Categories
Short Fiction

Molecular

Illustrations were done by Kelsey Parkhurst (kelseyparkhurst.com and @unsolicited253 on IG)

I wake up, sweaty and tightly wrapped in my blanket, as if I’ve been performing a death roll in my dreams. I live in a single room in a rundown building on the outskirts of Chicago. It’s called “The Northside Manor” but the sign is missing the “N”. Sometimes I call it “The Orthside Manor,” but never in front of people. My apartment is on the third floor, just warm enough to be uncomfortable during the day, a little too cold during the night.  I look around my room, it’s a mess, and standing in the middle of it is Gregor.

I don’t believe in ghosts, and I’m not crazy, but my apartment is definitely haunted. I was here first, Gregor moved in a few weeks after I did. Sometimes he is only sound, but when he wants to be seen, he is a leather-clad punk rock looking guy. He shoots me a shit-eating grin, and combs a green mohawk. I ignore him, I hate punk rock.

Lately he’s begun to follow me outside of the apartment. It puts me on edge. People see me yelling at him and they think I’m crazy, which is stupid. I tried to talk to my landlord about doing something about it, but he doesn’t believe me. Apparently, exorcisms aren’t covered in my rental agreement.

I walk right through Gregor’s body and sort through the clothes that he had strewn about the place overnight. He hates when I ignore him, and vanishes in a huff. I can feel him perch on my neck and he whispers into my ear, “Your teeth are shifting.

My thumbnail instinctively moves to my front teeth. The left tooth is slowly overtaking the right one. My nail clicks against the overhang with a futile effort to fix the deformity.

You’re not going to fix it like that,” says Gregor. He brandishes a pair of phantom pliers. I wish I hadn’t lost my retainer.

Eventually he’ll get tired of hassling me and go back to flinging my clothes about. I grab my bright blue polo shirt with the Shell gas station logo on it, and pull my black slacks out from under my blanket. I head to the door and Gregor makes a point to fling himself wildly against it. His tantrum is echoing down the hall. I’m sure I’ll get a note from my neighbors about this, but there’s no way to explain these things without sounding crazy so I keep my silence.

 I walk the three blocks to the gas station with Gregor creeping behind me. He whispers things while we walk, I try not to notice. “Crack, crack. Step, step on a crack break your mother’s back, step on a crack. Crack.” He’s not funny, but he thinks he is.

When I finally get to the gas station, I relieve Phil from the night shift. Phil is an older guy, I don’t know much about him for sure. He has a younger daughter that hates him, he writes a lot of Xena fan-fiction, and the owner of the gas station, Imran, tells me that he got a Math degree from Harvard. But I think he just says that to justify not firing Phil yet.

I always smile around Phil, I guess because he’s always so depressed. I’ve seen him take meds before. I’ve seen him not take them too. I don’t know which Phil I like more. Gregor loves Phil, he says that they’re kindred spirits. I’m not sure what that means, but I don’t want to ask.

Anyways, I take over the cash register. We count up all the money together and complete our shift changing duties. Gregor whispers numbers in my ear while I count. He doesn’t want to be ignored today.

 Phil always stays about twenty minutes after his shift to complain about everything that happened that previous night. I used to ignore Phil when he complained, but a couple weeks ago a guy died in the bathroom on his shift. Since then, I’ve been trying to be better about listening.

The dead guy was a heroin addict. He didn’t overdose or anything. Phil said he just got really high and hit his head, then had his girlfriend stop at the gas station on the way to the hospital so he could take a shit. He passed out on the toilet and died there. Brain aneurysm, or something. Gregor joked that he must have pushed too hard. I think it messed Phil up pretty bad, he cleaned up the mess. The cops told him that he shouldn’t have, because they usually do that kind of thing, but Phil did it anyway. He is kind of OCD like that.As soon as Phil leaves, Eva sneaks over from the coffee shop across the street. She doesn’t like Phil. She says he makes her feel empathetic. Eva hates empathy. She’s a really nice girl, really, but she says she doesn’t like feeling other people’s feelings. I’ll admit she’s a bit odd, but she always brings me free coffee and sits with me during slow hours. She’s very pretty. She has a lazy eye, but you wouldn’t notice unless she told you.

“It’s a screen door kind of day, isn’t it?” says Eva. I nod. She isn’t expecting a reply. Most of our conversations are like that. I guess I’m just not as good at words as she is. I like to listen to her talk, she doesn’t talk much around other people, just me. That makes it valuable.

Gregor floats listlessly about the counter while we talk. When there is a lull in the conversation he makes fun of me. “Man, I can’t believe she’s still talking to you. She must feel really bad for you, dude. It’s probably your teeth.”

My thumbnail clicks against my teeth until Eva seems to notice. I stop abruptly and she smiles, but I can’t tell whether it’s because I stopped or because I was doing it in the first place.

She continues to talk, absentmindedly folding a piece of paper. “Today’s Tuesday. It’s called that because of the god Tyr, from Norse mythology. They say he got his hand bitten off by a giant wolf. That’s why they call the wrist your wolf joint. Have you ever heard someone call a wrist a wolf joint?”

I shake my head, no. Gregor is making obscene gestures from behind Eva. I really don’t know what’s gotten into him today. My face flushes with embarrassment, but Eva doesn’t notice and continues talking.

“Yeah, I don’t think I have either. I wonder where people say things like that.” She stops talking for a moment, and makes a concerned face at her folded paper. “They say you can only fold a piece of paper seven times, but I’m stuck at six.”

Eva has long red hair, and lots of freckles. She likes bees and wants to be a beekeeper, or a lavender farmer. I’m not sure what lavender smells like, but she says it smells good. I think I had lavender scented soap once.

Things start to get busy around noon and Eva has to leave, but she asks me to go to a party at her apartment. I say I’ll go. I’m not a people person, but I like to be around them. People help me tune Gregor out.

The rest of the day goes by pretty fast. There are consistently people in the store with me, and Gregor behaves himself for the most part. He passes time by slinking around, shifting into different animals, and knocking candy off the shelves. I follow along and straighten everything out. I actually don’t mind, it gives me something to do.

A middle aged woman comes in and buys three miniature wine bottles. She seems kind of embarrassed about it. She comes back two hours later with a drunken squint and her blouse unbuttoned so that her cleavage is showing. She flirts with me a bit before leaving with another three miniature wine bottles. I’m not that great at flirting, I don’t think I’m supposed to flirt on the job anyways.

 I see the woman again at about five. She has put on a coat, and her make-up is smeared as if she has been crying. She doesn’t look me in the eye this time, and leaves with two miniature wine bottles. I feel empathy toward her, Eva would hate it.

I hear that some people are more likely to be addicts than others, some special molecule in their brain makes it happen. I think the wine lady has that molecule. The heroin guy probably did too, but I bet that one is a different molecule. I really hope I don’t have a molecule.

I’m your molecule,” hisses Gregor. I ignore him but the thought lingers.

Phil comes in at about twenty past seven. He complains about his daughter, and I listen. I always feel bad for his daughter. She never seems to do anything wrong, but she and Phil don’t get along. I wonder what happened to her mother. I wonder if there’s a depression molecule. There probably is.

I go straight back to the apartment after work, and Gregor begins tearing the place up enthusiastically. He is in his punk rock outfit again, stage diving off my bed into the pile of clothes on my floor. He must know that I’m not staying for long, he seems agitated. He hisses angrily as I change into my only clean pair of jeans and my favorite jacket, which I notice that he had torn in his fit. I yell at him for a while, and he seems to quiet down. I hate yelling at him. It makes me feel crazy. I think my neighbors are scared of me. I hate that too.

 I sit on my bed and flip through the phone book. Gregor sits directly in front of me and half-heartedly flips the pages back. I tell him that if he was real I would’ve killed him by now. I always say that. I say it like a joke, but I’ve never meant anything more in my life.

As it turns out, Eva only lives a couple blocks away from me. I leave a little bit late for the party. It is very cold outside, and dark. The inside of my nostrils sting. I ring the doorbell, but nobody opens the door. Maybe they can’t hear me. They are having a party, after all.

I ring the doorbell again. The door seal cracks as someone pushes it open, just enough to send a sliver of light across my sneakers. I walk in to see Eva glide back down the hallway in wool socks, her long red hair accented against a blue floral dress.

I add my shoes to the pile by the door, mostly leather dress shoes and high heels. Noise from the living room echoes against the white stucco walls of the small apartment, and I reluctantly walk towards it. I regret not wearing thicker socks; my feet are already going numb against the cold hardwood floor.

The living room is square. Three couches line the walls, filled with well-dressed young people drinking wine. I don’t know anyone, so I quickly take a seat next to Eva. She doesn’t introduce me to anyone. I’m thankful for that, I guess. Someone hands me a drink. The conversation seems intellectual, and I am too tired to do anything except feel self-conscious about wearing jeans and a torn jacket to what I didn’t know was a formal event.

I quietly survey my surroundings. There are half-deflated balloons taped to the ceiling, each one has a name written on it. “What are those for?” I ask.

Everyone laughs, except for Eva. She smiles and looks down at her feet. A large guy on my left leans toward me, a little too far, and says, “Eva got bored over the summer so she made a balloon for every one of her friends. Now they’re all deflated but she still won’t take them down.”

“Well, they’re all still my friends,” says Eva, “The people, not the balloons.” Everyone laughs again. Someone hands me another drink.

Eva places her warm, wool-clad left foot over my right foot and applies pressure. Someone asks me a question. I can’t think of an answer, so I just smile. Eva doesn’t really ever say anything, but everyone seems to talk directly to her. She occasionally lets out a chirping laugh, or deadpans an absurd thought. Something about bumblebees. Everyone laughs when she speaks. More drinks.

I let myself relax into the hum of conversation, smiling, feeling a little too drunk. I realize how long it’s been since I’ve seen Gregor. He must have gotten lost on the way here. That’s how I know he’s a ghost. If he was a molecule in my head, he probably wouldn’t go away. I can feel the gentle pressure of Eva against my shoulder.

 “MOLECULE

I almost jump out of my seat, spilling my drink on the sleeve of my jacket.

 “Who said that?”

The room goes quiet and everyone looks at me.

 “Said what?” asks Eva. I let out a forced laugh and try not to look crazy.

“Oh, um, nevermind.” A few people laugh, I act like I’m not still hearing things.

Molecule. Your molecule.

Gregor peeks around the corner, wearing a crooked party hat next to his mohawk. “You thought you got rid of me? Maybe you really are crazy.

The talking starts back up, drowning him out. I thumb my teeth.

Hours pass and all of the guests leave. Eva asks if I would like to stay the night and I say yes. We walk back down the cold hallway to her room. She apologizes for putting her foot over mine and pressing down, but says that she thought it would be comforting. I suppose it was. I sit on her bed and stare at her tapestry covered walls while she takes a shower. Gregor sits next to me. I ask him to please leave me alone. He shrugs and vanishes.

The room smells like some sort of herbal something. Probably lavender. She comes back wearing nothing but a towel. I take a shower next.

Apparently the shower was where Gregor was hiding out. “You just couldn’t live without me could you?” I hope he wasn’t there while Eva was showering.

When I get back to Eva’s room, she is laying on her bed, naked except for her wool-knit socks. Her body is lean, but muscular. Her nudity doesn’t surprise me, she seems more comfortable, and the comfort makes me feel more confident. She asks if I want to have sex, and we do.

After we finish, we both crawl into her bed. Her pillow cases are old t-shirts, damp and smelling clean like her hair. We stay up late talking. She tells me that her lazy eye gives her hallucinations because it doesn’t sync up with her other eye. She says that for the last year, she has thought that she might be dead. She says she feels that she watches other people’s lives, but doesn’t actually live. She says that occasionally her hallucinations cause her to lose track of time and where she is. She says that she hasn’t told anyone this before.

I tell her that I don’t know what to say, she laughs because she doesn’t either. I think that she’s self-conscious now, because I’ve been quiet. I’m trying to decide if she has a molecule. “Do you think I’m crazy?” she asks.

I take a deep breath. “Do you believe in ghosts?”

She looks as me funny.

“I mean, I don’t, but I think I’m being haunted because there’s this ghost, and his name is Gregor, and he lives in my apartment, and he follows me around, but nobody else can see him.”

She just stares, her mouth open a little. “Are you making fun of me?”

I don’t think I’ve ever seen her look that way. She pulls away from me and a vacuum of cold air fills the void. I pull her close and try to kiss her but she doesn’t kiss back. The comfort is gone.

“I think you should go home.” She says. I try to think of a way to reason with her, but decide she is too good with words.

I quickly dress and leave Eva’s apartment. I shiver, half from the cold, and half from an empty creeping fear. Something doesn’t seem right. I feel like I’m too drunk, the Earth is rolling towards me as I walk. I can hear Gregor laughing behind me. “I can’t believe you blew it!”

I start to run, leaving Gregor behind. I run past my apartment and all the way to the gas station. The drunken lady from earlier is slumped on the sidewalk a few feet from the entrance, weeping and surrounded in vomit. I walk past, and into the gas station. Phil isn’t at the register.

I wander into the back room, and find Phil hunched over on a stool, head in his hands. He looks up at me with watery bloodshot eyes and gets embarrassed, rubbing his face with his hands and clearing his throat.

“What are you doing here? It’s only four.”

I tell him about the woman in front of the store.

“Yeah I know. She tried to buy more booze and I had to kick her out. That’s my problem. This is my shift. Why are you even here? Why don’t you go somewhere else?”

I shrug.

He laughs, stops, knocks over a box of potato chips and collapses back down onto the stool. “That’s your problem. Your generation is too messed up. You can’t care about anyone. Nobody cares about anyone anymore.”

I stand there, not sure of what to do, my thumb clicking against my teeth. His head is in his hands again but I can still tell he’s crying. I look back into the store and see Gregor standing at the register. He waves.

I slowly make my exit from the back room, from behind me Phil mutters, “I could just disappear and no one would notice.”

Gregor thumbs through yesterday’s newspaper. I grab the mop bucket and wheel it outside. The woman is gone, I start mopping up her mess. Maybe her addiction molecules are in there somewhere. Maybe she got lucky and her body finally rejected them onto the sidewalk. I kind of doubt it, mostly looks like macaroni.

Phil walks out to his car. He opens the door to his driver’s seat and waits for me to look at him.

“I’m going home. If you see Imran, tell him I’m not coming back.”

He waits for a moment. I can tell he wants me to say something. I thumb my teeth.

“Hey, Phil?”

He sighs heavy, expectantly. “Yeah?”

“If you, get to choose, to be a ghost or not…”

Phil takes a quick two steps towards me and punches me in the face. Right on the cheekbone. It’s already bleeding on my shirt. I hold my face in shock for a moment before finishing, “…Don’t be a ghost.”

Categories
Short Fiction

Smoke in the Summertime

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

She danced like cigarette smoke in the summertime; slow, deliberate, pleasant in the short term but carcinogenic at length. Their eyes watched from under the brim of weathered cowboy hats and her eyes flickered around the room returning every glance and disappearing in and out of the thick cloud of tobacco smoke that filled the saloon. The atmosphere was stagnant as the parched local life assessed whether she planned to quench or incinerate.

               These were dry folk. They looked like drought. Chapped lips stuck to gums, skin cracked and blistered, sunken eyes glared from their sockets.

               She twirled and threw back a shot of whiskey from the top of the piano, pausing to judge the character of the woman playing it. They locked eyes and the musician gave her a smile and a nod, never breaking the parlor song rhythm that her fingers heavily slammed out on the keys.

               Neither of the women seemed to be from town. The dancer was lean and sharp, but healthy looking, dressed in a strange earth colored gown with red silk streaming off of her joints. The musician was a rosy cheeked portly woman with smile lines weathered into her face. She wore the thick canvas pants and leather boots common among the men around her but her shirt was clean white cotton with frills at the end of her sleeves. The dancer wore no shoes.

               As the song died down, the musician stood up to take a break. None of the patrons so much as raised an eyebrow.

               “My name’s Marla,” She said as she extended a frilly wrist toward the dancer. “Can I get you a drink?”

At by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

“It is good to meet you Marla.” The dancer spoke slowly, and with an indistinguishable accent. Her eyes seemed red. But perhaps that was just the sunlight coming through the dirty windows. “I would love a drink.”

               “So what brings you to Drywater?” Marla struggled to make eye contact as the Dancer’s long curly black hair teased the tight skin along her collar bone.

               The dancer flashed a bright smile. “You do not think I am from here? I am. Where are you from?”

               The bartender interrupted unsmiling and whistling through the broken teeth he still possessed. “Bullshit she’s from here. I ain’t seen ‘er around.”

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

“Maybe I have been avoiding you,” the Dancer said at last. She slid the glass across the bar top and the bartender caught and refilled it, not breaking eye contact with the Dancer.

               Marla stammered, seeking to regain the Dancer’s lost attention. “Well, uh, if you’re from here, how come you’re still here? Drywater is a mining town, and a small one at that. Surely a pretty woman like you would have more luck living in the big city?”

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

With that the two strolled out of the saloon and onto the dirt road that ran through Drywater. Marla found herself staring at the Dancer’s bare feet, they landed soft against the Earth and were not coated in the dust or dirt that caked and crusted onto her own boots. The Earth seemed to release her with every step. “Um, where are we going?”

               The dancer did not look back. “To the building of the mining company.”

               Marla practically had to jog to keep up. Wind began coming in strong from the East, whipping tumble weeds down the street. “I think another storm is comin’.”

               The dancer laughed, “Yes, yes, the last storm.” She strolled up to the oak doors of the largest building in town. The sign out front said, “Drywater Mining Co.” She swung the door open hard and Marla followed behind. At the front desk was a young man with a thin goatee and clean clothes. He stood up as the dancer walked in. “Pardon me miss, but you’re gonna have to come back another-“

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

The dancer swung an arm in a fluid movement and hit the young man so hard in the face that Marla could hear his skull give a sickening pop and as he slumped to the floor she heard a wet gurgle and a stink as the young man’s bowels released.

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

The dancer turned right and climbed a short flight of stairs up to the second story pf the building. Marla stared at the broken young man with her mouth agape, but quickly followed.

               Upstairs was an office space, with one large desk that the dancer had an older fat man pinned to. She hissed in a language that Marla had never heard, and as the old man pleaded, the dancer gripped his throat with her left hand and raised her right hand in the air. Sunlight silhouetted her fingers, which danced through the dust upturned but the struggle, and her little finger bubbled and cracked while bending in impossible ways. The dancer hummed and hissed with her eyes closed, hips moving to an imperceptible beat.

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

Marla watched in shock as the beautiful dancer’s finger turned into a scorpion’s tail, which gave a dramatic flourish and disappeared into the old man’s mouth. His eyes bulged and watered as he screamed silently. As his body went slack, Marla noticed the skin near his eyes and lips turning black.

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

With a satisfied look, the dancer withdrew as if nothing had happened, and wiped her little finger on a stand of red silk. She strode past Marla, down the stairs, past the young man’s body and out the door. Marla looked from the body to the staircase twice and ran after the dancer as fast as she could. As she ran out the door, strong hands grabbed her shoulders, stopping her completely, and the dancer pressed her mouth against Marla’s in a kiss so passionate that Marla forgot the bodies behind her and melted into the woman before her, their tongues becoming intertwined and the dancer’s somehow wrapping around Marla’s several times like a tiny serpent. The dancer’s tongue pulled hard as it unraveled back into the dancer’s mouth, keeping Marla’s mouth pressed close.

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain

Marla was vaguely aware of the dust storm kicking up around them. She could hear the townspeople scurrying for cover and shuttering windows. She could feel the sand stinging her face, but she no longer seemed confined by her body. She was warm, comfortable, and felt a deep glow of ease emanating from within her.

               The dancer pulled her face back, and looked deep into Marla’s eyes. They both smiled and the dancer gave a long farewell kiss before backing away off of the mining company’s porch.

               “Wait,” Marla shouted, holding her hat to her head, “I don’t know your name! Why did you want me to follow you?”

               The dancer began to twirl and slide into the dust storm. Marla heard her voice as if the dancer was whispering in her ear. “Only the wind may speak my name and only the Earth knows it.”

Art by Carolyn Main @carolynmain
Categories
Short Fiction

It’s a New Year, Baby

It's a new year baby travis nelson short fiction
Art by Mitch Mitchell

On a grim grey block on the last day of the year you could hear the distant rattle of noise makers, upbeat and festive amongst the economic decay surrounding. The same thing happened every year. Party goers flocked to the Genesis Pub on New Year’s Eve. That was the only time it was busy, and frankly, the only time anyone had noticed it existed. The rest of the year it may as well have been boarded up like the rest of the block full of dilapidated old retail shops and a warehouse barely standing. The city’s health department didn’t even have it on the books.

     Down the street, a young group en route to the Genesis walked past a shuttered convenience store. They gave a wide berth to a solitary person sitting on the sidewalk, covered in blankets, sitting on cardboard, and looking the worse for wear.

     A man and a woman, her hands tightly wound around his arm (pressure does seem to stave off the cold), stopped to ask the lone person for directions. “Excuse me,” the young man asked, holding up a flyer, “Do you know where the Genesis Pub is?”

     A worn, sexless face gazed up and wheezed, “Just down the block. Keep going, you won’t miss it.”

     The man muttered a “Thanks,” and tried to move on but the woman hanging on his arm pulled back. “Thank you for the help… eh…”

     The old faced split with a toothless smile and said, “Call me Baby, honey.” The woman smiled back and pulled out a five dollar bill out of her pocket. “Happy New Year, Baby.”

     Baby took the bill and tucked it into the pile of blankets, whispering a “Thank you,” with a head tilted low.

happy new year baby bum outside travis nelson short fiction
Art by Mitch Mitchell

The man pulled his girlfriend away scolding, “Emily you shouldn’t give them money, you don’t know what they’re going to spend it on.”

     “Well it’s my New Year’s resolution to be more charitable,” she said as she elbowed him playfully in the ribs, “Wouldn’t hurt you to do the same Derek.”

     The couple passed before they could see a tear roll down Baby’s cheek, leaving a clean path through soot and dirt, seemingly dissolving wrinkles as it went.

     The straggling group of friends neared Baby and didn’t see the tear either, they didn’t even look down. Baby wheezed a “Happy New Year,” at them and one man said, “About damn time, this year sucked.”

     Baby had a coughing fit as they passed by, and a girl in the group made a quip about tuberculosis.

     Once they had left ear shot, Baby pulled a weathered hand from the blankets and clicked on a metal counting device. One for Derek, eight for the lagging friend group. A smile grew wide once again and Baby cackled in a manic, quiet glee, “That’s enough for this year! That’s them all!”

     Inside the Genesis was a party fit for the end of the world, a setting dystopian in a subtle way. Everyone was wearing pointy party hats and many had novelty drinking shirts that said things like “Drinking Team Captain” or “Drinking in the New Year.” Some were even in costumes, including a Big Bird, Santa Claus, and Father Time. The bartenders had stopped charging for drinks and were pouring freely, adding to the anarchistic vibe that accompanies a good New Year’s Eve bash.

     Derek, Emily, and their group sat at a table full of beers  and half a dozen shots of whiskey. The group was loudly discussing their resolutions. One friend leaned in at an exaggerated tilt, his loosened tie plopping into a puddle of beer on the table as he loudly explained to Emily that this was the year he was going to turn things around, “No, seriously.” His boyfriend sat back in the chair next to him, staring off into the distance as a sort of inebriated ennui settled over his consciousness.

     At 30 minutes to midnight, nobody even noticed the door creak open as Baby slipped in, surprisingly agile in a mismatched pair of old boots. A room of costumes provided adequate camouflage.

     The girl that had made the tuberculosis comment on the sidewalk earlier was leaning heavily on the end of the bar, her eyes glossed over. She gripped a wad of money in one hand, waiting to get the attention of a bartender, but far too drunk to realize that the bartenders had left. Baby sidled up next to her, the girl noticed that.

     “Hey… weren’t you outside earlier?” She slurred, leaning back for a better view, and a less distinct smell. “You can call me Baby,” said Baby.

     “Look, I’m really sorry.” The girl’s eyes were sad, “I’ve had a really tough year too…” But Baby held up a hand, “Let’s not talk about last year. Let’s talk about… next year.”

     The girl swallowed hard. “Yeah. Next year. Next year I’m gonna fix it.”

     Baby pulled the girl close, “That’s the spirit. Tell me how good you’re gonna be.

Emily’s eyes had started wandering around the room. She had never been much of a drinker. The more she looked around, the stranger the bar seemed. There was a whole wall of photos from New Year’s past, going all the way back to black and white. She tugged on Derek’s sleeve, “Hey does this place like, only do New Year’s Eve parties?”

     Derek, interrupted halfway through a conversation he already couldn’t remember, scoffed, “Baby, that wouldn’t make any sense. They wouldn’t be able to stay open off of one night a year.” He turned back toward the group, “Hey has anyone seen Jasmine?”

     Emily got up to use the restroom, humming along to the song currently playing, “…I’m just a soul whose intentions are good, oh lord please don’t let me be misunderstood…”

     She turned down the narrow hallway to the restrooms, and almost ran smack into Baby, who was chatting with an extremely drunken guy in a dress shirt stained with cranberry juice who was absolutely bawling. “You’re like, so right. This is a chance to turn things around. This is a real chance for a new beginning.”

     Emily tried to catch Baby’s eye to give a knowing smile, she’d babysat her fair share of drunks. But as Emily walked by, she was suddenly unsure if it was Baby. There was no longer any dirt to that face, the wrinkles were gone, and somehow… did Baby have teeth now? She caught a flash of enamel as Baby murmured to the drunk guy, “You’re gonna need a plan if you’re gonna turn things around, sweetie. Tell me what you’re gonna do. Tell Baby how you’re gonna make it all better.”

     Emily ducked into the restroom and tried to shrug of the incongruities of the night. Baby must have dentures or something. There were three stalls, but the only one with a clean toilet also had a broken door that she carefully adjusted into semi-working condition. She sat on a cold seat and was accosted by a hot smell of vomit from the toilet next to her. She wasn’t sure why she and Derek were spending New Year’s Eve in such a dump, but it had seemed like such a good idea earlier on in the week. Now she couldn’t even remember whose idea it was.

     She flushed the toilet. It was the only thing she’d encountered in the bar that was functional as anything other than an alcoholic. In fact, it was so functional that it sprayed water back up on her dress. She sighed, washed her hands and checked her phone, where she had a strange number of texts about missing friends.

     “Where’s Jasmine? Lol”

     “Hey have you seen Amanda?”

     “Is Brett with you?”

     Damn drunks wandered like cats. As she walked out into the bar, she noticed that Baby and the drunk guy had disappeared.

     The table her group had been sitting at now had a few empty chairs. As she sat back down, Derek slurred into her ear, “Ten bucks says Amanda and Brett are hooking up.”

     She rolled her eyes and then squinted quizzically, “Hey did it… did it get brighter in here?”

     Derek made a bad joke about, “Must be me,” but she shook her head, “No dude, something’s weird here.”

     Emily looked behind the bar and saw the bartenders were gone, and now the only person behind the bar was a person about her age wearing a white sequined dress and leaning over the bar chatting with a distraught looking young man. The sequined dress seemed to be glowing, but the person wearing it seemed oddly familiar.

     Emily walked up to the bar and tried to wave down the sequined dress. “Hi! Hello! I’m Emily!”

     Sequins didn’t even look her way, “Yeah hi Emily, one second girl.” Something was whispered to the young man, who picked himself up off the bar and staggered around to a door near the restrooms that said, “Office.”

     The person in the white sequined dress watched him go, and as the door shut behind him, they turned to Emily and said, “I really hope he doesn’t piss on the desk.”

     “What’s your name?” Asked Emily, attempting friendly.

     The glowing figure flashed a flawless smile and said, “I’m Baby.”

     Emily forced a laugh. “Ha. Ha. That’s so weird, I met someone outside named Baby…” She purposely leaving space for Baby a chance to explain whatever it was and take responsibility for whatever was happening.

     Instead, Baby laughed and said, “Everybody’s a Baby on New Year’s, it’s a new start.” The smile disappeared and Baby looked straight into Emily’s eyes for a startling second and muttered, “Shouldn’t you be getting home Emily? It’s getting late.”

     Baby then walked over to the office and opened the door, beckoning a number of morose party goers in before following them, and as the door closed, Baby looked back and winked at her without a smile.

     Emily took a random shot off of the bar because she needed it, because this wasn’t the booze. Something was up in that bar and, “Oh shit, that was fireball, gross.”

     She walked back over to her table, where Derek and two others were the last left seated. “Derek, I want to go.”

     Derek tried to turn his head without turning his body, and almost fell out of his chair. “C’mon baby, I don’t want to spend the countdown in an Uber!”

     “Derek, seriously, I want to go. NOW.”

     As Derek scoffed, Emily looked up to see the door to the office, glowing bright from the inside. The door swung open and a kid that looked about eleven years old walked out. The kid was the only one that walked out and was glowing so much that you couldn’t even see its face.

     “Hey does anyone else think it’s weird that there’s a kid in the bar?”

     Nobody seemed to hear Emily.

     “DOES ANYONE ELSE THINK IT’S WEIRD THAT THERE’S A KID IN THE BAR AND THAT KID IS FUCKING GLOWING?!”

     The music had stopped and now a bar full of drunken, disgruntled faces were staring at her. “I mean, does nobody else think something weird is going on?”

     A guy a few tables away hollered, “Sit down.” The crowd chuckled.

     Emily started to say, “Why are all our friends missing?” But as she opened her mouth, the lights in the bar dimmed and a spotlight shone on a karaoke machine in the corner. The kid stepped into the spotlight and picked up the microphone. “Hi everyone! I’m Baby. Are you ready for the countdown?”

     The bar slurred a cheer together.

     “Before it’s time, let’s take a minute to focus on everything we’re going to do better next year. Let’s all make resolutions!”

     The same monotone cheer.

     Emily noticed Baby was glowing even brighter “No!” She yelled, “Guys don’t! We have to leave now!”

     “You have to leave now!” Baby yelled into the microphone, causing feedback into the cheap karaoke speaker. “We’re not starting the countdown until you go!”

     The entire bar stood up at once and moved toward Emily. “What are you doing?” She screamed, “This is crazy!”

     Derek grabbed her by the arm, “You’re being weird babe. Wait outside, I’ll be out in a minute after the countdown.”

     Emily felt hands all over her, pushing her towards the door, but it was too dark to see who was touching her. Before she could protest further, she was out on the sidewalk, the door slamming behind her. She heard it lock, and she stood there shaking from fear, anger, and cold. She looked down the street and saw the pile of blankets where Baby had been, now they danced untethered across the street.

     She could hear drunks inside yelling out their resolutions and she banged her fists on the door in protest.

     Baby began counting down, “10…9…8…”

     A glow from the bar shone from under the door.

New Year baby woman looking in travis nelson short fiction
Art by Mitch Mitchell

“7…6…5…4…”

     “Derek I swear to god!”

     “3…2…1”

     “DEREK!”

     From inside, “HAPPY NEW YEAR!”

     The bar erupted in a rendition of “Auld Lang Sine” and with every word the bar got brighter and brighter. The building started to shake so hard that dirt fell from the roof and Emily stepped back out onto the street, convinced that it would collapse.

     Then, as soon as the song ended, the entire bar went dark and silent. Even the open sign in the window turned off. Emily stood there in the cold, quiet dark, and for just a moment, she heard a baby coo.