course and ran into a stack of the bleach cartons. They tumbled and fell. One came close enough to my head to make me step backward, and I tripped over another carton that had landed behind me. I fell down, thumping my head hard enough to see bright stars in the darkness. Good show.
I lay there cursing myself and rubbing my head, telling myself to just take it easy, just get up and get out of here, get back to Billy, telling myself nothing soft and slimy was going to close over my ankle or slip into one groping hand. I told myself not to lose control, or I would end up blundering around back here in a panic, knocking things over and creating a mad obstacle course for myself.
I stood up carefully, looking for a pencil line of light between the double doors. I found it, a faint but unmistakable scratch on the darkness. I started toward it, and then stopped.
There was a sound. A soft sliding sound. It stopped, then started again with a stealthy little bump. Everything inside me went loose. I regressed magically to four years of age. That sound wasnât coming from the market. It was coming from behind me. From outside. Where the mist was. Something that was slipping and sliding and scraping over the cinderblocks. And, maybe, looking for a way in.
Or maybe it was already in, and it was looking for me. Maybe in a moment I would feel whatever was making that sound on my shoe. Or on my neck.
It came again. I was positive it was outside. But that didnât make it any better. I told my legs to go and they refused the order. Then the quality of the noise changed. Something rasped across the darkness and my heart leaped in my chest and I lunged at that thin vertical line of light. I hit the doors straight-arm and burst through into the market.
Three or four people were right outside the double doorsâOllie Weeks was one of themâand they all jumped back in surprise. Ollie grabbed at his chest. âDavid!â he said in a pinched voice. âJesus Christ, you want to take ten years off myââ He saw my face. âWhatâs the matter with you?â
âDid you hear it?â I asked. My voice sounded strange in my own ears, high and squeaking. âDid any of you hear it?â
They hadnât heard anything, of course. They had come up to see why the generator had gone off. As Ollie told me that, one of the bag-boys bustled up with an armload of flashlights. He looked from Ollie to me curiously.
âI turned the generator off,â I said, and explained why.
âWhat did you hear?â one of the other men asked. He worked for the town road department; his name was Jim something.
âI donât know. A scraping noise. Slithery. I donât want to hear it again.â
âNerves,â the other fellow with Ollie said.
No. It was not nerves.
âDid you hear it before the lights went out?â
âNo, only after. Butâ¦â But nothing. I could see the way they were looking at me. They didnât want any more bad news, anything else frightening or off-kilter. There was enough of that already. Only Ollie looked as if he believed me.
âLetâs go in and start her up again,â the bag-boy said, handing out the flashlights. Ollie took his doubtfully. The bag-boy offered me one, a slightly contemptuous shine in his eyes. He was maybe eighteen. After a momentâs thought, I took the light. I still needed something to cover Billy with.
Ollie opened the doors and chocked them, letting in some light. The bleach cartons lay scattered around the half-open door in the plywood partition.
The fellow named Jim sniffed and said, âSmells pretty rank, all right. Guess you was right to shut her down.â
The flashlight beams bobbed and danced across cartons of canned goods, toilet paper, dog food. The beams were smoky in the drifting fumes the blocked exhaust had turned back into the storage area. The bag-boy trained his light briefly on the wide loading door
Erma Bombeck
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