"All the freaks are out tonight!" Ben's boss elbowed him as he walked by.
"Watch out for the bogeyman on your way home!" He snorted and laughed with that hideously annoying sound that to Ben more closely resembled something
like a cross between a pig and a donkey. Seems his boss also had personality traits to match both as well.
Ben hated this shift, hated this job. But like everyone, you take work where you can get it, just to survive. Surviving his boss was more work than
his actual job. How do people like him get high positions anyway, he thought instantly as his superior left the room to heckle someone else.
"Just thirty minutes left", Ben said out loud to nobody in particular. Then out of here and home to bed. No big Halloween party this year, no friends
with nothing else to do. Work was all he had this holiday. Too bad Halloween doesn't pay time and a half.
As he walked down the corridor towards the front desk, he caught his first glimpse, in hours of the now darkened evening outside. A quite somber rain
had begun to fall, and though a storm was predicted, he had hoped it would hold off till he got home. No such luck.
The clerk flashed him the same fake mask of a smile that she did to everyone who walked by and he wondered if she practiced it in the bathroom mirror,
or worse, kept smiling in her sleep, long after her shift was done.
Making his final rounds, he yawned, long and loud. It had been a slow boring night. Peak season was now over, and he knew many more nights like this
were to come. His mind drifted to the leftover pizza in the fridge, and the cold beer beside it, just waiting for him to come home.
He checked his watch, ten minutes to go. Maybe if he walked really slowly to the staff room, changed, grabbed a soda for the road, he could just make
punch out right on time. Yeah, that's it.
Time stamp proved him right. 12:00am, on the dot. Damn he was good.
With one foot out the front doors of the hotel, he heard the rumblings of thunder overhead. The wind gusted at him from behind, swirling wet leaves
around his sneakers, and the rain poured harder causing him to zip his jacket higher, and quicken his pace.
He was thankful that there was a bus to take him home, but annoyed that it only stopped three blocks away. In this weather, it might as well have been
ten blocks, because despite the jacket, he was almost soaked right through.
The walk seemed quiet enough though, as most were retired for the night, or had already taken shelter from the rain. Two blocks down, one two go.
As he neared the intersection of Maple St. and Third Ave. he heard a ruckus of male voices coming closer to him. Around the corner came a group of
young punks, some dressed for the occasion, some not. They were loud, pushing each other around, throwing a slew of obscenities at each other. He
could see that a couple of them had spray cans in their hands.
Eyes down till you get closer, then just nod…Ben reminded himself. He didn’t like feeling unnerved by a group of kids about ten years his junior,
but he was.
One of the group spoke, despite Ben’s gaze being elsewhere.
“ Hey buddy, you got a smoke?” Another voice chimed in as well, “ Yeah y’know where’s a good place to party man?”
Ben just shook his head and managed to stutter out a quick “Nope”, as his feet kept propelling him closer to the group, trying to gather speed to
go beyond.
But as they got closer, the group spread out, blocking the entire sidewalk.
“Sorry, guys,” Ben stammered,” I just need to catch my bus.”
“Oh he needs to catch a bus everybody! Did you hear that? Think we should help him with that?” Laughter rippled throughout the gang of them and
echoed off the brick walls of the buildings on either side of the street.
Ben felt the sour pang of fear begin in the pit of his stomach and spread the butterflies all around his body, stopping at his heart, their fluttering
wings creating a faster beat. He made a sudden move past them, onto the street, and darting past the first half of the group before they could react.
Three of them tried to grab his jacket and were within inches of doing so. They gave chase only a few hundred feet before a taxi speeding down the
road to its next fare, intervened in the cat and mouse game.
It rounded the corner of the final block of Ben’s walk and startled him more so than the fear urging him onward. He stumbled on the edge of the wet
curb, his ankle twisting, and down he went, with the back of his head hitting the wet asphalt.
In an instant the pain shot from his head over his scalp, and a tunnel of black filled his vision mixed with raindrops till he was out.
When his eyes opened again, he was cold, lying in a river running directly over his body towards the gutter a few feet away. His vision was blurry,
but he righted himself, sitting up on the curb, rubbing the large bump on the back of his head. Suddenly remembering how he came to be here, he
quickly looked around for any sign of the gang of boys who chased him. None.
He checked his watch and made out the time. An entire half hour had passed as he had lain here, and he had missed his bus. Quickly checking his
pockets, he also realized his wallet and phone were missing.
He cursed, and kicked at the ground, and began the remaining twelve block walk home, stumbling a little off balance, trying to compensate for the pain
and dizziness.
Ben had never been happier to see his own front door. By now he was shivering and a large puddle formed under his feet as he dug for his key in his
coat pocket. At least the little jerks didn’t grab that and throw it somewhere.
He locked the door behind him and made his way immediately to the bathroom, peeling off his clothing and turning on a hot shower at the same time. It
took the full hot water tank splashing over him to begin to thaw the chill in his bones. He dried off quickly and put on the warmest pajama pants and
sweatshirt he owned. Opening the fridge, he pulled out the leftover pizza and placed it directly in the oven to reheat, passing up the cold beer
because he didn’t want to start shivering all over again.
He walked back to the bathroom and grabbed the bottle of aspirin from the shelf, downing two pills with one swallow, and no water.
The pizza took the edge off his hunger pangs, but the sourness of the evenings events remained as he lay in bed and pull the blankets up to his neck,
trying to get rid of the last of the chill. His hand gently felt over the bump on his skull, and he cursed again, thinking of his lost wallet and
phone. Soon the warmth and comfort of his own bed lulled him into a deep sleep.
(Continued next post)
edit on 10/1/2013 by tothetenthpower because: (no reason given)