Back in The Neutral Zone, Morgan felt happier than she had in a long time. She liked being back in her store, with her friends and customers and co-workers. It was an atmosphere she'd missed.
The plywood out front still tugged at her heart, but Casey had led the effort to paint it and put up posters and other decorations. Casey had even suggested a contest for a new logo and art for the store, and putting it on the plywood until the storefront was fixed. They would award the winner some merchandise from the store. Morgan had liked the idea, and they decided to work out the details.
It felt good to be doing something positive, she thought. Their little community had come together, and she was only sad that she'd missed most of it.
"Hi, Morgan." Vincent waved as he came in.
"Vincent, hi!" She beamed. "How are you? It feels like it's been forever since I've seen you!"
"I'm good, and it's great to see you back at work." He leaned on the counter and grinned. "Does Casey know you're here?"
Morgan rolled her eyes and made an exaggerated shushing motion. "I snuck in. Don't tell her."
"I heard that." Casey peeked out of the office. "You be good or I'll make you go home."
"Yes, ma'am." Morgan shared a laugh with Vincent as Casey went back to her paperwork.
"I'm sure you're sick of it, but I have to ask, how are you feeling?" Vincent said.
"I'm a little tired of it, but at least you haven't asked me before," Morgan said. "I'm all right. I still have some symptoms from time to time, but time is the only thing that will fix it, so I guess I'll just have to be patient."
"That sucks."
"It does, but I'll manage. I've started drawing and even writing a little again, and that helps."
"Excellent. We all await the sequel," Vincent said.
The door chimed and Morgan looked over.
"Well, fuck," she said quietly as two men entered the store.
"What is it?" Vincent glanced over. "Do you know them?"
"I do." Morgan eyed them as they approached. "This is Jim and Dave, who have a podcast and YouTube channel and offered to leave us off it."
"What's up? Who's this?" Casey came out of the office.
"Jim and Dave?" Vincent frowned as he thought, then turned to them. "Jim and Dave with the Comics Confidential podcast?"
"Yeah, that's us. I'm Jim." He nodded and held his hand out to Vincent.
"I'm Dave," said the other man, and also shook hands.
Morgan was wary. They were not at all acting as they had on their first visit, but she didn't trust it.
"I'm Vincent. Nice to meet you," said Vincent. "Just wanted to say I enjoy your podcast."
"Thanks, man," said Jim. "Glad to hear it."
"I remember you," said Casey and her eyes narrowed. "Morgan told me how you guys tried to test her or some shit, then threatened our reputation. What do you fucking want?"
"Casey, take it easy," Morgan said.
"I am taking it fucking easy." Casey glared at the men.
"This is Casey Lu," said Morgan. "She's my best friend and co-owner. It wasn't just my livelihood you tried messing with, it was hers too."
Jim and Dave exchanged guilty glances.
Vincent spoke up. "I have to say, whether I keep listening is going to depend a lot on what happens here. Morgan and Casey are good friends of mine, and this store is one of my favorite places. If you're going to diss them or the store, I won't be listening anymore."
"Um, yeah. About that." Dave cleared his throat. "We, ah, we wanted to apologize."
"Oh." Morgan was surprised. "Thanks." She shook her head. "I don't mean to be rude, but why?" She put a hand on Casey's arm to keep her friend from going off.
"We were assholes," said Jim, "and we shouldn't have been."
"Damn straight," muttered Casey, but said nothing else.
"My sister is a customer of yours," said Dave. "We did talk a little about your store on our podcast--and I'm sorry about that too--and it turns out my sister heard us and ripped me a new one."
Vincent smiled, amused. "I missed that episode. And good on your sister."
Dave huffed out a laugh. "Yeah. Man, you don't want to get on her bad side. Anyway, after that episode, she kind of let us have it on social media. Not, I mean, in a bad way. Not even boycotting us or anything."
"Then what?" asked Morgan, curious.
"She told her friends and then got them and some of your other customers to post on our sites, in our channel comments, things like that," said Jim. "You have a very dedicated group of supporters."
"We do," said Morgan, "and I'm always grateful for that."
"So there was a lot of support for you, and not so much for us," said Dave. "We lost a lot of subscribers. Between that and my sister, we realized that, well, we'd been pretty awful."
"A few people did 'support' us," said Jim, using air quotes. "But when we read their comments, we realized we didn't want people like that as fans. They said awful things. We blocked them as best we could, but there's always more."
"Oh, yeah," said Morgan. "Our social media feeds would make your hair stand up."
"Then we heard about what happened here." Dave looked around. "We are so sorry. I don't know if anything we did contributed to it, but we didn't mean for anything like that. I mean, god." He threw up his hands. "We're just two guys shouting into the cyber void, you know? We didn't think people paid that much attention."
Morgan's lips quirked into a small smile. "Not even with all of your subscribers?"
Dave reddened and cleared his throat. "Well, our numbers--"
"We were jerks," said Jim. "That's all there is to it. And we're sorry."
"Thank you," said Morgan, sincerely. "It means a lot. I appreciate it." She glanced at Casey, who gave a short nod of agreement.
"We know we can't do much to make up for it, but we'd like to try," said Dave. "If you're interested, we'd like to dedicate an episode of our show to you, and your store."
"We read your book," said Jim. "It's terrific. We'd like to talk to you about that, about how you started your store, whatever you want."
"Thank you," said Morgan. "It's a nice offer. We'll think about it."
"I don't--" began Casey, but Morgan patted her arm again.
"We'll just think about it," she said to Casey.
"I don't fucking trust them." Casey glared at the men.