Fortune – 7

2018

Sitting in traffic to get to a coffee shop on the other side of town.  Ridiculous! But Lucy couldn’t afford to live in the coffee shop’s neighborhood and she wouldn’t give up going there even if it took 20 minutes to travel 10 miles.

Going out for coffee seemed like a break and an opportunity.  A welcoming destination.  She could focus on her writing better than sitting on her bed, it was a chance to drink coffee and maybe see someone she knew. Have a random encounter, overhear some gem of an observation, watch other people do whatever they did when no one was watching. 

 Sometimes after getting her coffee and securing a table to herself, she played a game she enigmatically called “How do I know I can trust you”.   Pick a person at random and create a backstory for them, complete it with a fact from your own life creating the illusion that you have something in common.  In a mysterious way this game made her feel more connected and after she played it several times she felt like she belonged in the world and was one of it’s true participants.

The radio played a song that was popular when she was in high school and her mind wandered. Communicating with strangers had begun to feel strained, archaic.  She often felt like she was trying to use a tin can on a string to talk with others, the  distance felt that tangible and clunky.  She would second-guess a witty remark that then would fall flat and seem inconsequential.  She might interpret a silence as awkward and try to fill it with too many meaningless Ummm’s and stutterings.

She had left her job at Costco recently to write her memoir, to live off her savings and drop out of the retail world where she felt like a gladiator facing off to a herd of lions.  “What was a group of Lions called?” This unemployment further isolated her but actually gave her something in common with a lot of others. Many were working this way now, consulting or contracting themselves, not dependent on a day to day wage slave at a building in the city. 

And she used to love to talk to new people! Lucy was the kind of woman you’d see at a party flitting from group to group, leaving the sound of laughter in her wake.  At this point in her life?  She was finding it difficult to know how to reply to a cashier’s “How are you today?”

The cars were starting to move and she felt a twinge of shame.  She would be a more important, interesting person if she had a tech job and was able to live in a beautiful apartment in the neighborhood instead of commuting.  And she’d walk to the coffee shop, saying hi to the fascinating neighbors and the local small dogs, and nonchalantly walk by the graffiti and the other city life she would pass every day.  Her everyday exposure to the “aunthenticity” of the  city would somehow make her a more “real” person. 

Another thing, Lucy pondered to herself, another thing that was disconcerting lately – she had seen some kids in the university district wearing face masks.  It made her wonder what they had that they didn’t want to give away.  Or was it something she had that she was infecting others with?

She’s ask someone she decided.  

Maybe she was just imagining things.

this is the 7th installment in the serial fiction Fortune

Fortune -5

The ambulance came to take her away.

Lucy stood out in the parking lot with the rest of the diners and staff, the ones that had stayed.   Lucy had seen some patrons running out the emergency fire door.  “I wonder if they paid,” she had thought as the chaos was ramping up.

It seemed like it had been years since she first saw that girl looking at her through the fishtanks, but it had probably only been a half an hour.  Time was feeling very fuzzy to Lucy so she concentrated on breathing evenly and naming things that she saw.  “Store” and “blue car” and “streetlight”.

Would they take her to a mental hospital? Lock her up?

The door to the ambulance closed from the inside and the vehicle started away. Lucy wondered if she should go back in to get her left-overs but she didn’t want to take a remembrance of this evening home with her.  

The wildfires were still burning in some places on the west coast.  The night air was easier to breathe than the smoky, daytime air.   Because it was late summer the hot days kept the smoke thick and ,hovering and the sun in the sky turned a bright orange.  Breathing outside made you want to lick your mouth like a dog that has tasted something strange.

Lucy got in her car and put the key into the ignition. She looked up, through the windshield, and saw a flyer under the wiper. She unrolled her window and craned her body to reach it.  

A blank piece of paper.  No, there was a qvc code printed on one side, blank on the other.  Just a plain piece of copy paper with that…what was that thing anyway, like a bar code? “I have no idea what to do with this thing,” she thought.  It made her shiver a little to think of someone putting that on her car.  A bread crumb, a sign post to what? Why her.

She crumpled the paper and threw it on the floor of the passenger side. 

And then in a change of mind, she reached over to grab the paper and smoothed it open on the seat.  Smoothed it and folded it, putting in her purse.  She would ask her son what that symbol was, he was a millienial and knew about stuff like this. And how to use it. 

this is the 5th installment in a 5 part series