Tagged with fiction

Short Story: Eavesdropping

Load plane. Take seat. Read in-flight magazine.

A few minutes into the flight, 5, 10, 15, 20 – Jim had no idea – one of the flight attendants – not the cute one or the gay guy, but the overweight obvious mother type – came down the aisle, stopping before every row and pressing down on the cart-brake with her white Asics sneakers (he looked). She was only three rows away, so like a conditioned lemming he unlocked his tray from its upright position and readied himself for his moment ; in the spotlight was coming.

What would they offer? Chicken definitely, but beef wellington as well perhaps? He doubted fish or pork – had he ever eaten one of those on a plane? No, no, that’s a silly though. Would she offer him a kosher meal? No, you had to request those before the flight, at least that’s what he had read somewhere before. Besides, he wasn’t like, Jewish or anything anyways.

Before he knew it she was upon him. He moistened his lips in preparation of speaking, but she addressed the other side of the row and then the Persian lady to his right first. Hmm…old person jealousy he thought, ignoring the fact that she had used the same procedure with every single row up to their 15. Persian lady was going with chicken. A safe, sensible and prudent choice he thought. He instantly warmed to her: safe, sensible, prudent – good attributes to have in a row-mate.

“And what about you fine sir? What will you be having?” Jim was astounded at the force of her smile. Her personality showed through it and for a second as the sun peered above the clouds her face was illuminated. Jim reacted with an inward gasp, a proclamation of the situational angel he was now faced with.

I’m sorry I prejudged you.
It’s OK, everyone does.
You are a nice lady
Thank you

“Well, what do you have m’lady?” he shot back with his most charming smile.

He felt he had gone too far. Her smile diminished, obvious patience slid out of her expression. She felt he was being “cute”, and not the good “cute” that worked so well at frat parties or at tehc ampus bar, the “cute” that aggravated those  who had lived, those who were working, those whose loved revolved around the routine of life. Jim instantly wanted to apologize for the unintended charm.

“We have a chicken plate, a chicken salad sandwich plate and a beef plate.”

“Chicken salad please.”

She handed over the tray and without another word unclicked her brake and walked the cart to the next aisle before turning to the next passenger and turning on her beaming smile. “And what would you like fine sir?”

Jim could not hear the man’s response over the popping sound of the plastic cover of his chicken salad sandwich plate.

Try as he might to find fault with his meal, Jim had to admit it was delicious. The lettuce was crisp, the side vegetables were fresh, as was the fruit in the accompanying fruit cup: honeydew melon, cantaloupe, grapes, and even a few pieces of pineapple. The standing of the flight company increased immediately. Everything on most flights was usually pretty cut-and-paste, but a good chicken salad sandwich plate went a long way with him. I mean he had even been on flights where they didn’t even give you a meal. This blew his mind. They advertised themselves as a “no frills” company, but come on – it was like going to church and getting skimped out of communion. Sacrilege! They smugly walked around with their menus to buy chips or bars or a ham and swiss cheese on rye, but he had never had money handy and even if he had there was no way he would buy anything on principle alone. No, he would not take their Judas-cookies or chips. There are certain places a man must take a stand, even if they are sitting down.

Jim nodded to himself in resolution and wiped his hands with the accompanying wet-nap. Yup, these guys were fucking pros.

Mr. PimpleNeck really seemed to be enjoying his newspaper. He folded and crimpled it every few minutes like he was an origami master. If he had made a sailor’s hat of the classifieds, Jim would have instantly liked him. He doubted this little miracle would take place however.

Placing most of his upper weight on his left elbow, he leaned to better see what PimpleNeck was reading through the cracks between the chairs in front of him. The headline on page…page? Ah…page A5 read “Insurgents Strike Kabul Again; 5 Killed”. He deduced that this was the article Pimple Neck was reading, judging by the various disapproving mouth clicks and head shakes that emitted almost like clockwork every five or six seconds. Mark down PimpleNeck as a non-fan of insurgency and innocent deaths.

Without knowing why, this made Jim dislike him even more. Jim slouched back in his chair, his jaw slightly agape, cocked to one side. He licked the back of his teeth and pulling down on the left sleeve of his polo looked out the window again. Off in the distance he saw the glimmer of water – whether it was a lake or ocean he didn’t care.

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Sample Fiction: Bus Route A3

With every pumping and screech of the brakes – foof-foof-shhhhh – John was aware of how crowded the A-14 “Portsmouth – to – Denver” bus was getting. It was definitely not his first choice of transport, but when a car is stolen, wallet inside, what other options are there? He knew Sandra would use this occasion to highlight his irresponsibility, how he was unfit to have visitation rights with Clarissa, how he now was one of “them”. She couldn’t help herself from ripping into him, and he strangely missed it.

Casting a furtive glance over his shoulders he calculated roughly how many stops before each seat was filled and people were forced to stand. He tightened his grip on his daughter’s right shoulder. She looked into his eyes and smiled.

He hated to do this to her, to expose her to the commonality of existence, to show her how people below her station lived. He had spent her whole life trying to protect her from harm, nay, the possibility of harm and here they were, on the fucking A-14 at 11pm.

I hate this. I hate, hate, hate this. All these people are animals. If one of them looks at her wrong I’m going to…well I don’t know what I’ll do, but it won’t be pretty.

Foof-foof-shhh

Seven more people got on the bus with the last three looking around like lost sheep for a spare seat. Resigned to stand, each shuffled their feet towards the side and grabbed the hanging straps. Shoulders slumped, two of the new passengers – who looked like poor students to John – fixed their gaze on the in-bus advertisements. One of them, even with long, unwashed black hair nevertheless portrayed a casual indifference so prevalent amongst youth. Smiling at his companion, well smirking really, John could do nothing but smirk himself. He had once been like that, but that was a lifetime ago.

Law school. Marriage. Children. Children. Divorce. Bills. Mortgage. Stress.
If only his biggest worry was which ad to gaze upon.

Dental school Bartending school. Crisis line. Burger shop. Fishing store. Burger shop. Movie theatre.

Dental school it is then.

The bus petered to a slow pace, inching towards the Knight Street bus stop. Ignoring the passengers directly across, John peered outside. His view was not a spectacular one. Creatures walked along the sidewalk with their hoods up, sheltering themselves from the cold Colorado wind. Occasional wafts of air would slip through the hoods. John thought of boiling kettles. Those without hoods tried to bravely face the freezing air, their cheeks red with frost, their breath escaping with more and more frequency and ferocity, as if unwanted from lungs to airway to lips. He had never liked this area of town, nor the people in it.

Foof-foof-shhh

With a furtive glance that displayed his hostility, John grimaced upon seeing the bus’s next passenger – a 40ish woman who shall we say was of “ill-repute”. Slightly inebriated, completely embarrassing, she swayed back and forth as the bus lurched out of its pit stop, her torn leggings and mud-stained boots belying her evening, if not her life.

John pulled his daughter towards his chest, caving his body so that he could kiss the top of her head. She deserved better than this.

She wasn’t sure if it was the lights, or the bright colors of everyone’s jackets, or the fact that her seat was high enough so her legs dangled over the edge, but for some reason Clarissa couldn’t stop smiling. Her teacher had taught her a song today, maybe that was it. She couldn’t remember the words, but hummed the tune quietly to herself while rocking slightly back and forth in delight, her brown hair bobbing on her shoulders before springing up to its original position.

She could feel her father’s grip on her shoulder. It was strong but she didn’t mind.

She couldn’t remember the last time they’d been alone together and he hadn’t been working. Oh how she missed this man greatly. Not the man who constantly broke plans and promised to take her to Disneyland only to cancel hours before, but the close, warm, smiling man who made her feel safe. There was something about him that always made her feel joyous – Was it his smell? Was it his hair? – she couldn’t put her finger on it, but whenever she knew “daddy” was coming to pick her up her right foot would twitch uncontrollably, sending a wave of excitement all through her legs. Even though it had been weeks since he had last seen her, when she found out daddy, and not mommy, would be taking her to the recital, there the twitch was, like a Pavlovian response.

The bus slowed its pace as if to stop.

Clarissa saw her father making eye contact and she returned in kind. While her smile was unbridled, his looked pained, but still happy. Her father often did this, looking at her with an expression of underlying sadness, but she didn’t mind. She liked it when her father looked at her no matter what the occasion, so she blinked quickly and smiled a wide grin right back at him. His grip on her shoulder tightened.

Clarissa liked taking the bus.

As each new passenger got on, their cheeks rosy and flustered, she bit her bottom lip. She really wanted to talk to everyone. She wondered what their voice sounded like and if they would like her. One older woman had leaned in close before saying “well aren’t you a pretty thing?”, but that was when they first got on the bus and she had gotten off on the next stop.

Clarissa wondered why more people hadn’t said anything to her. Wearing her new shoes – the pretty brown ones with a strap across the back – she felt like a princess, and wanted to dance in the middle of the bus, just like the lady who got on.

Oh how they’d love her! She could picture it now; she’d finish dancing and raise her arms outward, then bow, just like Mrs. Meachem had taught her in ballet class. Everyone would clap. She gripped the seat tightly and rocked forward, betraying her excitement through the glimmer in her eye.

The bus driver pressed the brake pad ever so slightly to allow a green car to jump ahead.

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