Showing posts with label JL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JL. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 December 2015

You, JL, part II


You, JL, part II
You are stripping the beds when your phone rings. It’s Lori from the airport calling to say that, “only three of four came through.”
You can feel the sweat beading at the base of your hair follicles. “Who’s missing?” rasps out of your throat.
“Mahmoud.”
“Thank you.” You hang up.
Out the window, nuthatches, pigeons and squirrels are noisily competing for the feed you spread on the ground to attract their company. It can be lonely after a group leaves.
The first thought that lands in your mind is that Mahmoud has been caught. You have some serious and reasonable doubts about that possibility, but still, something has gone wrong and you don’t know what so you are imagining. Police on the train maybe? Did he do something to draw attention to himself? He knows how important it is for things to go smoothly if he wants to stay in this country where things are safer and quieter. He understands, presumably, the importance of getting to a town where it is safer and quieter still, to a less major port where he can work the respectable, quiet job you found him, where he might blend in less, sure, but where fewer people are without papers so fewer people are looking for people without papers.
What has gone wrong? The men all knew where to disembark, which bus would get them to the airport.
Fuck, fuck, fuck.
You take a deep breath, hold it for a five count then exhale, attempting to push all the bad air out. Keep cleaning, you decide. Keep cleaning because you can’t keep from worrying, but you don’t need to stop working, should never stop working.
You find a map in the bathroom garbage. Hand drawn, the dashed path leads from a house beside a stick-figure man with bulging muscles and stripped shirt (you), down a few neighbouring streets and into the great urban park a few blocks from your apartment. There is a heart sticker overtop of the X that marks the spot. In the top right hand corner, you can see that it had been stapled to another sheet of paper. You dump the contents of the garbage can onto the floor. The other sheet of paper is not there. You put the dirty Kleenexes and clothing tags and clumps of hair back into the bin. There is a trashcan and a recycling container in the kitchen. You bring them both to the bathroom and empty them there because the floor is already dirty. No letter.
You sit on the medicine ball by the window and look at the map. Someone gave it to Mahmoud, someone who knows where you live and knows when Mahmoud and the three other men were there. It did not arrive in the mail. Someone must have slipped it under the door.
The beautiful day clashes harshly with the discord in your guts. Normally exercise brings your thoughts, feelings and insides all into pulsing harmony, but today, with the birds singing and the wind and leaves whispering together, your furious, desperate pedaling is doing nothing for you. Following the dashed line through the park, you pass the castle playground, the animal enclosures and an obelisk honouring the dead from some “Great” war. You arrive at the foot of a large statue of a striding Nikola Tesla erected by the local Serbian community. The artist has managed to convey electricity in the up twisting of Tesla’s short hair, the intensity of Tesla’s expression and the torment in the wrinkling cloth of his pants and jacket.
After resting your bike against a tree, you sit down on the bench across from Tesla. “Did you see anything?” you ask the mute metal.
A tiny white dog leaps onto the bench beside you, his whole backside wagging along with his tail. Someone claps loudly and calls, “Jack.” The dog shoots off the bench, his body stretched out. You notice a fresh carving in the wood of the bench back.
SP ©’s M
You close your eyes. It is not your habit to monitor the movements of the men who pass through your place. This has nothing to do with your disposition: you believe that freedom from scrutiny is a dignity you are compelled to provide.
Mahmoud’s smile. You remember Mahmoud’s smile. Easier at your place than in the photo used in the passport. Still beautiful, still noteworthy in the passport photo, though. The passport photo taken in a studio in a foreign city you could only imagine. You remember wondering, actually, the effect this man had on the photographer. Did the photographer have time to appreciate Mahmoud, or was there a lineup distracting him, forcing him to work too quickly to appreciate the moment, the expression that he had just fixed, the man whom he had helped save?
It was the type of photograph a person could fall in love with.
You hop onto your bike and hurry home.
You are so out of breath from the ride and taking two stairs at a time, that T.J.’s partner asks, “Is everything alright?” when you ask to speak to T.J.
“Sorry, I’m— I’m in a bit of a hurry.”
“T.J.’s not here. It’s Saturday, Jack.”
Your chest is heaving. “I know.”
“He’s at the ponies.”
“Till when?”
“Usually gets home after dinner.”
You have a few hours.
“Should I have him call you?”
“No. Thank you.”
“Kay.”
“Does an S.P. work for T.J.?”
“Uh,” T.J.’s partner hesitates. “Why do you ask?”
“It’s nothing. Thank you very much.”
“You sure I can’t have him call you?”
“It’s alright. Thanks again. Goodbye.”
The whole way there, you are watching for Mahmoud. Each subway stop you change cars looking up and down the platform for any sign of him, then, between stops, walking though the new car looking at each person and making eye contact with anyone who happens to look up, smiling as reassuringly as you can muster—Don’t worry, it’s not you, but hello, nice day isn’t it? And those few times that the train emerges from its subterranean route, you scan the roads that run parallel to the tracks, hoping to catch sight of the escapee.
Man. Not escapee. He is not your prisoner, but there are arrangements that have been made. For Mahmoud, for the three others, for the others that had come before them and the ones that will come after, for their safety and happiness and wellbeing. For their benefit.
For you. For your sense of security because, after all, it is you and your associates who are doing something against the law.
You get on a bus. As you get closer to the racetrack and its neighbouring amusement park, there is increasingly heavy pedestrian traffic. The children going to the park are leaping with excitement, their parents turning nervously towards the vehicles racing by. The children leaving are less buoyant and bouncy than the balloons they are tethered to, and they have trouble keeping up with their parents who walk quickly despite carrying large or small stuffed animals or bags of garish, useless products they purchased after they or their children failed to hit the bull’s-eye or knock the cans over or throw the ring over the neck of a bottle. There are teenagers going both directions, holding hands or slowing down to kiss awkwardly as some family passes them. On the bus, there are four young men dressed in their finest tracksuits and team jerseys and talking about which scary rides scare them the least.
None of these people are Mahmoud.
An airplane passes low overhead and you check your watch, wondering if the plane is carrying one of the other men to some haven deeper in the interior of this relatively safe country.
The racetrack’s grandstand has its back turned to the road. An outline of a jockey on a horse, rendered in blue neon lights, covers four stories of the structure, glowing strangely in the daytime. The amusement park’s Ferris wheel rotates lazily just beyond the racetrack.
You traverse the vast parking lot and enter the grandstand, surprised no one is there to sell you a ticket. There is a wide set of stairs. You take them two at a time. When you see the lineups of people placing bets, you think, yes, of course, that’s why there is no admission fee—a different economy drives this show.
T.J. is under a straw fedora in the third section you trawl looking for him. Mahmoud is in none of these sections.
“Hello,” you say.
“Huh?” T.J. clears his throat and works his expression into something welcoming. “Well, if it isn’t Jack from the company.”
“It is.”
T.J. smiles briefly, exposing a rainbow of pastry sprinkles stuck on the border between his teeth and gums. “This business related?” With his middle finger, T.J. starts rapidly flicking the white betting ticket he has pinched between his index and thumb.
“One of our boys didn’t make it to the airport.”
His lips recoil from his teeth tellingly, the sprinkles now fully visible; there is a reason T.J.’s gambling spirit has found a home at the track and not around a poker table.
He places his betting slip in the breast pocket of his leaf-print shirt. He sucks air in through his nose, then abruptly bends in half. Your heart pauses before bang bang banging so hard that your hearing is affected. You tense, ready for anything. T.J. tries to say something, but the words get lost somewhere between his constricted diaphragm and his open mouth. He comes up holding a box of donuts. “Want one?” His fumbling fingers struggle to open the lid.
You are shaking your head, but he doesn’t notice so you say, “No, thank you.”
He keeps working the lid until it comes open, maybe determined for his own reasons to perform this simple act, maybe deaf to your refusal.
“No. Thanks,” you say again.
“It’s a new business,” he says. He looks at his hands, so deft at forgery, now struggling to close a donut box. “I bought a donut shop. I’m hoping to make that my primary—my only—business.”
Nodding, you think, Fine, fine, though finding a new counterfeiter will be an added challenge. “Is there an S.P. who works for you?”
“I’m using some of my Company staff at the new place,” he says, nodding.
You wait for him to go on. Down on the track, a jockey in shiny blue and grey satin leads a skittish horse with a shining coat back and forth in front of the grandstand.
T.J. stands up abruptly. “It’s nearby. The new business. At the amusement park. I think you should follow me.”
You lead the way out of the row of seats. T.J. hands the box of donuts and his ticket to an old lady sitting at the end of the row. She is surprised, but thanks him. T.J. leads you up the stairs and out of the grandstand.
Near the main gate to the amusement park, there is a small building marked SECURITY that interrupts the perimeter fence. You follow T.J. through its metal door. A woman wearing a navy blue uniform, her hair in a tight bun, looks up from a series of T.V. screens showing black and white images of the fence. “Hello, Mr. J.”
“He’s with me,” T.J. says.
“That’s fine.” To you, the woman says, “Hello.”
You walk out the glass door at the other side of the building and into a crowd of people hurrying left or right to some tempting amusement in their near future. T.J. finds a gap and you follow him into the flow. Soon you are lined up to take the gondola lift, its colourful cars carrying people to and from the castle on top of the iconic man-made mountain whose silhouette is the logo for the amusement park. You and T.J. don’t speak to each other, which is fine. A beautiful young boy and his lovely little sister are chasing each other between the fences keeping everyone else in line. You watch the boy notice a small garden growing on a raised platform beside the snaking line-up space. He stops and looks at the flowers. When his sister notices that he is no longer chasing her, she walks to where he stands. You watch him select and pluck two flowers, one yellow, one red. You watch him hold the red one out for his sister. Then both children flinch and turn abruptly towards an older woman who is bending towards them. The boy’s smile morphs into something pained, guilty, his eyebrows dancing anxiously. You watch as he drops the flowers. You watch as he cuts slowly back through the line towards his parents, crying, his sister following behind him and looking back towards the woman who is now standing straight up, her chin forward and her lips pressed tightly together, eyes fixed at some point past the heads of the people in front of her in line.
The girl and boy are still quiet five minutes later when they follow their parents into the yellow gondola and start up the mountain. There is room in the next gondola, orange, for you and T.J. The operator, his bright blue amusement park coveralls ironed and buttoned all the way up, says, “Hello, Mr. J. Nice to see you, sir.”
T.J. grunts something and holds his hand up in what is probably meant to be a wave. The operator looks at you like this rudeness is probably your fault and, you suppose, in some way it is. “Hi.” You offer a conciliatory smile, which the operator turns away from.
The gondola sways as it makes its halting progress above the crowds and amusements. T.J. stares off towards the racetrack. You catch a glimpse of the thoroughbreds with their tiny riders rounding into the final stretch. “Ah,” T.J. says.
You take a deep breath.
The gondola goes through a gate into a courtyard on top of the manmade mountain. T.J. steps out before you. “This way,” he says, walking towards the castle.
You follow him through two large wooden doors propped open with cinderblocks and into a food court. He walks towards a donut shop. “Hello, S.P.,” he says to the person in the bright red apron.
“Hello Mr. J.,” S.P. says.
“I’d like you to meet Mr. J.L.,” T.J. says.
“Hello Mr. L.” S.P. holds their hand out over the glass counter. 
You take S.P.’s hand and shake it.
“Mr. L. is from the Company,” T.J. says.
S.P. immediately withdraws their hand and stares at you angrily. Actually, angrily, is too mild an adverb.
“Where is Mahmoud?” T.J. asks.
S.P. turns their head towards T.J., opens their mouth then, without uttering anything, brings their eyes back to you.
“Mr. L. knows Mahmoud did not make his flight.”
S.P. bares their teeth. They open their mouth, like they might say something, before they close it again and inhale, their nostrils whistling and chest swelling. You are unnerved by the feelings behind the eyes S.P. fixes you with.
“Mr. L. is a reasonable man,” T.J. assures S.P. as he lifts up a section of countertop then opens a gate for you and he to pass through. “We can sort this out.”
Mahmoud is under a cowboy hat in the back room. He is reading Lonesome Dove. He drops the book and removes the hat when he sees you. “Hello, Jack. I’m . . .” He bows his head.
T.J. leads you, Mahmoud and S.P. to a tiny office. “Make yourselves at home, everyone. I’ll go work the front.” T.J. grabs an apron off a nail near the door. “I just want to say, Jack, obviously I was involved. I’m sorry I didn’t say anything, but I think that these two— Well, you’ll see. I think they make a strong case.” He runs his tongue nervously over his lips then turns to go.
You sit on the top of the desk and listen to S.P. explain how they had felt when they saw the photo of Mahmoud; how their love for Mahmoud grew as they spent time carefully placing the small picture in the fake passport; how S.P. had mustered the courage to ask Mr. J. for your address, a secret he guarded honourably; how once S.P. began to cry Mr. J. offered to bring the envelope with the letter to Mahmoud at your apartment; how Mr. J. asked where S.P. planned to meet Mahmoud, then made the map himself. Then Mahmoud explains how much he liked the city right away; how the letter—“This letter,” he says, pulling it out of his pocket—made him smile and laugh and feel at home; how he had followed the path through the park; how the birds had sung and flown about; how the chipmunks had scrambled between last fall’s leaves. How he and S.P. had held hands. How S.P. had given him the hat and Lonesome Dove, because S.P. thought Mahmoud would love the book and that the hat, they laughed, could act as a disguise. How they wanted, they do want to give things a try, to have a chance together, not because they know what the outcome will be, but because they want to and why not? Mahmoud does not want to move again and how is staying here, in this city, any different anyway?
They look up at you then. You stand. You crouch. You fold your hands as if in prayer and hold the tips of your index fingers between your teeth. You nod. You nod emphatically.
“Yes?” Mahmoud asks.
“Yes?” S.P. asks.
“Why not?” you say, nodding still.
They jump and hug and shower you with, Thank you, Thank you, Thank you.
Before you leave, before you accept the box of donuts T.J. insists on giving you, before you ride the gondola down the fake mountain, before you navigate through the crowds and board a bus, then a train, before you go home to your apartment, empty of Mahmoud and the three other men who had traveled so far to you, you make sure that you take S.P.’s hand and look them in the eyes and thank them, make sure that you take Mahmoud’s hand and look him in the eyes and thank him, make sure you thank them both, thank them both sincerely, and wish them good luck.
Toronto, Dec. 2015

Emoji sequence: Nolan Dubeau
Story: Lee Sheppard
If you liked this story, read "You, JL, Part I"

Saturday, 5 December 2015

You, JL, part I


You’re big. Or, you’re working on it, anyway. You always look a bit bigger after a work out and you like that.
You’re in the tub, your Tom of Finland book on the toilet seat beside you. The showerhead has a slow leak, and you watch the cold water collect, distorting the calcium caked holes before dropping into and being absorbed by your hot bath water.
The new anchor tattoo on your forearm barely distorts as you twist your wrist as far as it will go either way. The rope around the anchor, while stylized nicely, has a very natural quality to it. Even when you stop twisting your arm, it looks like the rope is dancing, maybe, or tossed in the competing currents at the bottom of the sea.
The towel feels good against your skin. You are an ember, and just below the surface there is fire burning in your muscles and bones and blood.
You sit on your low, single bed to pull on your briefs and your tight blue jeans. The bed is the closest thing you could find to a cot. The foam mattress is thin and hard; you’d considered replacing it when you realized that, no, you couldn’t really feel the bed-frame through it.
There is a bench and weights, a medicine ball and skipping rope in the corner. Also, there are four other cot-like beds in your room, all carefully made, each crisp white top sheet folded just so over a woolen blanket. Each bed has a full duffle bag on it and each duffle bag has a yellow Post-It with a name.
You notice an ingrown hair on your chest. Its red-ringed pustule is exposed by your favourite striped tank top. Your unzipped leather jacket’s broad fur collar will distract the average person from the tiny blemish on your exposed expanse of chest.
There is a pile of passports on your dresser. You shuffle through and open the first page of each forgery, just to make sure, before you slide them into the breast pocket of your leather jacket and zip the pocket up.
You tie your high-top black Converse, which are finally broken in enough to wear out of the apartment.

You lock your Kronan bike up out front of the bank. Through the window you can’t tell if that boy whose body is outgrowing his collared shirts is working. Yes, he’s cute, but more importantly he’s too new to the bank to ask many questions, too polite yet to scrutinize.
There is no lineup, so you haven’t had a chance to see if maybe your boy is there, just in some back room, when the bottle blonde with red lipstick and matching skirt says, “I can help you here.” You can’t think of a way to say no without seeming suspicious.
“Yes, Hi.” You smile briefly, without teeth, and keep eye contact with her for a count of one-one-thousand, two, then pull out your debit card and struggle to jam it into the machine. You give your arms a quick flick to get the nervous out of your fingers before you type your four-digit code.
The teller watches the screen until the information comes up. Then, “Joe Long Sausage Company?”
“That’s me.”
“Are you Joe Long?”
“Yes. I ordered some cash. I was checking to see if it had arrived.”
“How much?”
The customer next to you is an elderly woman wearing thirty-year-old glasses. She and her teller are engaged in an intense, whispered conversation about a number on the teller’s screen.
“Thirty-five thousand,” you enunciate quietly.
The teller slaps some keys on her keyboard and says, “It looks like it has arrived. May I see some identification, Mr. Long?”
“Of course.” You hand her a fine forged driver’s license with a picture of you when you were trying to grow your mustache. You really should just replace the embarrassing card.
She slaps more keys, then holds your card up to the computer screen. She hops off the stool like it has caught fire and walks over to the photocopier where she copies your card twice—front and back. “It will just be a minute, Mr. Long.”
On some signal, the large man with the lazy eye who helped you set up the account almost a year ago comes out of his windowed office, which overlooks the branch. “Good afternoon, Mr. Long,” he says.
“Hi.”
Smiling officially, he looks at your I.D. and at the photocopy. The teller walks off to where a woman waits behind security glass. The man comes over to the computer. “There’s just a form we need you to fill out,” he says. “It’s new. It’ll just be a minute.”
“It’s no problem,” you assure him.
The document declares that you have been advised and have understood that there are other, more secure ways to withdraw large sums, that you have taken necessary precautions to secure such a large sum, that you absolve the bank of any responsibility if you are robbed. As you are signing it, the teller returns with a sealed envelope containing four bundles of hundred dollar bills. She runs each bundle through a counting machine in plain view of anyone who might turn towards the noise. Three bundles have 100 bills, one bundle has 50. She puts the money into a narrow envelope, prints a receipt and hands you both. She and the large man smile and wish you a good day.
You put the envelope in a pocket hidden in the satin lining of your coat. You put on your watch cap, checking in the reflection of the bank’s window that it sits on your head at the angle you prefer.
The bike ride to the docks feels like floating or flying. Yes it is a downhill ride, as are most trips towards water, but it is the adrenaline in your legs and hands, the buzz between your ribs that lets you ignore the bike, that lets your eyes take in everything like you are a hawk above gliding on wind currents.
The Norwegian is beside the giant crab where he said he would be. He does not look well, he does not look like he’s been following the training regimen you set for him. No. He looks like he has been snorting with his shipmates and laying in his bunk all night nervous and twitching. You put your arm across his shoulders and tell him he looks like he needs a drink.
The crab shack is dim so people cannot see the quality of the crabmeat, shipped to this inland port from the East Coast. The music is loud, so that no one can hear your conversation. You order The Norwegian a glass of house red and a plate of French fries. You ask for a glass of water. Then, you excuse yourself.
The bathroom has a toilet, a urinal and a sink. The uncovered florescent light feels ruthlessly bright after the dining room’s dimness. You lock the door and take out the envelope. You remove what looks to you like fifty bills. Leaning against the sink, you count. You were close. It is 53 bills. You put the three extra bills back in the envelope and put the envelope back in your pocket. The $5000, you put in your wallet.
The Norwegian has finished his wine. He’s eating the fries one after another. You sit down across from him. “How’s the family?”
He stops chewing for a minute and looks at you almost like he’s wondering who you are. “They’re good.”
“Everyone is well?”
“Yes. Happy even. They got the food you sent them.”
“I hope so.”
“They are eating better than me.”
You tap the stack of money through your jacket. “You should be eating just fine.”
He smiles. “Alright,” he says. “But that isn’t all for me.”
You pull out your wallet and look at him for a few seconds before turning your head and getting the waitress’s attention. “Bill, please.” You hand The Norwegian five crisp hundreds. He smiles like a pervert. “Don’t snort that all at once,” you tell him. You slap a ragged looking twenty-dollar bill down on the table, drink all the water in your glass, then place the empty glass on the twenty.
“Your bill,” the waitress says, holding the paper out for you as you pass.
“There’s a twenty on the table.”
“Your change?”
“For you.”
“Thank you,” she says.
“See you again.”
The Norwegian refuses to take you into the yard before you pay, so you hand him the $30,000 in the shadow of the ship. He counts it there. You keep watch to make sure that no one sees him. He is a link in your chain worth replacing. “That money will get to the right people, right?”
He assures you it will.
“If not, The Company will know which hands dropped it.”
He paused and looked at you out of the corner of his eye before nodding vigorously. “Of course.”
The shipping container is bright orange and labeled John Littlegood Oil Co. It has been placed into the center of a little shipping container courtyard created by the Stevedores at your request. The Norwegian stands back and looks around nervously as you press your hand against the door and announce, “You have arrived. We are going to open the door now.”
The four men inside all cover their faces from the bright daylight. One man sits on the floor. One man is cross-legged on one of the cots. One man is holding a half eaten apple from one of the food bins. One man is standing in the back corner by the waste buckets. You wait for them to uncover their eyes, smiling despite the overwhelming gust of urine and feces and sweat and breath.
The man in the back corner slowly removes his forearms from his eyes. They are wide eyes, the iris a muddy brown. He has high cheekbones and pouting lips. He looks very nervous.
As you are holding his gaze and holding your smile, you unzip your breast pocket and pull the passports out.
The man on the floor lowers his forearm. He has a long, pigment-free scar beside his left eye. He stands.
The man with the scar’s passport is the third in the pile, you think. You shuffle to the appropriate document and turn to the appropriate page and, yes, this is the man’s new passport. You hand it to him. He reaches out, pinches it gently between his thumb and forefinger, and pulls it slowly towards himself.
The other two men are looking at you now, too. The man on the cot has thrown his legs over the edge of the bed and is blinking rapidly, his head lowered a little between his shoulders. The man with the apple is eating again, but he is chewing slowly and absentmindedly, like he’s thinking about hundreds of other things.
“Van’s here,” The Norwegian says.
You turn. Then, all four men turn, though they almost certainly cannot see the van yet. “Good,” you say, hoping to reassure the men.
After you give each their new identification, the men gather whatever clothes and things they managed to bring along. You speak to the driver and explain that, as usual, these men are to be taken to your apartment and told to make themselves at home: to shower, to eat, to exercise, to sleep. The driver knows to explain the duffle bags, to say that the clothes inside are gifts to welcome the men to their new home, but you remind him to do it anyway.
You open the rear doors of the van, parting the arcing pink text: Julia Love’s Linen Service. You pull out a duffle bag and throw it to The Norwegian, who has started to pile the dirty bedclothes by the container’s door.
Once the new arrivals have all found seats in the van, you make sure that they have each buckled up before closing the door and patting the side of the van. You wave as it drives off.
The Norwegian has finished making the beds and is emptying the coolers of any unfinished food. You walk to the back of the container and grab the slop buckets. Thirteen of them. You make sure the lids are sealed, then carry them out of the container before turning on the dangling overhead and closing the doors on The Norwegian.
The trailer from which the Stevedores conduct their business is much too warm. Baron wiggles his mustache and flicks his chin at you as you enter. His eyes check the windows left, right, and straight ahead.
Pulling your wallet from your pocket, you explain, “The Norwegian’s supposed to pay you, like normal. But—” One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine and ten one hundreds. You place them on Baron’s desk. “That’s a gift, but if you don’t get what’s owed you, then you talk to me, please.”
“Something wrong?” Baron slides you a key linked with a simple snap chain to a bright orange piece of floatation foam with a black “2” drawn on.
“Nope. Everything’s fine.” You nod and pick up the key. “Kids’ good, Baron?” you ask as you walk towards the door.
“Nope.”
“Figured.”
“You’d worry if I said yes.”
“It’s a shame. See you in a minute.”
Around back of the trailer, there are three modified golf carts with pickup truck style flatbeds and numerals on the hoods in faded black paint. You get into number two and drive it over to the container.
You put eight of the buckets on the flat bed and drive them to the water’s edge where you dump each one. Then, lying on the ground, you lower each bucket one by one into the lake water to rinse it. You drive back to the container to drop the empty buckets and return to the water’s edge with the remaining five to repeat the process.
Once you are finished, you and The Norwegian use rags and disinfectant to clean each bucket. Finally, the container is back to its pristine form, the empty slop buckets piled back in the corner.
The Norwegian shakes your hand. “We’ll see you again.”
“Would you mind taking the cart back for me?” you ask him.
He looks at the cart. “I’m meeting some of the crew—”
“It’ll only take a minute. You can give Baron his share. Get it over with.”
The Norwegian nods. He seems almost grateful. “Yeah,” he says. “Yeah, that’s a good idea.”
You unlock your bike and start the uphill ride back home.
To Be Continued
Toronto, Nov.-Dec. 2015

Emoji sequence: Nolan Dubeau
Story: Lee Sheppard