by Elaine Barnard
cola
When the mortuary called me at
midnight I took several breaths then got in my old pickup and drove to
Portland. I’d known Trace since grade school. He was my best friend, the only
guy I could confide in when I felt really down which was much of the time. And
the same went for Trace. We ate our peanut butter and jelly sandwiches together
at lunch and hung out after high school until Trace had to leave for work at
Gina’s Pizza. He swore he’d be a top chef someday. He was taking cooking classes on-line. But
now with this pandemic Gina’s was closed except for takeout so Trace had a lot
of free time. “Hey,” I said when I phoned him. “Get off your ass and enter this
marathon. It’s for disadvantaged kids. You could tote up some points before you
enter the pearly gates.”
Trace wasn’t enthusiastic. “Get up? What for? I deserve a rest. Been
on my feet all night doing takeouts. Besides I’m still in my pajamas. It’s
nice. I think I’ll stay this way.”
“So how’s Sandy gonna like that?”
“Not here. Went home to Seattle. Afraid I might give her the virus.”
“Not a chance.”
“Right. I wasn't in front talking up the customers. I was in back, isolated, doing my fucking job
until now.”
“So what are Gina’s plans?”
“Who knows. She’s on a cruise to Hawaii or some place where it’s not
raining.”
“So that leaves you in charge? Great.”
“Not so great. Nothing to be in charge of.”
“How come?”
“Well yesterday this gang of protesters smashed in Gina’s front.
Looters took just about everything she had. Lucky I was in back or they may
have smashed me in too.”
“Did you call the cops?”
“Like I didn’t?”
"I know you did. So?”
“So nothing. They filed a report. Gina’s under insured.”
“Bad news. Did you contact her?”
“I tried. Never picks up. Never answers my texts.”
“So what will you do?”
“Got any ideas?”
And it went like that. Trace, who never had a lucky day in his life
was now stuck with this. Last I knew he lived alone in a trailer. His parents
were in jail again and no lawyer to haul
them out. It had been that way since he was a kid. Maybe I saw him smile once
when I brought him to my mom’s for Christmas. But he caught hell later from his
parents for leaving home without permission. They were in jail so how could he get permission?
So when I got this call from the funeral home I knew I had to go. No
one else would or could. I was his best friend, his only friend. They’d kept
him refrigerated. His black skin was sort of pale but aren’t the dead supposed
to be pale? He was still wearing his short order outfit, white jacket, checked
trousers, black hair in a pony tail.
“Hey Trace,” I said, “they got you big time. Life in short order.”
I didn’t know what to do then. It was like…like something had died
inside of me. I had this strange empty feeling like maybe I needed to eat only
I wasn’t hungry. The funeral director,
an old solemn guy, put his hand on my shoulder, “Someone dumped him at my
door. I found your number in his pocket,
only one he had. Do you know how we could contact his parents? I’m sure they’d
like to know.”
About the author:
Elaine Barnard's collection of stories, The Emperor of Nuts: Intersections Across Cultures was recently published by new Meridian Arts and noted as a unique book on the Snowflakes in a Blizzard website. In 2019 she won first place in Strands flash fiction competition. Her work has been published in numerous literary journals. She has been nominated for the Pushcart prize and Best Small Fiction. She was a finalist for Best of the Net. She received her MFA from the University of California, Irvine and her BA from the University of Washington, Seattle.
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