Stay by Ash Knight
Chapter One
Joe-Age 22
“I
can do this. No one is looking at
m-m-me,” I chanted, taking in a gulp of air. As I pulled open the huge glass
door to Pump It Up, the local sweatbox of death, I adjusted my cloak of
invisibility and prayed for the best.
Well, that’s a lie. I didn’t pray. I didn’t get religion at all. But that was personal, and I didn’t do
personal. Swiping my card under the tiny
red laser beam, I waited for the brash sounding chirp that signified that I had
paid for my membership for another month and the manager didn’t just take my
cash and pocket it. It had happened
before, so I had plenty of reasons to be suspicious.
Finding
my way two steps past the curving countertop, I heard a loud voice yell, “Hey,
Joe, don’t forget we close at eight tonight for the holiday,” Penny, the automaton that sat at the front
desk seven days a week, said. I’d only
ever witnessed her wearing booty shorts and skin-tight tank tops whilst
dutifully ignoring anyone who wasn’t a muscle god. If you were
a muscle god, she found a reason to touch the goods, each and every
time. The only reason she spoke to me
was that I had been known to help her out from time to time fixing things when
the members got upset that the equipment wasn’t working. Otherwise, I was sure I’d be a pariah.
“Got
it, t-t-thanks,” I replied, briskly walking to the changing rooms,
wincing. After opening my locker (lucky
#34), I pulled out my shower basket and towel and threw in my backpack.
Sometimes,
I regretted my life. Not today,
though. Today I had work. A guy I knew from a few months back, Mitch,
said he needed extra help at a job site because one of his guys called in sick
and the framing inspection was tomorrow.
I’d done my share of odd jobs and helped enough with construction that I
could be helpful and not a disaster. I’d
always been a hard worker. I just needed
a chance to prove it. Anyway, I’d made a
bit of cash today so on the way here I’d stopped at McDonald’s and bought
myself two Big Macs and a Coke. I didn’t
think I’d ever had food taste that good.
Or at least, I couldn’t remember the last time I had the money to pay
for something freshly wrapped and untouched.
It was heaven. Or it would have
been if I believed in that. But I don’t.
Once
I’d showered and shaved, I pulled my laundry out of my locker and started
washing it in the shower. One important
tip I’d learned is that if you kept the shower curtain closed, no one bothered
you about washing your laundry at the gym.
And really, I had bigger issues to deal with.
I’d
also learned that it was important to take care of your belongings. I’d only ever truly cared about something
once. And then I understood that caring
was a liability. Anything could be taken
away. Used against me. Since I was a kid, I’d vowed never to find
myself in a situation like that again.
Nothing was worth feeling like your heart could stop beating at any
moment. Like each second it was gone
you’d inch closer to self-destruction.
No. I’d had that once. Never again.
Who
was I kidding? I owned 4 shirts, 1 pair
of jeans, 1 pair of boots, 3 days worth of underpants and 1 good pair of
socks. With flamingos. The other pair of socks had a hole where a
nail caught along the side when I hauled ass out of the abandoned building on
Trent Street two weeks ago. Those were
my unicorn socks. Now I only wore those
in case of emergencies. The point was,
even if I’d wanted something to care about, I couldn’t have it. If it didn’t fit in my bag, I didn’t need
it.
After
running the hair dryer over my wet clothes for a while, they started smelling
like burnt toast, so I knew the cotton had had enough and I gave the weave a
break. I rolled everything up, stuffed
them back in my backpack, threw my basket into the locker and pulled the key
from the lock.
Passing
the cardio equipment, I could see it ended up being a busy night, which meant
there would be lots of activity in the parking lot for awhile; I’d need to walk
around until it calmed. As I passed the
southern corner of the gym building, I could see the dumpster and Phantom. He roamed around as usual, taking in the last
vestiges of light before the sun set.
Phantom loved the sun and would stretch out for hours, inching across
the parking lot as its rays lazed fluidly across the concrete.
I’d
met him about four months ago, when I first found myself in this town in
Oregon, a week after I had started coming here.
He had scared the shit out of me in the night, rubbing against the
cardboard and purring like a motorboat.
I had never heard a cat purr so loudly in my life and now I found I
couldn’t sleep without the sound of him.
Phantom was comforting to me in ways that I couldn’t even think
about. I couldn’t allow myself to go
there.
As
I strode over to him, he stretched his legs up, up, up until he was directly on
the edge of the building’s shadow, then gave up. I could see the moment he’d resigned that it
was getting dark, signalling his time to hunt.
He’d usually be gone for most of the night, but he’d be back to slay the
demons in my nightmares later. After
crouching down and giving him a nice neck scratch, I wandered behind the
dumpster, behind the old pallet boards lined up against the fence and unpacked
my still damp clothing. It would most
likely take all night to get everything dry, so now was a good time to
start.
After
laying everything out across the wooden boards, I threw my bag into the tent
that I’d rigged up between the pallets and the chain link fencing. It could have been worse. I could have nothing. I’d been there and lived that life
already. I’d learned from that
experience as well...don’t ever let yourself be vulnerable, physically or
mentally. If you had to be alone, make
sure you had somewhere to hide.
After
a few hours of walking around the area, I headed back home. The gym should’ve been empty by then and I
was exhausted. As soon as I had turned
my clothes over to dry the bottom side, I got into the tent, pulled my boots
off and lay down on the cool sleeping bag.
I told myself I would not think of her.
I would not think of him.
Venom. I couldn’t. Every night it was the same. Don’t
go down that rabbit hole.
Sometime
during the early morning hours, Phantom joined me and curled up around my neck,
purring into my ear, regaling me with his debauchery and antics while I had
been fighting with my prefrontal cortex.
I wished I could dream of the night sky.
I’d be a star, twinkling in the dark, shining on only the people I’d
want to see me.
***
It was Sunday and Sundays were the
worst days. There were less people on
the roads, but more were out wandering around, aimlessly peering into windows
and sitting around people watching. I
understood it, though. I had once sat on
a bench in the park on Edgar Street for eight hours watching people pass. I’d met two kids named Ethan that day. Both Ethans had jam hands. Kids have this peculiar knack for seeing
invisible people. You can’t hide
anything from them. I wondered at what age that ability went away. Most adults looked right through me. Of course, that was the way I liked it.
My
mind kept going back to the Big Macs from McDonald’s. I had a few bucks in my pocket, but I
couldn’t buy food today. I needed to get
myself a jacket and a pocket knife. Life
on the streets had turned me into a scavenger.
And now that I had money for it, I needed a knife. For protection as well as for useful
things. Like opening cans. Cutting through boxes.
Going
to the Goodwill in town was always a nerve-wracking struggle for me. On a good day, I could tolerate a few people
milling around. When there was more of a
crowd, I’d get itchy. My eyes burned, my
face grew hot. My skin got too tight. I felt like I was being ripped apart. But I had some money today, so I needed to
take my chances that everyone would be praising Jesus and hailing to their God
while I looked for the necessities of life.
After
twenty minutes and about twelve death stares, I had a jacket, a knife, and a
couple of pairs of socks. This was one
of my better trips. On the downside, I
now only had a couple of dollars to last me until I found another job. Phantom would be waiting for me when I got
home, so that gave me purpose, and I stepped lively.
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