Joseph Manning bent
his head back so far, he could have passed as a yawning sea lion. People
wandered around him like a flock of seagulls, constantly moving but without
real purpose. If it wasn’t for these walls of steel and glass rising above him
like tidal waves, Joseph wouldn’t be standing there, waiting for them to start
crumbling down.
“Do you happen to know where Jefferson Street is?” Joseph
asked a woman passing by, but she barely paid him any attention. Joseph
snorted. “Why Gabe gave up the sea to
live in this city, I’ll never know.”
Joseph attempted four other times to ask strangers for
directions, with the same amount of luck.
“What on earth could there possibly be to keep an entire
city on it’s feet that someone can’t stop five seconds to help a stranger? Had
this place been anything like St. Veronica Harbor I could have been there by
now.” A few people gave him funny looks before swooping past him.
“Serves them right.” He muttered. He decided that he might
as well start moving in some direction, he’d probably get lucky and just
stumble upon the right street eventually. Straight. Right. Left. Dead end. He
cursed, and a few people who were watching him scattered away when his eyes met
theirs. One of them dropped something and with a huff he went to retrieve it
before they got too far away. He picked up the little white ball of string that
fit perfectly in the palm of his hand.
“Hey! Sorry, but you dropped something!” He shouted, several
people stopped to look at him, waving the ball of string in the air. But the
woman who he believed dropped it didn’t look back. Joseph slumped up against a
wall, too tired at this point to run after her. He looked back up into the blue
sky, where ships of white clouds passed by. He looked back down at the ball of
string in his hand. He found the fraying end and fiddled with it in his
fingers. Now that he noticed, this string felt soft between his calloused
hands. He looked back up at the sky as he contemplated what to do next.
“Hi there mister,” a small voice said. Joseph looked down. Big
green eyes stared up at him.
“Hello little one,” Joseph said.
“You look lost.”
“As a matter of fact I am. Does a little tyke like you
happen to know where Jefferson street is?” Joseph asked.
The little boy blinked at him with a raised eyebrow. “It’s just
right there.” He pointed to the sign directly across from where they were
standing.
Joseph couldn’t help but smile. “Thanks little one.”
“What’s that?” The boy asked, motioning to the string.
Joseph looked at his hands, and noticed that the string was now woven between
his fingers and thumb.
“Just some string. Would you like it?” Joseph said,
untangling it from his hand. The boy nodded and offered his hands out to take
it. His fat little fingers found the frayed end and in a flash the boy took off
running. Joseph let the boy run, waiting for the string to unravel in his hands
till it was gone, but the boy had already run all the way down the large block
and turned a corner and the ball in his hands didn’t shrink. He pinched the
fast moving string and tugged. The thin line of string broke off and instantly
turned to dust. Joseph looked back at the ball of string, but it looked just as
it had before. He crossed himself before tossing the ball of string into a
nearby trash can. He waited to safely cross the street.
He stepped out onto the street but his leg got caught, he
looked down to see the white string wrapped around his fingers, his waist, and
his leg. Suddenly a black car came swerving crazily down the street. The car
whooshed past him and almost missed the left turn at the light. The air was
soon filled with the sound of car horns and angry shouts.
Joseph crossed himself again as he backed up onto the sidewalk.
There it was again, the soft white string. Muttering a prayer, he double
checked the street before attempting to cross the street again. Before he did a
woman ran in front of him. She grabbed his wrist. Joseph noticed the tears
streaming down her face.
“Please, sir, have you seen him. I told him to wait right
there for me. I was only gone two minutes. Please, tell me have you seen my
little boy. He’s this tall,” she said holding a hand out to her waist, “he’s
got the sweetest big green eyes. He has blonde hair and he was wearing a train
t-shirt. He’s not hard to miss. Please tell me you’ve seen him.”
Joseph’s stomach plummeted. What had happened to the boy
after the string broke?
“Ma’am, take a deep breath. It’s all going to be okay. Your
son was just here just a minute ago. I’m sure he hasn’t gotten far.”
The woman nodded and gave a small smile. She breathed in
deeply. “I’m sorry. I’m not the kind of mom who just leaves her son somewhere.
I really don’t. I just was trying to hurry so we could get home. I should have
known better. But he’s normally so good and stays put. I don’t know what could
have made him run off like that.”
Joseph swallowed down the hard lump in his throat.
“Don’t blame yourself. I’m sure you’re a wonderful mother. I
saw him go this way.” He breathed in
shakily as she let go of his wrist. She kept up a brisk walk as she walked down
the sidewalk. When they turned the corner, the woman stopped walking. Cars were
still honking their horns and a large crowd was gathered around what appeared
to be an accident. Joseph couldn’t help but notice a black car, similar to the
one that had almost ran him over smashed up against another car. An ambulance
barreled past, sirens blaring.
Joseph put a comforting hand on the woman’s shoulder.
“Maybe he’s watching with the rest of the crowd. You know
how little boys are interested in danger.”
The woman nodded in reply, but Joseph could see the worry in
her eyes. She walked stiffly beside him. As they got closer, Joseph saw
paramedics rolling out a stretcher. A police man was yelling at people to back
off.
“I’ll look over here,” the woman said as she walked past
him. Joseph nodded in agreement. He started to look through the crowd. Though
there were many boys watching the scene, none of them looked at all like the
little boy who had talked to him earlier. He clenched the ball of string hard
in his fist. Though no matter how hard he squeezed, it still felt as fresh and
soft as ever.
Somehow he made it through the crowd and was now up close to
the scene. The familiar black car was smoking, the windows were all smashed. It
looked more like a beat up dingy than a car. With the front end all mushed up.
There were two other cars smashed and wrecked, but it was obvious the black one
had taken the most damage. On the black road there was evidence of some kind of
liquid, but it could have been anything.
Then he saw something that made his knees wobble. Lying on
the ground was little hand with fat fingers clutching a broken white string.
“That’s my son! That’s my son!” the woman screamed, she tore
past him and ran to the paramedics. A police man stopped her and began talking
to her. Joseph wanted to move, wanted to run. He wanted to shout to the world
that somehow this whole mess was his fault. But all he could do was stand there
and watch. Moving with the crowd like a buoy.
Then somehow the scene was gone. The ambulance had driven
off with mother and son in tow. Tow trucks had cleared away the wreckage. All
that was left now was a large red stain on the ground and Joseph watching the
street return back to its normal quick paced and unfeeling current.
“Similar to the sea…” Joseph thought. His hand felt heavy. Though
he wanted to chuck the string again, he felt like it wasn’t going to leave him
alone. So he put it in his pocket. He back tracked the way he had come, he
could see the faint white line of dust still and he followed it back to the spot
where he had met the boy. He stood there for a moment wondering how to make
sense of it all. The more he thought about it, the heavier the ball in his
pocket felt.
He looked back across the street. There it hung in green for
all to see, “Jefferson Street”. Joseph looked both ways, then calmly crossed
the street. Nothing stopped him. He continued on his way, ready to tell Gabe
about his interesting adventure to the city. He never noticed the ball of string
fall out of his pocket. And there the string sat, waiting for another hand to
hold it.
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