The beginning of the end was pretty tame.
He walked into the local Food Lion to buy some Pop Tarts
before heading to work. The aisle was blocked by three middle-aged women
fighting over a jar of mayonnaise. He stopped to watch this spectacular spectacle
unfold in front of him. While he stood there, he wondered why anyone would use spectacular
spectacle to describe something.
The first woman was big. Not tall, but fat. Her arms were
larger than his thighs, but none of it was muscle. She needed mayonnaise like
he needed reminders of his ex-girlfriend.
The second woman was tiny. Twiggy tiny. Her legs were as
wide around as the cardboard that a roll of paper towels is wrapped around.
The third woman – who happened to be holding the jar
everyone so eagerly wanted – had on a Pixies t-shirt and nerd glasses. Her
curly hair looked like an afro that hadn’t been combed in weeks.
“I have three kids!” the fat woman said loudly. “They need
this more than you do.” She said directly to the skinny woman.
“Well, if we’re going by need, I’d say I need it the most!”
Twiggy yelled right back.
“Well, I got to it first, so I’m taking it,” afro woman
said.
“Ladies, why are we fighting over a jar of mayo?” I said.
All three looked at me curiously. Then back at each other.
Then back at me.
Twiggy spoke up.
“You haven’t heard?” she said.
I stared back in silence.
“He hasn’t,” the fat one said in disbelief.
“Do you not have television?” afro added.
“I have not heard of anything, and no, I do not have a
television. They seem so…pointless.”
They laughed at me and went back to fighting. He ambled his
way through the melee.
Suddenly, he noticed that the shelves were pretty vacant. As
always, the Sex Pistols churned through his mind at the mention of those two
words together. He got to the Pop Tarts and saw one measly box of Vanilla Ice
Cream flavored ones.
“I guess it’ll have to do,” he said, taking the box in his
hands.
Walking to the cash registers, he noticed another thing, no
one was paying.
“Odd,” he thought to himself. He found the short, balding
manager of the store. He had glasses and a whiny Irish accent – if such a thing
is even possible.
“What’s going on?” he asked.
The manager looked up at him and started chuckling.
“Here’s two bucks,” he said to the now hysterically laughing
polo-shirted man. “You can’t say I didn’t pay whenever the cops show up.”
The two dollars dropped from his hands to the floor.
“They’re worthless kid,” he finally spoke. “You have no
idea, do you?”
“Not at all,” he said, not waiting to find out the answer.
Why? Because it dawned on him that he needed to get some beer.
He got in his car and drove 20 miles west. There was a small mom-and-pop
beer craft beer store down the road. He got there and it was still closed.
Lucky for him, he got up early this morning.
Getting out of his car, he noticed a din of activity
everywhere. It seemed like the day before Christmas, but it was August 3. All
the shops were buzzing.
At the door, he knocked. He knew the owners and knew they’d
be there. Gracie came to the door, peered outside and saw who it was and
clicked the door.
“Inside, fast!” she said in a hushed, but excited tone.
He slinked inside the door, and looked around. All the
shelves were empty, but the floors were full of boxes. Each one filled with
bottles and cans of beer.
Finally, his interested was piqued.
“What the hell is going on?” he asked Gracie, who was by now
joined by her husband Jeff.
“It’s the end, my friend. The end.” Jeff said.dd
“The end of what?”
“Life as we know it.”
“You’ve got to explain a little better.”
“You really haven’t seen?” Gracie asked as she grabbed two
boxes of beer and walked over to the basement entry. He was one of a select few
people who knew about the basement storage site under the store. It was an old
bomb shelter, built in the 1950s, that Gracie and Jeff didn’t know about until
one day when the termite man showed up and asked if they wanted it bombed as
well.
“No, I haven’t. I woke up this morning, wanted a Pop Tart and
watched three ladies fight over a jar of mayo. Now I come here to get some
beer, because some kind of run on stores is happening and I don’t want to be
unprepared.”
“We’re all unprepared.” Jeff said. “And if you want some
beer, just take a few cases. Pretty soon, it’ll all be gone.”
“What do you mean?”
“The roads, they’re all closed going west,” he said. “The
military aren’t letting anyone leave.”
“Wait a minute. I drove west to get here.”
“From the island?”
“Yes, from the island.”
“It’s only the main highway. But I’m sure they’ll get to
your road soon enough.”
“And there’s a curfew at 5 p.m. tonight,” Gracie added.
“What?” he said incredulously.
“They’re shutting down the entire east coast, my friend. Go
home, get ready for the shit to hit the fan.”
He grabbed six cases of really good beer. Put them in the
back of his car. Going back inside, Gracie and Jeff were almost done putting
the beer in the cellar.
“How much do I owe ya?” he asked.
“Nothing, my friend. Money doesn’t mean anything. It’s just
friends and enemies now. I consider you a friend.”
They shook hands and he left.
He had one more stop – the old Roses department store. If
things were really about to get “shut down” he knew something else he needed.
Getting to the store, it was oddly open. Cashiers stood at
their posts. But they weren’t paying attention to customers, they were watching
a television. The president was speaking.
“My fellow Americans,” he began. “This is a time of
unprecedented action. We don’t do this lightly.”
He decided to go finish what he came to this store for. He got
a shopping cart and headed to the outdoors section. There, he grabbed as many
fishing poles and pieces of tackle and fishing line as he could find. If the
supermarkets were going to be empty soon, he’d need a way to get food. Fishing
was about it, on an island.
Lastly, he grabbed seeds. He took the entire display of
vegetables. He found it odd that no one had hit up Roses yet. I guess being in
a bad location was good for him today.
As he exited the store, the president continued:
“These are your friends. Your family. Your spouses and your
children. But for the good of the rest of the country, North Carolina’s coast
must become a quarantine zone.
“I wonder what the fuck is going on?” he thought after those
words. But for now, he just wanted to get
home. Call his girlfriend and make sure she was on her way home.
“Looks like I won’t be moving out afterall,” he chuckled as
he started up his car. Full tank of gas and Lucero playing on the stereo.
“Punk rock girls and Lone Star beer,” Ben Nichols bellowed. “Tonight’ll
be ok…”
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