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The Fair Exchange - Part 3

Return to Glenville

By John CoxPublished about a year ago Updated 11 months ago 5 min read

Driving across the bridge into Glenville revived long forgotten emotions. The old general store, Madison Avenue Grill, the Royal Theater, and so many other memorable landmarks had disappeared. In their places I saw knick-knack shops and second-hand clothing stores sitting side by side with shuttered businesses that I remembered from childhood, their dingy facades marred by graffiti and time. I had not expected to feel the loss of the home from which I once left without expectation of return but driving slowly through downtown I began to grieve what I had never grieved before.

You cannot truly hate a place unless you loved it first.

But my back tingled with excitement when I saw the sign for Big Ed’s Barbershop, the original candy cane pole faded almost white and the store’s plate glass window warped with age. Walking through its open door, I smiled at the barber standing with the Glenville Times in his hands.

“Do you have time for one last trim before closing?”

“That depends,” he replied closing the paper with a snap, “do you have the scratch to buy the first round at Marty’s Place?”

“Do you promise to buy the second?”

Big Ed was taller and easily 50 pounds heavier than the barber gesturing toward one of only two chairs in the little shop. His replacement seemed friendly enough and wore a handlebar mustache and tattooed anchors on each of his large biceps – bluish green with age.

“New in town?” he asked while draping a black cloth across me and fastening it behind my neck.

“Just visiting.”

“How you do want it cut?”

“Skin on the sides, fade in back, clean up the top.”

“Ex-military?”

“Marines.”

“Nam and a lifer to boot from the look of ya.”

“Yeah. Never was a fast learner. You?”

“Navy … pleasure cruise in the Med. I thought it’d be fun to see the world but spent most of it scraping barnacles.”

We both laughed.

“I had planned to join the Marines myself and would have if not for the accident.”

“Accident?”

“My best friend was hit by a car when we were seniors in high school. Me, Joey and Marty had planned to join once we graduated … but with Joey paralyzed….”

His words rendered us both speechless. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up at the realization of who he was, the memory of his former youthful face sending a wave of fear through my guts.

As he started trimming, I broke the awkward silence, asking –“You Big Ed?” even though I knew damn well he wasn’t.

He chuckled. “When I was a boy folk called my dad Big Ed and me Little Ed. But now that Dad has passed everyone just calls me Ed. And you are?”

“Jay Eff,” I answered offering my hand, “pleased to make your acquaintance Ed.”

Setting down the electric shears he picked up his scissors and continued –“We don’t see many tourists in Glenville … visiting friends or family?”

“Neither,” I lied, I visit Glenvilles. This is number seven. I collect postcards, memorabilia, history.”

“I’ve heard of stranger hobbies.”

“Yeah … well, this is mine.”

“If you’re interested in history you’ve come to the right shop. This little town is the Philanthropic Capital of the world.”

“You don’t say.”

“Course it wasn’t always. But people here are more generous per capita earnings than any other town in the country. Joey started it after the accident.”

“Because of the accident?”

It’s difficult to explain,” he answered. “But no one believes he could have turned his life around without it. The story made more sense when Joey told it. I remember the look in his eyes, the terror of the thing.” After an uncomfortable silence, a tear slipped down his cheek. “It was the car that changed everything.”

I was a senior when that car changed Joey’s life. But no one ever got that story right. They always left the most important part out. Without it there was no life-changing accident, no small-town hero, no philanthropic capital of the world.

Like a lot of kids, Joey bullied me regularly, singling me out after school every Wednesday. He would push or punch me around or bring me to my knees by pressing his fat thumb along the radial nerve on the inside of my left forearm. It was the regularity of his torment – anticipation building the acid up in my guts till I could no longer prevent the inevitable rupture. One day when Joey cruelly squeezed my collar bone, I drove my right hand into his sternum with sufficient force that it knocked him flat.

I was every bit as surprised as he.

I had seen the echoes of that fight in my midnight vision in the cemetery, but never believed its prophetic certainty. I yelled – “You need to make a choice,” my voice sounding as alien in my ears as if independent of my thoughts.

“What did you say?” Joey demanded, his eyes narrowing with anger and concentration.

My adrenaline spiking, a fleeting vision appeared of Joey running into the pathway of a car before it was replaced by Joey’s ruddy, grimacing face as he rolled up his sleeves.

“Walk away Joey,” I pleaded, “walk away or something terrible will happen … to you.”

Something in the urgency of my voice made him pause. But once the moment passed, the glint of concern in his features vanished.

“Something terrible is going to happen alright.”

I didn’t know the first thing about fighting. But after a flurry of weakly deflected punches my fear vanished, the realization that I should have stood up to him years before more painful than the beating he was giving me in the moment. But as my arms weakened and began to droop it was more a beat down than a fight. Eventually even Joey was winded, pausing to stare angrily into the one eye that hadn’t quite swollen shut. But between ragged breaths I began to helplessly laugh – feebly at first – and then harder and harder at the absurdity of the situation.

“You think this is funny?”

I nodded my head faintly but there was no point in trying to explain. Focusing on his angry, watery eyes, I only managed to mutter, “So … you made your choice.”

“Yeah,” he answered before whispering – “You think Wednesdays were bad before? I’ll make them a thousand times worse.”

His next punch broke my nose; I felt the thick blood oozing from my nostrils and laughed out loud, my chest swelling with a euphoria I had never experienced before. A few moments later my legs collapsed, but the anger my laughter triggered had short-circuited Joey’s brain, my unexpected mockery filling him with a savage rage.

I don’t remember much after that. I vaguely remember Joey kicking me in the ribs as Rita’s voice shouted –“You’re killin’ him!” After that Joey ran out of the school and into an oncoming car.

_____________________

The Fair Exchange - Part 4

FictionHorrorMagical Realism

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

  2. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  3. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  1. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  2. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (15)

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  • Caitlin Charltonabout a year ago

    Between the lying and the flashbacks, and him laughing through the pain I’m going to brace myself for part 4. He’s almost exactly like the bully.

  • Heather Zieffle about a year ago

    Loving this story so far, John!

  • D.K. Shepardabout a year ago

    Really really enjoyed this one, John!! Each installment has had its own particular feel to it and yet the link between them is clear. The brief reappearance of Rita in the flashback was a nice touch

  • Hannah Mooreabout a year ago

    You are on form here John.

  • Rachel Deemingabout a year ago

    I'm intrigued to see where this is headed, John, how it will all end. There has to be a cost...

  • Andrea Corwin about a year ago

    I liked this descriptive part:wore a handlebar mustache and tattooed anchors on each of his large biceps – bluish green with age. Bye-bye stupid bully Joey! 👏 great job.

  • Kelli Sheckler-Amsdenabout a year ago

    You cannot truly hate a place unless you loved it first....aww, you got me now! The uncontrollable laughter accompanied by the unseen hands of fate...wooo, this is some good stuff

  • Mark Gagnonabout a year ago

    Your depiction of the schoolyard bully is spot on. Now on to the next!

  • L.C. Schäferabout a year ago

    Didn't see that ending coming!

  • JBazabout a year ago

    I felt sad yet understood why he laughed, knowing what he knew. I wish there would have been one more part after part two, then this could have been part four, just to add a little more context for the finale. John I very much enjoyed this tale and how you wrote it. This is easily a novella in the making.

  • Cathy holmesabout a year ago

    Joey had it coming.

  • Gerard DiLeoabout a year ago

    Damn! But I'm a little cofused. Did he laugh because he thought he had changed things enough to save Joey (even though fate cruelly ran over him anyway), or because he set him up to be hit based on his prescience? Maybe I'll just read it again. I liked the continuity of the "choice." Well done.

  • Jay Eff as in JF as in Jamie Faust! Okay so Ed, Marty and Joey are best friends. Sorry for my confusion but did Joey bully Ed or Jamie?

  • Lamar Wigginsabout a year ago

    The ending was pretty damn intense... Loved it! Also, when you introduced the barber, I imagined that mustache before I read it. Freaky stuff!

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