There are a lot of stories here where the author writes about writing stories. Well, it's an interesting theme, so I thought I'd give it a try.
This is a story about a predator and a wife who lets her guard down for just an evening. It is neither a BTB nor a RAAC story.
I did set out to make this a 750-word story, but I quickly failed badly and gave up.
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It was nearly six in the evening, and it had been a hell of a day. Work was okay, but my life was another matter. I had a lot of questions where life was concerned.
I walked into the bar and seconds later I saw him sitting on a stool. Bastard!
I took the seat next to him and extended my hand. "George Baker, it's been a while!"
He pretended not to recognize me. The bastard was as transparent as glass.
"It's Bill Johnson. My wife works with you? We met at the Christmas party last year."
"Oh yeah, Bill! Good to see you again." The prick shook my hand. His grip was clammy.
"How you been, Bill?"
As if he didn't know... I ordered a beer. "Oh, you know, the same old same old." I thanked the bartender and took a deep swallow. It felt good, and it was exactly what I needed after the news I got today.
"I hear you're a big reader! Your wife is always talking about your latest story."
He says it like the ability to read is some great accomplishment. I wanted to tell him they teach it in grade school, but I didn't. "Well, I do read a lot, but she was probably talking about the stories I write." I took another mouthful of the amber gold.
"Really? Have you written anything I might have read?"
A hundred snarky responses ran through my mind at once. Instead, I shrugged. "Probably not. I mostly write short stories and publish them online. I get some interesting feedback. Sometimes it's like taking a master class in writing and other times it's like fighting off a pack of rabid dogs."
He was laughing, but I'm not sure why. It was probably his unhidden sense of superiority. "So, what do you write about, Shakespeare?"
"This and that. I see what's going on around me. I hear people talk. You can learn a lot just by listening."
"Then you report your findings?" The bastard was still laughing.
"Not exactly. I think about what I hear, and I turn it over in my mind. I try to understand what makes people tick and why they do the things they do. Then writing becomes a vehicle for exploring those thoughts."
"I'd rather watch football."
I'm not surprised. I bet he's never played a game of football in his life.
"So how do you write these little stories of yours?"
Condescension seems to be his strong suit. "If you think about the characters in a story, they take on a life of their own. You start them off and they sort of steer the story in their own direction. For me, it's a form of meditation that helps me understand the kind of people that elude me normally."
"Maybe you just need to get out more. The real world is more interesting."
"That's the thing about writing - you can live vicariously in the words on the page and do the things you can't do in the real world."
"Like what?" he asked.
I took another gulp of my beer and looked in the mirror behind the bar. I felt no need to stare in his face until I was ready. "Like you catch your wife with some lousy coward, and you hit him in the face and break his nose. You hit him hard, so you hear that satisfying snap as his nose breaks and see the splatter of blood as he falls. Then you divorce the slut and leave her with just the clothes on her back. You can't do that in real life. They still arrest you despite your motivation, or at least they do in most states. Here in Texas they tend to congratulate you for showing restraint. And the wife gets half."
The arrogant prick was laughing. I guess he thought the joke was on me.