June 4-3, 2025 (Fiction)

The Crusader

Gale slouched outside the tall glass building and tugged at the collar of his shirt that squeezed his large, pale neck. As he adjusted his tie in the reflection of the windowpane, he couldn’t help but pause and look at himself. Had I really gained this much weight? A gentle breeze caressed the sides of his tweed jacket, threatening to reveal his midsection. Gale hastily buttoned the jacket and looked around to ensure that no one was watching. Men with suitcases and places to be walked past him, never giving him so much as a glance. No one ever looked at Gale, and this gave him a strange sense of comfort. As he brushed his short hair with his hands and parted it in the middle, he looked through the reflection in the window and saw a young woman sitting at a desk and staring into his eyes with a pitying smile. Gale forced a disingenuous grin, hunched over, and looked at the floor as he walked into the looming building of the Peabody Conservatory at Johns Hopkins University.

No one watched Gale as he shuffled towards the office door that read DR. Tobias Faustus. He tried to wipe the sweat from his brow but found that his hands were just as sweaty as his forehead. He knocked sheepishly three times.

“Come right in!” He heard the professor sing. Gale slowly opened the door with his gaze upon the patterned rug. As he closed the door behind him, he saw the old, lanky professor behind his desk standing and looking out the window.

“Gale.” The professor greeted without turning around. “Please, sit down and be comfortable.”

Gale obeyed the first demand. The professor turned around, looked into his eyes, and smiled like a predator. “It seems like only yesterday that your brother was in this very office.” He looked at Gale’s small shoulders and protruding stomach and felt more powerful than he ever had before.

“Yes, professor.” Gale responded. His eyes switched between the floor and the desk in front of him. Upon the desk was pages of sheet music marked with red scribbles. The professor stood up straighter as he paced behind the desk. “You and he are not so different, you know.”

Gale’s eyes widened as he met the professor’s gaze for the first time. It was the best compliment he’d ever received. “Really professor? You think so?”

“If I did not know it, Gale, I certainly would not say it.” He smiled but Gale didn’t know why. “Harold had potential, yes, but he was simply too stubborn. Tell me… what is your brother doing these days?”

“Well, he just released an album.” A crack of enthusiasm slipped passed Gales’ lips. “He’s touring the country right now and-”

“Pish posh, Gale.” The professor interrupted. “My God, it almost sounds as if you think that is impressive!” Gale’s eyes dropped to the floor again and he clutched his tie. “No, professor. Of course I don’t.”

“Good, Gale.” The professor sat down at the desk. “If my suspicions are correct, and I suspect they are, then you shall be destined for much more than your hard-headed brother.”

“Yes, professor.” Gale obeyed.

“But that’s simply not going to happen with work like this.” The professor placed a spidery hand on the sheet music sprawled across the desk and looked down at the pages with a scowl. “I mean, The Crusader Concerto? My God, Gale. I have perfectly good reasons to fail you over this. Who do you think you are?”

Gale thought of the men with suitcases who never looked at him. He thought of his reflection in the windowpane. “I am nobody, professor. Nobody at all.”

“That is for certain.” The professor began shuffling through the sheet music and pointing at each of the red scribbles. “Yet, you are changing key signatures in thirds, you have these derisory thirteenth chords, the bass part is all over the place, and do not even get me started on the percussion… And, my God, thirteen-eighth time, really? How this appears to me, Gale, is that you are trying to rewrite the past.”

“No, professor, I wouldn’t dare.” Gale shifted in his seat as his stomach churned.

“I would surely hope not!” The professor leaned in and paused. “But you have potential, Gale, yes. You just need someone to tame you. I am going to offer to you what I once offered your obdurate brother.” He pushed the sheet music towards Gale. “Accept these changes and you will graduate. The score will be published under my name, but you will have a full-time job writing for the symphony under these conditions.”

Gale looked up as his hair fell beside his eyes and his stomach rose into his throat.

“Is this not what you want, Gale?” The professor smirked and leaned back. “Is this not the reason that you went to school? You can have it all, Gale. Right here. Right now.”

Gale looked at the sheet music before him and followed the red scribbles. It was as if the life in the music had been choked out. Gale adjusted the collar of his shirt. “But I want to write my own music?”

Your music?” The professor scoffed. “Does the world really need more rugged individualists striving for their own selfish ends? Tell me, Gale: does the artist’s work truly belong to them? Or does it belong to the audience?”

“I don’t know.” Gale was never taught about this in the classroom. “What did Harold do?”

“Pah, Gale.” The professor chuckled. “Your brother tore up his own music in front of my face and stormed out without a word. Now look at where he is: without a degree and a second-rate proponent of so-called rock music. Worst mistake of his life. You are better than that, Gale.”

Gale clutched his tie and felt the collar on his neck tighten. Beads of sweat created a layer of mist on his forehead. He glanced behind the professor and caught his reflection in the window. The face of an overgrown infant gazed back at him silhouetted by a cityscape of more glass. He stood up and shook the professor’s frail hand.

“Best decision of your life, Gale.” The professor smiled.

Gale left the Peabody Conservatory as a new graduate, the wind blowing against his buttoned tweed jacket. He felt like he had accomplished nothing, and he knew that he never would.

June 4-2, 2025 (Fiction)

Tears of a Clown

Jerry Dorn stood outside the apartment door with his hands in his pants. As he fumbled for his keys, he could hear the faint sounds of movement from inside the apartment, but he thought nothing of it. Jerry Dorn rarely thought of anything.

Eventually, he opened the door and stepped inside his own apartment. A crowd of clowns greeted him with mischievous smiles. I don’t remember those at all, Jerry thought as he looked at each clown to make sure they weren’t forgotten pieces of furniture. They weren’t, but Jerry didn’t bother himself too hard with the details of their existence. He walked to the kitchen and began making his favourite sandwich, peanut butter and jam. This upset the spirit behind the clowns.

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings had expected Jerry to stop and scream in terror. Much like Jerry sustained himself on peanut butter and jam sandwiches, Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings feasted on the terror of mortals. And just like Jerry’s excursions to Taco Bell, Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings was in the mood for something exotic. He had never been in the realm of humanity, though he had often heard about their capacity for terror and so decided to venture outside of his usual dimensional jurisdiction to have a taste. Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings, however, was lazy on his homework. In researching humanity, he came across a Stephen King novel and a video game about zombies, and correctly deduced that clowns are often considered strangely terrifying. Unfortunately, he made the mistake of assuming that the most foolish of humans were also the most prone to terror.

As Jerry made his sandwich, Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings decided to take a more psychological approach to terror. He snapped his fingers, destroying the rest of the clowns, and approached Jerry alone. Jerry watched this from the corner of his eye but felt that spreading the jam evenly was more important. Nothing’s worse than a sandwich with uneven jam, Jerry thought.

As Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings snapped his fingers, this time in front of Jerry’s face, Jerry felt momentarily horrified as he spilled jam onto his plate.

“Dude,” he said, turning towards the clown. “My jam.”

“Did you hear that sound?” The clown asked, relishing in Jerry’s gaze.

But Jerry was looking at the clown’s nose. He wanted to squeeze it and see if it made the same noise as in the cartoons. At the same time, Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings watched Jerry and salivated. He thought he was moments away from tasting the delicacy of human terror, but Jerry caught him off guard.

“You mean the heater kicking in? It does that sometimes.” Jerry attempted to explain the old heater unit, but Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings was getting hungry and impatient.

“What? No, I mean when I snapped my fingers.”

Much to Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Being’s annoyance, Jerry turned his head back to his sandwich and started scooping the jam from the plate back onto the bread.

“Oh, yeah, that was kinda annoying.” Jerry was relieved that the clown wasn’t there to diagnose the old heater. He often wondered if there was something seriously wrong with it. But if it’s not diagnosed, Jerry thought, it doesn’t exist.

“That’s the sound,” the clown licked his lips. “Of every other person on Earth ceasing to exist.”

Jerry surprised himself when he laughed. He thought about all the times that he’d wished there were less people in the world. He thought about waiting at traffic stops and the game store line-up; he thought about crowded movie theaters, restaurants, and parking lots; he thought about people walking too slowly in front of him and too quickly behind him.

“Just imagine the line at the grocery store,” He smiled at the clown. “Am I right?”

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings was astonished. At least this is going to be a dinner well-earned, he thought.

“Dude, I’m serious. I am a dark God capable of horrors beyond your wildest dreams-”

But Jerry already decided he didn’t care.

“Bro, chill, I get it.” Jerry said looking at the sandwich. “I’m gonna go to Disneyland and ride Splash Mountain as many times as I want.”

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings wanted to slap the knife out of Jerry’s hand and jam it down his throat, but he knew terror by torture was never as delicious as terror from the mind.

“What the actual fuck is wrong with you? You should be screaming in terror like a character in a Lovecraft story! There’s no grocery store, there’s no Splash Mountain, and everyone you love no longer exists!”

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings watched and waited for Jerry’s eyes and mouth to widen in terrifying realization, but instead, Jerry watched the floor as a large, orange cat waddled towards him and rubbed against his legs.

As Jerry bent down and petted his cat, he started to feel bad for the clown. Whatever it wanted, it obviously wasn’t getting it from him. He decided to help the clown in the best way that he knew.

“Do you want a sandwich, Mr. Dark God?” He asked.

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings was defeated. If I can’t best the stupidest person on Earth, he thought, then I am a poor excuse for a God and I will never know the taste of human terror.

“No.” he said. An immense sadness poured over him and he began to shed a tear.

“Do you want to pet Elmer?” Jerry asked and pointed at the cat. “He’s really nice.”

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings looked at the cat and wondered how Jerry was able to be so loving even knowing he was the last human on Earth. He had to ask for an explanation.

“I thought humans were profoundly social creatures?”

Jerry paused looking at the clown and finally recognized the mistake. The clown seemed to assume that human desires depended on the existence of others. And, for perhaps the first time in his life, Jerry paused, thought for a second, and said what he truly believed.

“That’s what we’re told when someone wants to take advantage of us.”

The dark God nodded, bent down, and petted the cat. He felt self-assured knowing that he had the ability to make the animal feel affection; he felt a selfish pleasure knowing that the cat wanted his attention; he felt gratitude towards Jerry for showing this to him.

Jerry watched this, but didn’t understand or care what was happening. All Jerry wanted was to play video games before it got too late. If it became too late, he would feel groggy when he woke up to watch the morning cartoons.

“Hey, Mr. Dark God.” He said through a mouthful of sandwich. “Do you wanna play Xbox?”

The dark God looked up at Jerry, still caught off guard by his nonchalance. “What do you have?” He asked.

“Left 4 Dead 2.” Jerry responded.

Rogensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings recognized the game. It was one of the human creations from which he learned that clowns were strangely terrifying. He liked the character ‘Coach’ because the character’s obsession with food resonated with the dark God’s appetite for terror.

“Can I play Coach?” The dark God asked.

Jerry shuddered. Coach was his character, he never played anyone else. But he could tell that it meant something to the clown, so he decided to allow it, just this once.

The two went into the living room and sat down on the crusty futon as Jerry booted up the game.  The loading screen reminded him of how much he enjoyed having other people to play with, and he decided to ask the clown for a favour.

“Listen, Mr. Dark God,” he started. “Obviously, your trick didn’t work. Why don’t you just bring humanity back and we can play with some other people?”

Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings looked at Jerry and felt admiration for his courage, dedication, and having bested him. He turned to his controller feeling excitement and forgetting about his hunger for terror. He breathed a deep sigh of consensual defeat and snapped his fingers.

Immediately, a child started crying in the hallway and someone in the parking lot blared on the car horn. The latter sound reminded Jerry of a previous thought. He reached out and pinched the clown’s nose. A loud honk filled the room. Rorgensh’Kar Destroyer of Beings laughed.

June 4th, 2025 (Fiction)

Lorba Will Hunt

Seriously, do NOT open this door

– Management

I read and re-read the sign slowly and carefully in my mind. After looking around the store, I read it out loud like a mother scolding her child; I read it like a police chief addressing a room; I read it like an old man reading a newspaper headline; Finally, I read it like a small-town redneck after a few too many beers. God, that impression is getting good.

When I decided there was no possible way that anyone could misinterpret the sign, I left the supply closet door and began stocking the shelves. Of course, that’s when the store landline decided to ring.

“Hello, Mr. Ivanovich.” I glanced at my watch already knowing exactly what was coming.

“Ahh, Nia!” Mr. Ivanovich exclaimed as if I was the one who called him. “Ehh, Alex call sick, say he has-”

“No problem, Mr. Ivanovich.”

He hung up abruptly like a character from an action movie. I always suspected that’s what he was going for and, somehow, it caught me off guard every time. I didn’t mind taking the double shift. I saw it coming from the moment I clocked in and rang up Alex’s 24-pack of beer before he sped off towards the woods with a four-wheeler strapped to the bed of his pickup truck.

The customers that wander into this liquor store are not your typical consumers of alcohol. The store is located right beside a forest highway in bumfuck nowhere in a tug-of-war between two small towns. So, the local customer-base is almost entirely bored rednecks, aging white guys upset they never ‘made it big’ in high-school football, and seriously dedicated drunk drivers. I can’t begin to count how many times I had to order a replacement glass door. Suffice to say, a lot of these people have demons to drown and have a knack for testing my patience. Being the only Black woman in at least a 15-mile radius always seemed to make it worse.

It was 11:00PM when the door rattled open and Doug, one of our regulars, stumbled in. Doug was a heavyset man in his mid-forties but looked at least ten years older.

“G’d Evenin.’” He drawled like a southern Hitchcock speaking to the bottle of Smirnoff on the shelf.

“Evening, Doug.” I replied and, as I looked up from my inventory sheet, I could tell that something was wrong.

Doug was walking around and scanning the whole store despite knowing the layout better than the back of his hand. He eventually picked his usual poison, brought it to the till and asked:

“So’t’s jus’ you tonight?”

I try to think as little as possible about the customers that come in here, but I never knew Doug to say anything other than “G’d Evenin”, “G’d Mornin”, “Thanks”, and “Sorry ‘bout the door.” Yet here he was looking shifty eyed around the store and getting uncharacteristically personal. It was just enough to draw my eyes momentarily to the baseball bat underneath the counter.

“Yep, just me.” I responded as I rang him up.

He nodded, grabbed his bottle, glanced at the store camera above me, and left. When he reached the front door, however, he turned around and added yet another phrase I’d never heard from him:

“Have a g’d one.”

I turned my eyes to the clock. 11:02PM. Just three more hours until I could get out of here. Doug turned his truck towards the highway leaving the parking lot in a dark cloud intermittently interrupted by the faint flicker of the neon-red sign above the door. Something was not right, and I hoped that it was none of my business. Somehow, I knew that it was.

I started mopping the eternally greasy floor in an attempt to forget about the encounter with Doug. “This Kiss” by Faith Hill played on the radio. I swear they play that every hour. I’d once asked Mr. Ivanovich if we could change the station, but he neglected.

“Are cuztomers.” He stated with an unfitting air of pride, “ezpect a certain, how-you-say… atoms-fear.”

I don’t believe he ever actually met one of our customers. They either didn’t care about the music, didn’t notice, or complained that it was ‘bitch music’.

“Sorry,” I would always reply, gesturing to the table with the radio and paper sign that read ‘Does Not touch’. “Manager’s choice.”

“Between you an’ me,” a young regular once responded in an unnecessary whisper. “You should get on that thin’ and play yer old-school hip-hop, y’knaw’m’sayin’?” He looked at me as if suggesting an elbow and a wink.

“Why would I play hip-hop?” I asked as I scanned his handle of rum.

“Well, ya know, jus’ a suggestion, I mean…” He did that embarrassed redneck thing where they start trailing off, talking faster, and getting quieter.

The radio was halfway through it’s passionate performance of “Red Solo Cup” by Toby Keith when I decided to proceed to party by breaking store rules and turning it off. I had just finished mopping the front entrance when the store landline began to ring. It was odd for Mr. Ivanovich to call when I had actually finished a job.

“Hello, Mr. Ivanovich.” I greeted, this time unsure of why he was calling.

“Nia?”

I recognized the voice and immediately knew something was seriously wrong. Mr. Ivanovich was the only one who ever actually used the store landline.

“Alex?” I asked, startled. “How are you feeling?”

“Uhhh, not good.” Alex fake-coughed directly into the receiver. “Listen, Nia, you need to close the store right now.”

“Okay, why’s that?”

“Well, I’m at the hospital, alright… For my illness.” I heard a cacophony of drunken chatter and jeering in the background.

“Sure.”

“And Keith and his guys were in here.”

My blood ran cold. That was exactly the name I feared I would hear tonight.

“Nia…” Alex continued,  “Doug joined them and they was all talking about Cletus and he said that you was alone at the store and-”

“Okay Alex,” I interrupted, trying to stay calm. “I’ll close the store. Call Mr. Ivanovich and let him know, okay?”

“Okay.”

“Alex,” I just had to ask. “Why was Keith and his gang at the hospital?”

“Uhmm…Uhhh…” He stammered, “Oh, the doctor’s callin’ me – gotta go… Bye?”

It was less than a week ago that Sheriff Hank walked into the store, this time not just to buy alcohol. He used to be a large, imposing figure but late-stage alcoholism had withered him away to a stick-thin man with a gut and a uniform that fit like pajamas from a previous generation. He assured me through a yawn that he had the entire police ‘squad’ dedicated to tracking down the ‘perp’ of the robbery.

“Really, Sheriff,” I asserted. “That’s not necessary. It was Cletus on another drunken binge with a gun.”

Sheriff Hank chuckled and shifted in his boots. “Well, you know. We can’t just go on arrestin’ folks based on people’s word.” He made his way unprompted behind the counter and pointed at the ceiling. “Hey, how about that camera?”

“No, Sheriff, it doesn’t work. I told you that last time.”

“Rats!” he exclaimed much too loudly. “They never make it easy, huh?”

I stared at him, wondering if he was going to explain how the police ‘squad’ was working to track down the ‘perp.’ At the same time, however, I really didn’t care.

“Well.” He yawned and checked his watch but, when he noticed I was staring at him, he quickly pretended to be inspecting a non-existent mole on his wrist. “Well, we’ll let you know if anything comes of this but, as I’m sure you know, cases like this are notoriously difficult to solve.”

“What do you mean?” I pretended to care. There was just something hard to shake about how nonchalant Sheriff Hank seemed to be, even for his usual lazy self. “You can’t get a warrant? The guy’s chronically unemployed and probably sitting on pretty suspect amounts of cash right now.”

He chuckled again and shook his head. “Oh, if only it were that simple, Neo. Folks deal in cash all the time.” He turned to leave, but a fifth of vodka caught his attention. He picked it up and slammed it on the counter.

“Cash or card?” I asked.

“Oh, card.”

When Alex hung up, I looked outside towards the highway. As if on cue, a large pickup truck sped into the parking lot and parked, taking up three parking spaces. It was actually an impressive feat, even for our usual customers. Three camo-covered men, obviously strapped, exited the truck and I recognized them instantly. Garth was a short, large man with a crew cut and a baby face and always carried a very out-of-place crystal-cut glass of rum. Ellis was a tall lanky man with shoulder length dark hair and a handlebar mustache. He was a regular who once came in extraordinarily drunk and asked if I would be his ‘black queen.’ When I denied, he left and, to my knowledge, never returned. Walking towards the store in front of Garth and Ellis was Keith, a tall blonde with broad shoulders, a mouth of mostly missing teeth, and an unlit cigarette that stayed perched behind his ear by sheer tyranny of will. When I saw Keith, my heart skipped a beat. I knew exactly why these men were here and I was determined, at any cost, not to give them the pleasure they wanted.

Keith was one of the few young men that had a real chance of making it out of this little slice of nowhere. As the star quarterback of the high-school football team, he earned himself a scholarship to attend an expensive college in the city. The week that he was supposed to go, however, his dad lost a bar fight by cracking his head open on the sidewalk. With a meth-addicted mother and a brother who was in and out of prison, Keith started working full-time at the lumber mill to provide for what was left of his family. When his brother Cletus never returned after attempting to rob this store, I knew I was the prime suspect on the list of a man who had little left to lose.

Keith threw open the glass door with one arm like half of a cowboy and walked straight up to the counter, his minions following him.

“Can I help you gentlemen?” I asked, my heart pounding in my ears.

“We’re here fer justice.” Keith drawled. His minions laughed, but I could tell it was rehearsed.

“We don’t carry that brand. Sorry.”

Keith pulled the obvious handgun from his crotch and pointed it at my head.

“Maybe ya di’n’t ‘ear me.”

Time seemed to slow down. I glanced at the bat below the counter.

“Okay, Keith.” I started as calmly as I could. “But just so you know, they don’t serve Pabst in prison.”

Keith chuckled and his minions followed one beat behind.

“Ya think ol’ Hank’s gonna book me?” He straightened his shoulders. “I’ll jus’ tell ‘im you swung at me wit’ that there bat behin’ tha counter. Self the fence, pure and simple.”

I was caught between wondering how he didn’t know the phrase ‘self-defence’ and how he knew about the bat behind the counter when it hit me: The only other redneck who was behind this counter was none other than Sheriff Hank himself. That crooked bastard.

“What do you want?” I already knew, and I knew I couldn’t convince him of the truth.

“I want yer life.” He drawled like an actor going overboard. “An’ first. I wanchu t’admit ya done killed my brother.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about.” I breathed. The bat somehow looked further away then it did just a few seconds ago.

Keith slammed the table with his free hand. “An’ who’s the sheriff ta believe? Me or some nigger?” His minions snickered. I was not going to give them what they wanted. “Cletus said he was comin’ here that night! He never returned. Only one coulda dones it was you, It’s law-jick!”

“Keith, look-” I began but, just when I realized I was making the mistake of trying to use ‘law-jick’, Ellis casually interrupted:

“Hey Keith, buddy, I’m gon’ get us a pack a P-B-R.”

“That dawg will hunt!” Keith smirked at me and cocked the gun with a click.

Ellis stumbled his way to the cooler but stopped right before the supply closet. He narrowed his eyes at the sign and read it slowly and out loud.

“Seri’sly, don’t go inta this closet, management…” He turned to me with an eyebrow raised, “Hey how comes you guy’s done put up a sign tellin’ yerselve’s not ta go in this here room?”

I seriously could not underestimate these people’s intelligence. “Ellis, seriously, don’t-”

“They prolly got a big ol’ safe in there.” Keith interrupted; his eyes still fixed on mine. “Open it up, Ellis.”

Ellis turned the doorknob and pulled. Just as he did, the door flew open with a loud bang. Ellis flew backwards right into the table with the radio, hitting his head on the play button. “This Kiss” by Faith Hill filled the room and, from inside the closet, a fluffy dog as large as a grizzly bear emerged snarling and bearing six-inch fangs.

“What ‘n tarnation?” Keith and Garth cried in unison, turning towards the beast.

The dogbear roared and pounced on Ellis’s frail neck, ripping and pulling it apart like disappointing pork. Keith and Garth screamed and emptied their handguns at the beast. The dogbear only snarled louder. I saw an opportunity, grabbed the bat, and swung it right into Keith’s face, knocking him over and dislodging what was left of his teeth. The dogbear took this as a cue to start attacking Keith. Before any of us knew it, the beast was tearing into his neck with even greater fervency than it had used against Ellis.

“Jesus Christ!” Garth yelled as the last remainder of his gang. Without dropping his crystal-cut glass, he drunkenly made his way towards the door but slipped on the wet floor at the last second. The glass shattered into a million pieces as Garth looked up at the huge animal pleading in the way I imagine pigs look when they’re about to be slaughtered.

Just before the dogbear descended upon Garth, the store landline began to ring. Of course, Mr. Ivanovich had to call in the middle of a job. I picked up the phone.

“Hello, Mr. Ivanovich.” I greeted as Garth’s screams and Faith Hill’s singing provided my backup vocals.

“Ahh, Nia!” He exclaimed as if surprised. “Ehh, Alex call. He say you need, how-you-say… close ze store?”

“Well, Mr. Ivanovich. The situation is…” I glanced at the scene before me. Three mangled bodies lay in bloodied heaps as the dogbear continued feasting on Garth and wagging it’s tail in time with the music. I glanced at my watch. 1:30AM. “It’s dealt with, but… it’s Lorba, Mr. Ivanovich… Again.”

“Oh dear, my Lorba.” He paused. “I many sorry, Nia, Alex vill into store in half hour. He can-”

“It’s no problem, Mr. Ivanovich. I can take care of it.”

He hung up, somehow to my surprise. I scanned the store. Lorba sat near Garth’s pulpy body sitting, panting, and obediently looking right into my eyes. I sighed, grabbed a sharpie, tape, and printer paper, and wrote on the supply closet door:

Everyone, DO NOT open this door!

The management thanks you.

“A’right, Lorba, git!” I commanded, pointing towards the supply closet door. God, that impression is getting really good.