failing miserably.

Then, everything seemed to disappear when Sarah heard her voice. It was powerful, yet gentle. Its sound seemed to blow everything away. It beckoned to her, as if telling her that everything will be okay, and that her prayers would be answered.

There was another feeling, a feeling that seemed to make her hyperventilate while her heart beat so fast it felt like it might burst. When Sarah looked up at her, at her long, black hair that grew past her eyes, covering a pale, oval-shaped face, she became a different person from the nonentity an hour ago, yet she didn’t need to change anything about her. Sarah watched in awe as that person took the lyrics as her own and released them as doves that fluttered out to newfound freedom. That feeling that Sarah had as she watched her, she wasn’t sure what she was feeling that time. And she wasn’t sure if that was good or not.

Five years later, approaching 18, she wished she hadn’t felt this feeling.

Sarah wondered if she should have never asked her (former) friend about that person that day. Maybe she shouldn’t have approached that person after her performance. Unsure of the feelings she had, Sarah let them dictate her actions that day, and soon enough they had become two peas in a pod, doing everything with each other. She took all of Sarah’s worries away from her just by being at her side, and her voice was a like a remedy to her depression. But…

“Excuse me, ma’am.”

Sarah snapped out of her thoughts. An irritated customer was standing in front of her, waiting for her to ring up his items. She hastily rang them up, not even paying attention to what he bought, tossing them into the shopping bag. The man looked up at her in disgust at her mistreatment of his newly bought junk. Nonetheless, he pulled out his wallet and slammed the bills in front of her, not even bothering to pick up his change as he stormed off towards the exit.

Sarah watched him leave with a tinge of amusement, then pulled out her phone from her pocket and looked at the time, trying not to look at the missed call alerts that lined her screen. Her shift was going to be done in a few minutes.

She wished it didn’t.

In the past few months, she considered the Wal-mart she worked at more of a home than her own apartment. She didn’t want to come home to her dead-eyed, unmoving father. As much as she didn’t want to admit it, she was tired of taking care of him. A growing part of her wished he would just wither and die already, for the sake of both of them. She’s already sacrificed her friends, her education, and yet he didn’t so much as speak.

But in the end, Sarah still dragged her feet back home. She felt horrible for wanting him to die. How could she treat her only remaining family like that? Her father was just grieving as much as she was.

As she was walking home, Sarah gazed up at the night sky. That person was always saddened about how the light pollution had wiped away the stars. When she had time, she would travel to the countryside to see the night sky in its entirety, stars and all. Sarah wondered where she is now. She had declared that after she graduated, she’d take a year off, rent a small house in the nearby rural neighborhood, and just enjoy life for a bit. She should have graduated by now, and Sarah wondered if that person followed through with her desire, even with the recent events.

Sarah felt her cell phone vibrate in her pocket, bringing her back to reality. She didn’t take out the phone, and waited for the vibrating to stop. She didn’t even want to look at the name that would be written on the caller I.D.; there was only one person who would call her. The calls had become easier to ignore, but right now, the timing of the call with her thoughts had left Sarah annoyed and self-loathing.

Why can’t Sarah just forget about her? Why did she have to concern herself with what that person is doing without her?

She had hurt Sarah, even though that person tried hard not to. Then again, it was Sarah’s fault in the first place. She had been selfish and childish, and she knew it, but Sarah still wanted to do away with her. In the midst of her grief, she had become vulnerable enough for her heart to take over and spill her true feelings in front of that person. They were already close, but Sarah wanted to be closer, thinking that that person could take away all of her burden if they became more than just best friends.

Looking back, she should have known that there was an underlying motive to her response. She had taken her agreement at face value, without even realizing that that person had deceived her.

It was only after she called off the relationship, and slapped her with the truth, did Sarah realize that she didn’t reciprocate her love. That person claimed that she did it because she was scared at what Sarah might do to herself if she rejected her, but then realized that lying about her feelings only created more complications. It was too late, though, the damage had been done.

Even though she had only put on the act for a week, that person had given Sarah hope, only to rip it away in the cruelest way possible. Even though she genuinely seemed guilty about it, and was beating herself up with the act, Sarah couldn’t find it in her to feel remorse. She wanted so much to forgive her, but she just couldn’t, and so just erasing her from her mind seemed like the second best option to go.

Sarah didn’t even realize that she had reached her apartment already until she had already walked through the door and saw her father sitting still in his wheelchair, facing the glass door to the balcony.

She had read that sunlight can improve a person’s mental state, but she didn’t see any improvements. Still, the only thing she could do was keep trying.

She walked past her father and slid open the door. She walked out, leaning against the balcony railing. The landlord had been complaining about the late payments, and Sarah was already running out of money fast. They weren’t going to stay here for much longer. A disappointment, really.

Sarah felt her cell phone vibrate in her pocket again, and she felt the urge to toss it over the railing. She had already isolated herself enough, there was no one else she could talk to anyway. Before she could do anything, though, the vibrating eventually stopped, and her irritation subsided.

She looked down from the balcony. They lived on the upper floors, and a small thought had recently seeded itself into her mind and had grown alarmingly. She laughed internally at how easily she could do it. She could even bring her father along with her if she so pleased.

Sarah ended up walking back inside. Maybe she’ll do it one day, because it is much quicker than forgetting and waking her someone up. But for now, she’ll bear with it.

© 2015 Shijia Zheng