Tag: absolute write

Absolute Write: the Dog Days of Summer (FICTION POST)

Absolute Write: the Dog Days of Summer (FICTION POST)

Absolute Write does a blog chain each month. Writers from the board participate with their posts on a given prompt.

This month’s prompt:
Dog Days of Summer

In other words, the hottest and most sultry part of summer. Etymology lesson here. As always, can be prose, poetry, play, fiction, nonfiction.

Instructions:
Simply post your blog’s URL in this thread to join. I’ll let you know in this thread when it’s your turn. Once your turn comes up, you have two days to complete a blog post using the prompt. When you are finished, please add a link to your post on the thread.

If you signed up but find yourself unable to participate or need to be moved around in the schedule, please PM me or post in the thread. If you fail to post on your blog and on the thread within two days, I’ll bump you down to the end of the line on the third day; you’ll get a second chance at the end of the month.

Each post should be less than 1000 words if possible. Read and comment on other participants’ posts if you possibly can–they’ll be doing the same for you! Please include a list of all participants’ blogs (not necessarily their actual posts for the month) in your blog post.

 

Most days, Vera escaped the pounding Midwestern heat by basically living at her cashier job in a big box store. She never left until stars dotted the northern sky and the temperature lowered to something bearable. She had all the convenience of summer – but none of its price. Her skin only showed the barest hint of a tan – she started work at 6am; the sun had scarce time to touch her.

As the night breeze swept by on this particular summer night, the loneliness she kept at bay during daylight nibbled at her stomach. A friend to meet for a drink would be wonderful. A raucous night, laughing at nothing, fantastic. A diverting mysterious man would be better than all of that.

She looked around the emptied parking lot, back toward the wooded area on the edge of the lot. No mystery man emerged. She sighed and trudged across the lot towards the sidewalk. She faced a long, lonely walk home – and since no coworkers had shifts they wanted to drop, a sweltering day in her single room to face. At least her last paycheck afforded her decent walking shoes.

The 24 hour grocery store across the way beckoned. She needed something to eat, a few small things to stash in her fridge. She wandered across the boulevard on in. At 11 pm, a few people did push carts, all with the worn look of retail workers she knew well. Vera stepped around the palates of stock that came out at 10 pm on the dot – when you shopped late, you sacrificed convenience.

She rolled her eyes heavenward when she saw a palate parked squarely in front of the peanut butter – and in that look upward, she saw him. A small, mannish creature, crouched on the top shelf by the pickles. He winked at her and held his finger to his lips. As a man about her own age knelt to pull goods from the back of the shelf to the front, the creature grinned maniacally and tipped an opened jar of pickle juice so that it trickled down the back of the stocker’s collar.
Then, leaving the jar open on the top shelf, the red-haired thing hopped away, bounding past the salad dressings. Vera lost him somewhere in the breads.

“Was that you?”
She found herself facing the grocery employee as he wiped pickle juice of his brown curls.

“Er, no,” she said.

“Did you see who it was?” he demanded.

“I’m not sure you’d believe me if I told you.”

He wiped his hands on his smock. “Thanks. Then it’s exactly who I think it is.”

Vera just stared at him in silence. This direction was nowhere near where she wanted to drive.

He paused, mid-wipe. “But you did see someone?”

“Yes.”

“Huh,” he said, looking her up and down. “You’re not his usual type. Well, now that you’ve seen my adoptive brother, you’ve got a problem.”

“Why’s that?”

“My brother… he’s not exactly human,” he said. “And when he decides he likes you, he likes you to death.”

Vera rolled her eyes. “So how are you still alive?” She read his nametag. “Roland?” Roland?

Seriously?

He shrugged. “I’m definitely not his type.” He frowned. “Follow me, please.”

The please did it. What the hell, Vera thought. I have nowhere to go and no one to go to.

He walked over to the spice aisle and grabbed a salt container. “Open your hand,” he ordered. He poured the salt over her hand, looking over his shoulder to make sure no coworkers or customers saw. “Now put that in your pocket.”

“What? Why?”

He lowered his voice, leaning down to look her in the eye. “Just do it, okay?”

She shoved her hand in the pocket of her khakis. “Happy?”
“Sure,” he said. He shoved the container of salt on her. “Add that to your bill and make sure you put it around your bed when you get home.”

“What?” this man was bonkers.

“Like I said, when my brother likes you, he likes you to death.” He hustled her towards the cashier. “I hope you found the spices OK, ma’am,” he said, loud enough for the man with the vest and the clipboard to look over from where he hovered over the one working cashier. “I’ll stop by your work tomorrow to check on you.”

“How do you know where I work?” Vera demanded. Then she looked down. She once again forgot to stash her vest in her locker.

“I’ll see you,” he said tensely, before disappearing up the aisle.

She didn’t work tomorrow anyway. She shrugged. That was weird. She made a note to shop at the gas station across the street from her room rental instead.

Read on to other blog chainees!

rion_mk3 – http://nonexistentbooks.wordpress.com (link to post)
Ralph Pines – http://ralfast.wordpress.com (link to post)
articshark – http://www.drslaten.com/blog (link to post)
Sunwords – http://susannedoering.wordpress.com (link to post)
Diem_Allen – http://mindovermistakes.blogspot.com (link to post)
U2Girl – http://ancatdubh.org (link to post)
robynmackenzie – http://www.iwanttobeawesomewhenigrowup.com (link to post)
Lady Cat – http://radomwriterlythoughts.blogspot.ca (link to post)
MsLaylaCakes – http://www.taraquan.com (link to post)
pyrosama – http://matrix-hole.blogspot.com (link to post)
SuzanneSeese – http://www.viewofsue.blogspot.com/ (link to post)
rion_mk3 – http://nonexistentbooks.wordpress.com (link to post)
Ralph Pines – http://ralfast.wordpress.com (link to post)
articshark – http://www.drslaten.com/blog (link to post)
Sunwords – http://susannedoering.wordpress.com (link to post)
Diem_Allen – http://mindovermistakes.blogspot.com (link to post)
U2Girl – http://ancatdubh.org (link to post)
robynmackenzie – http://www.iwanttobeawesomewhenigrowup.com (link to post)
Lady Cat – http://radomwriterlythoughts.blogspot.ca (link to post)
MsLaylaCakes – http://www.taraquan.com (link to post)
pyrosama – http://matrix-hole.blogspot.com (link to post)
SuzanneSeese – http://www.viewofsue.blogspot.com/ (link to post)
Angyl78 – http://jelyzabeth.wordpress.com/
HistorySleuth – http://historysleuth.blogspot.com/
AshleyEpidemic – http://www.soipondered.wordpress.com/
SRHowen – http://srhowen1.blogspot.com
Angyl78 – http://jelyzabeth.wordpress.com/
HistorySleuth – http://historysleuth.blogspot.com/
AshleyEpidemic – http://www.soipondered.wordpress.com/
SRHowen – http://srhowen1.blogspot.com

Absolute Write January Blog Chain: Winter Nightmare

Absolute Write January Blog Chain: Winter Nightmare

orion_mk3 – http://nonexistentbooks.wordpress.com (link to this month’s post)
MamaStrong – http://writingofme.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
pyrosama – http://matrix-hole.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Turndog-Millionaire – http://turndog-millionaire.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Alpha Echo – http://aprilplummer81.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
LilGreenBookworm – http://themayhemofwritingsahm-style.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Domoviye – http://lets-get-happy.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
writingismypassion – http://charityfaye.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
kimberlycreates – http://www.kimberlycreates.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Suzanne Seese – http://viewofsue.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Diana Rajchel – http://blog.dianarajchel.com/

1292304106709  - Android Phone shots of November blizzard

Ralph Pines – http://ralfast.wordpress.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Alynza – http://www.alynzasmith.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Literateparakeet – http://lesliesillusions.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
in_one – http://quirkythomas.blogspot.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Tomspy77 – http://thomaswillamspychalski.wordpress.com/ (link to this month’s post)
Inkstrokes – http://drlong67.wordpress.com/ (link to this month’s post)
kiwiviktor81 – http://storygenerator.net/ (link to this month’s post)

For the AbsoluteWrite January Blog chain.

This is FICTION.

Minnesota is its own winter nightmare. Just being here tests the soul, forces you to face fear daily, and can make a quest out of an ordinary action like getting from a parked car to a workplace.

I am tempted to simply post a picture of what I see outside my window. I live in Minnesota. I don’t even live in the bad part of Minnesota, where there’s isolation, lousy wireless access and living conditions that swing halfway between bear hunting and bear hunting you. Even so, it’s life threatening at this time of year, a walk down the block can hobble you for life if you forget that second or third layer, and every year we lose some bodies to the cold. Anyone who lives in Minnesota, from the lifelong natives to the outlanders like me, retreats inward around January. Oh, we say it’s to detox from the holiday parties and because of the  new fiscal quarter. The truth is, it’s too cold to smell the death on the air, but we can still feel it. We retreat indoors and knit and write and fight with our loved ones, grieving for the people dying, people we don’t even know we’ve lost. Minnesotans are a cold lot, and they don’t welcome in strangers, often cleaving to the people they’ve known since high school with the occasional college exception thrown in. But while they refuse to acknowledge or include their outlanders, they still feel them, and on some level recognize them as part of the mass organism that forms this society of sunlight and snow.

1289667042198  - Android Phone shots of November blizzard

It’s been especially bad the last two years. The bad economy and police restrictions have pulled tighter, tighter, tighter every year – now some of the homeless can’t even rely on a garbage can fire, and every shelter has had to resort to a lottery system. Remember, the house always wins.

Especially when you don’t have a house.

I knew these things, just like I knew that the people standing out on street corners with signs saying things like “hungry, please help,” or “need money for the bus,” are, for the most part, really just gathering untraceable cash for things decidedly not food. Restaurants don’t lock their dumpsters in this city, and while giving someone shelter was sometimes too much to ask, people feed each other here. Even though the food shelves are getting wiped clean, and malnutrition abounds, no one is actually starving. No one who goes out on the street with a sign about it, anyway.

                                                                                                                      ***

The abandoned gas station just outside of northeast Minneapolis had clearly already had its tenants. One of the boarded-over windows hung out at a crazy angle: a scrawny kid or group of kids could easily climb inside. The pillaging opportunities were pretty good. While people evicted from homes were generally forced to take all their belongings with them, when a business goes under, all the flotsam usually gets left behind. Those television images of the disappointed business owner packing box after box right down to the fake plants in the lobby is fiction. The fake plants are left to molder until the rats eat it or the roaches make it a luxury resort. Kids would loot the place for 3.2 beer and candy; the enterprising (or addicted) might find uses I was better off not knowing for the over the counter cold medicines and caffeine packs marketed to truckers.

I went during the day, mostly just looking for a place to bury a jar – one of the byproducts of my spiritual practices – where the snow-minded natives of the area would not freak out. It had been my experience that the “mainstreamers” of Minnesota were among the most superstitious in the world; most found tarot cards terrifying (rather than cardboard) and explaining that I was burying a bottle of urine and nails because my neighbors imagined that I threatened them so I was using this superstition to counter the morass of superstition cast upon me, drawn from a religious culture that tromped on without outward verification, was just not going to fly if I had, say, elected to argue my tax dollars allowed me to bury the bottle by a tree in a public park. Best not to tweak the natives; they already got pretty damned hostile with any of us from foreign tribes.  While the park police had developed a sense of humor about me over the years, this situation was already too delicate for me to try to expand those limits.

I had a flashlight to peer inside, and a pipe that could double as a makeshift crowbar to poke around the property.  I’d already developed a plan if a passing police cruiser wanted to know what I was doing. I’d say I was “considering buying the property,” and that the  “real estate agent hadn’t returned my calls, so I was looking for myself.” I saw to it that I looked white, and dowdy, with the high-waisted mom jeans and a baggy t-shirt with no bra beneath.  I switched out my actual wedding ring for a faux-gold one I kept for situations where I wanted assumptions made about me to fall in a certain direction. My winter gloves would be enough protection from surface disease, although a rat could easily bite right through the cloth. I made a note to myself to avoid touching any rats.

None of the drivers on this edge of the city gave a damn, apparently. I managed to wiggle the board off and flash my light around with impunity. The interior was more or less as I’d predicted: the previous owners had left a lot of crap behind, and the broken cooler doors and candy wrappers dotting the floor showed where either drunk teenagers or desperate adults (or some combination) had descended on the place for its carrion. A flashed my light around the corners, and saw some predictable scurrying – mostly rats. Roaches needed a place with consistent heat and humidity, and the furnace was long dead at this place.

Someone had spray painted above the wall where signs extolled the pleasures dispensed in now long-gone coffee makers  (probably sold, one of the more expensive and financially salvageable items of a gas station shut-down) “Fuck the pigs!” I grimaced at that; it suggested that anyone I might encounter would be oppositional, defiant, looking for a fight. This was probably not a space I could share and use in peace.

Still, it looked like no one was there, and that would do fine. Chances are that anything I left here would go undisturbed forever. Abandoned establishments with gas lines didn’t get demolished as a general rule.

                                                                                                                      ***

I didn’t see it the first time, probably because on my first look there wasn’t enough air circulating to cause movement. And in the dead of winter, smell doesn’t play much of a role.

I came back with my reusable bag, filled with the things I figured I’d plant beneath one of the carts in the emptiest of the coolers. No one was likely to move one of those things for years.  That’s when I saw it, the slight swinging motion above the cash area from the corner of my eye. I turned to look. At first my brain did not fully report – or accept – the vision before me. Maybe it was just a banner that fell, gravity finally ripping away the plastic from the nail over years; perhaps a opossum adapted its lifestyle.

What registered first was the shoes.

Opossums don’t wear shoes.

At last, my mind put it together, and then all the details came in full force. It was a white man, well over six foot five. His feet were 12 inches off the ground. He hung by a sturdy cable, and as I allowed the flashlight to follow up from the track marks I could see on the inside of his arms all the way up to the ceiling, I could see where someone (him?) had punched holes in the ceiling to ensure there was proper length for someone of his height. The story told itself.

My flashlight drifted down again, over his face.

I knew his face. I knew it well.

We hadn’t spoken in six months. Six months ago, my confronting him about his alcoholism had caused him to throw me out of his life. Six months ago, he’d been afraid of needles.

And abandoned gas stations. Especially this one. I realized that I found it today because on some subconscious level, I specifically heard him mention it.

I gathered my bag and scrambled out, ignoring the skittering noises of the local rodentia. Of course I had to call the police. I did from my car, using my rehearsed lie about “possible property purchase” when I spoke.

A blizzard came up as I drove home, obscuring all but two feet of the road in front of me. The nightmare of last winter had become this winter’s bad dream.

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