I‘m all alone around closing time and Sid the owner is back in the kitchen loading highball glasses into the dishwasher and this corpse stumbles in and starts going on about how I gotta bury him. The juke is pumping heavy metal because that’s what Sid likes and it’s just me in the bar so he doesn’t care. Well it’s not just me and that’s the problem here.
“You’re none of my business,” I say to the corpse. “I don’t know you. I don’t know your people.”
“A decent person would honor a dead man’s request,” the corpse says. “A decent man would help a pal,” he says.
“You’re not my pal,” I say, eyes steady on my glass. “And I’m not a decent man.”
“You don’t have to be a decent man to do a decent thing.”
“Right.” I grab my jacket and head for the door. The corpse lets out this long spew of rot breath and starts to wail. I mean, really wail, like he’s crying for the sadness of everyone that ever lived, for the mothers that lost their babies right inside their own stomachs, for the little kids that wandered into swimming pools. I mean a deep, shin-splitting, gut-twisting kind of cry.
By Lesley Bannatyne, from her new book Unaccustomed to Grace.
4 comments:
Great bar set up! You have all my favorites!
Definitely gonna check that book out.
haha. Nice!
I started to worry about myself when I posted the photo and realized most of those bottles are getting pretty low on fuel!
Guess you will have to build up the strength to make a run to the dreaded Trader Joe's parking lot soon....
haha That is hilarious.
DEFINITELY.
Eventually.
Maybe.
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