Fourteen
Adele Roman
Moonset Historian: From a college lecture series about Moonset
The rest of the morning was a blur.
My last class before lunch was Economics, and thankfully I walked into the room to see
Malcolm already in a seat near the back. A class with someone I knew. There wasn’t much chance of sharing a class with either Bailey or Cole, but I was a little shocked that the three of us hadn’t shared more classes together. There’d been a few times where we all had nearly identical schedules.
“How’s your day been going?” Mal asked as I slid in behind him.
“Not bad,” I said, thinking of Ash showing up as my advisor.
His eyebrow raised. “Are you blushing?”
I turned away immediately, dropping my bag on the desk and resting my head on it. Mal didn’t press the issue.
On my lunch break, I went to the office to find out about switching lockers. The secretary first tried to assure me that I was over exaggerating about how big the mark on my locker was until
I pulled out my phone and showed her a picture of it.
“And this happened today?” she asked, looking at me with a hint of suspicion.
“I didn’t mark up my new locker,” I said, trying to suppress my annoyance. Finally she agreed to have someone from the maintenance staff look at it.
As I walked out of the office, I caught sight of Jenna coming towards me.
“And this is my brother Justin,” she announced, looking from her companion to me and back again.
I recognized the girl. “You’re Ash’s friend,” I said.
“Maddy,” the girl replied, a little frosty. “I remember you.”
“Yeah,” I said, “I remember you, too.”
Jenna looked between the two of us, a hint of a smile in place. Jenna found a friend on the first day? That was weird enough in itself.
“Listen, you guys should come hang out with us after school,” Maddy said, glancing down at her phone. “It’s this little hole-in-the-wall place that almost no one knows about. Ash’ll be there.
I know she’d like to see you.”
“Yeah,” I said, nodding. “I think we can do that.”
“Cool,” Maddy replied. “It’s called Mark’s. You know where the coffee shop is on Main
Street? It’s right by there, like a block away.”
“Okay,” I nodded. “We’ll try to stop by.”
“Well, this is an interesting place to bring me,” Mal said a half hour after we’d gotten out of school, squinting up at the building. “Is this part of some life lesson to make me appreciate all I have?”
I glared at Malcolm, but really, I was glaring at Maddy. Of
“I’d give her some points for moxie, but the prank itself is pretty lame,” he added.
“Shut up,” I said. “No one says ‘moxie’ anymore.”
“You’re just mad that no one says you’ve got moxie.”
“Stop saying moxie!”
It was like a spell of its own. I knew he was going to say it again. So I did the mature, responsible thing, and ran into the first store I could find just to put some distance between us. I knew Malcolm would never act like the embarrassment he was in front of an audience.
But the store I had chosen was so much more. The moment I crossed the threshold, it was stifling. The walls were simply drenched in hangings—paintings, art, objects, and garbage.
Shelves were crammed with knickknacks and weird bookends, one holding nothing but a series of bronzed elephants. Another table was weighted down by an elaborate crystal chess set.
When I picked up one of the pieces, not only did the table rock alarmingly, but I didn’t recognize the design in my hand. And the board was strange, tri-colored instead of dual.
It was nearly impossible to walk down the aisles because they were so narrow. Each step, I was afraid I’d bump into something and start a chain reaction that would topple everything in the building.
Mal had no similar feelings. He moved at ease through the store, occasionally picking up something that caught his eye and studying it from all angles.
“Welcome, boys!” A man literally popped up from behind a glass countertop in the corner. As we approached, I saw the sliding glass panel was open, and he was carefully removing everything from inside. From here it just looked like a lot of ugly, tarnished jewelry. “What can I do for you today?”
“We’re just looking,” Mal said. “But thanks.”
“Sure, sure,” he said, straightening one of the trays full of rings.
Mal and I continued browsing, but I couldn’t help but keep turning for the door. “Maybe I just got the name wrong, and the place she was talking about is right around here and we missed it.”
He saw right through me. “You have Ash’s number, right? Just call her.”
“I can’t
Yeah, real nice.”
“You need to relax, man. She’s just a girl.”
“You’ve met her. She’s not exactly a normal girl.”
He held up a trio of books that were wrapped up in a ribbon. One of them was a copy of
The man behind the counter piped up again. “Looking for a present for your girlfriend?”
I turned back to him, really seeing him for the first time. He was older, with thinning gray hair and dressed in plaid. He looked more like a librarian than a shop owner. “No, thanks. She’s not my girlfriend!” I said a little too quickly.
“Ahh,” he replied, “but you want her to be?” His eyes focused shrewdly on me. “I’ve got just the thing.”
He crouched down and started rummaging through the shelves he had been working on, eventually pulling out a tray filled with necklaces. “I’m sure she’ll love one of these,” he said.
“You’re lucky; I’ve been cleaning out the stock all week, weeding out the things that aren’t selling.”
I wanted to tell him that it looked like most of the stuff here wasn’t selling, but I didn’t want to be rude. Curious more than anything else, I walked to the counter. There was a hallway opened up behind the counter, leading into a kitchen badly lit with fluorescent lighting. That and the yellowing wallpaper made it look like some tragic seventies parlor.
“Ethan Alexander,” a raspy voice bellowed from somewhere beyond that kitchen, “where the hell is my
“Oh, hell,” the man muttered quietly. “Be right back,” he said, although I noticed he pulled the tray back and slid it back under the glass before he turned. “Coming, Dad!”
He didn’t need to bother. A much older man hobbled his way into the kitchen and from there into the hallway, moving with a determined gait. He favored one hip and kept a hand on one of the walls as he walked. “I