This Is
Where It Happens
by Louella
Lester
They are at a
table. In the food court. In the mall. Three teenage girls sharing an order of
salty fries spread out on waxy paper in front of them. Pecking. Pecking.
Pecking away, like the birds in the hedges along the parking lot, between
chirps and giggles. Distracted, though their wings are always ready for flight,
they don’t yet see the hawk-like guy, with the thick-winged coat, circling the
tables.
These fries are
the only thing they bought on this Saturday afternoon, but not the only things
they have acquired. Tia, the one with the chipped blue fingernail polish, yanks
at something in her backpack, then throws into the garbage can what, to the white-haired
lady seated nearby, appears to be a price tag. Next to her, Sandy, the one
whose eyelashes are just barely hanging on, reaches for a fry and a shiny new
thumb ring, that her friends have never before seen, sends flashes of light
bouncing across the table, making the hawk-like guy squint.
Teen boys are coming
and going, flocking close to the third girl, Kate, not the best-looking one,
because she never smiles. She’s wearing a hoody with bulging pockets that she
reaches into before she shakes their hands. Pockets that hold what the boys are
looking for, at a better price than offered by the hawk-like guy. There is
something Kate doesn’t notice, until Tia yells, Look out! before she
flies across the food court, Sandy winging it alongside her, to the far window
where they can only flutter and flap.
Kate tries to
skitter up across the table, but she’s a sparrow caught mid-flight. She sees
the white-haired lady, whose mouth is now hanging open, and Kate doesn’t know
this will be her only memory of the incident. Of the day. Of anything. Not the
eyes of the big hawk-like guy, pulling a machete from under the wing of his
coat, his toque pulled low and scarf pulled up, because he is well aware of the
security cameras in what he sees as his mall—his territory. Not the slash of
the blade. Not the paramedics. Not the cops. Not the names Tia or Sandy. Or the
names of the other sort of familiar visitors bobbing and chirping around her
hospital bed.
Louella Lester is a
writer/photographer in Winnipeg, Canada, author of the CNF book Glass
Bricks (At Bay Press 2021), contributing editor at New Flash Fiction
Review, and is included in Best Microfiction 2024. Her writing/photos
appear in a variety of journals, including: SoFloPoJo, Neither
Fish Nor Foul, Ink Sweat & Tears, Temple in a City,
The Odd Magazine, subTerrain, Gooseberry Pie, Hoolet’s
Nook, Roi Faineant, Mad Swirl, Dog Throat, Hooghly
Review, and Paragraph Planet.
Bernice Holtzman’s paintings and collages have appeared in shows at various venues
in Manhattan, including the Back Fence in Greenwich Village, the Producer’s
Club, the Black Door Gallery on W. 26th St., and one other place she can’t remember,
but it was in a basement, and she was well received. She is the Assistant Art Director for Yellow
Mama.
|