Aurora
who has risen in the east
to grace us with light!
“You’re making the loops too small,” Danny whispered. “No
one is gonna be able to read that!”
“You don’t like how I paint, get your ass over here and do
it,” Gavin hissed back. “Otherwise, just keep your eyes open for scouts.”
Danny shook his head as he looked at Gavin’s letter C.
“Too small,” he muttered as he looked back out of the alley
to the main road.
Nothing was quite the same since the federalization of the
city. While it had been welcomed at first, it turned into a nightmare of
providing documentation just to get through “criminal check points” on a day-to-day
basis. Danny’s dad had refused once, video taping the interaction for social
media as proof of the unconstitutional actions of the troops.
He was swiftly detained and had been in detainment ever
since. Three months later, neither Danny nor his mother were able to talk to
him or even get a lawyer to him. “Security reasons” being the cited reason by
those who would actually talk to his mother. The video had disappeared with the
phone and was never uploaded.
Gavin’s old man just disappeared one night on his way back
from work. No one talks to Gavin, being a minor, and since his dad was his sole
parent, Gavin lived with Danny now. While his mother was distracted with overtime
now that his dad was “detained”, it left Danny and Gavin some time to work with
the resistance.
Mostly other Teens who snuck out on various nights to tag
buildings and bridges with messages of discontent over the military occupation
of their city. Danny looked back at the small c loops in “Occupied” as Gavin
stepped back to admire his work.
“Loops are too small,” Danny whispered again.
“Shut up about the loops,” Gavin said. “We got it done. Let’s
go.”
“Stop where you are!”
They both jumped and looked around, pressing themselves against the alley wall.
“Stop now, or we’ll be forced to shoot!”
“We aren’t moving!” Danny tried to shout. His voice, however,
seemed lost somewhere between his throat and his mouth. All that came out
was an squeaky yet guttural croak that sounded more like a dying frog than a boy’s
voice.
He didn’t have a chance to try again when the shots rang
out. A body slammed onto the pavement in front of the alley way and skidded a
bit before coming to a halt. Something metallic rolled from the body towards them
and stopped against Danny’s foot.
Danny grew cold and tried to fight back the bile that surged
into his mouth.
He lost the fight.
Danny lurched over and vomited all over what was at his
feet.
“It’s paint,” he said spitting out the remnants of his vomit.
“Is that Clark?” Gavin whispered. He took a step towards the
body.
Danny looked at the face. It was a vacant look in newly dead
eyes that somehow seemed to be staring at him accusingly.
“We have to go!” Danny hissed. He pulled Gavin’s arm just as
Gavin had started to walk towards Clark.
The approaching footfalls of others registered in his ears,
and it snapped his mind back from Clark’s face. Gavin dropped his own paint and
ran as hard as he could.
The next few blocks would be a blur that neither of them
would remember for a night that neither of them would forget.
***
The soldiers began setting up a small perimeter around the
body to ensure no one could get close to it.
“Another kid?”
“They didn’t know it was a kid, Sarge,” a soldier beside him
replied. “They saw a glint from the can and thought it was a weapon.”
“Looks like there were more down this alley,” came a call
behind them. The Sergeant looked towards where the soldier was shining his
light from the cans of paint, the vomit and then up to the graffiti.
“Do the C’s look weird?” the soldier asked. “Do you think
its code for something?”
“Who knows?” the Sergeant replied. He turned back to the body at his feet. “Let’s
focus on saving our asses on this issue first, and then we’ll figure out your
conspiracy theory on another day.”
“I dunno. I think it’s the small loop of the Cs that are
throwing me,” the soldier continued. “They’re too small, don’t you think?”
The Sergeant sighed as he stared at the boy lying at his
feet.
“Yeah. A lot of things are too small lately,” he muttered to
himself.
© Jeremy L. Heath, 2025. All rights reserved
Betsy left the office crying. Everything that could have gone wrong in that interview did go wrong, and it was the first time an interviewer had told her during the interview that they would be going with other candidates.
As she walked through the lobby, just before the escalators, she saw a janitor struggling to move a step large ladder by himself. She paused, and tears still in her eyes, picked up one side of the step ladder and waited for him to take it in the direction he needed to take it.
The man looked at her for a moment, and then moved the ladder over to just under a light fixture that was slowly blinking its light.
After setting the ladder in place, he turned to her.
“Thank you, Ma’am,” he said. “But why would you help me?”
“Well,” Betsy shrugged. “I dunno. I was always told to treat the janitor the same as you would a CEO, and you just looked like you needed some help.”
“You believe that, do you?” He asked.
“Yes,” Betsy replied. She gave him a small smile. “Besides, I am having a bad day, so I may as well help someone else before they have a bad day.”
“What is your name?”
“Betsy.”
“Well, Betsy, I’m Joe,” he said. “As it happens, I am the CEO of this company. I have done this test on every single applicant that has come through today, and you are the only one who stopped to help me!”
“Really?” She sniffled, and wiped at her eyes.
Joe gave her a warm smile and patted her shoulder.
“Really,” he said softly. “I know from your tears that you think you didn’t do so well, but I make the final call on all hires. I need more people like you on my team. I want you here tomorrow when these doors open at six AM to start the first day of your new career! Can you do that?”
Betsy beamed at him, and grabbed at his hand.
“Yes! Yes!” She enthusiastically shook his whole arm. “I will be here! Thank you, sir!”
Joe watched as she walked quickly over to the escalator and went down, before she reached the bottom, she turned to wave at him.
She raised her cellphone to her ear, he could just barely hear her voice. “I got it! You will never believe…”
“Why do you keep doing that?”
Joe turned to see Dayle standing there with more light bulbs. He grinned.
“That makes three this quarter,” Joe said.
“The last guy almost got wasted by Security when he kept demanding to see the CEO who hired him for watering a plant.”
“First off, it was the plastic ferns over by the elevators, Dayle," Joe said. "Besides, doesn’t it piss you off that they act like we are some sort of untouchables who deserve public displays of compassion to make themselves feel better?”
“I don’t think about it,” Dayle said as he climbed the ladder. “I try to just do my job and go home.”
“Well, it pisses me off,” Joe said. “Besides, she touched my ladder.”
“Well, I am off tomorrow, so if there is another scene like last time, try to catch it on video for me and let me know what happens.”
Joe chuckled and was about to reply when he felt a tap on the shoulder.
Joe looked at his shoulder before turning to see a man in a suit looking up at Dayle opening the light fixture.
“You need any help with that?”
Joe smiled. “What is your name?”
© Jeremy L. Heath, 2025. All rights reserved