This is my entry for
"Amorous Goods, Season 04" Author Challenge
. Thanks to jaF0 for organizing this one. The old Friday the 13th TV series was one of my favorites growing up, part of a huge block of syndicated sci-fi and horror shows that ran on Saturday night in the D/FW area. It's been a lot of fun to write something in that vein.
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Prologue:
A lifelong collector of goods and objects from far and wide has passed and left the entire collection and the business built around them to the only remaining relative, a niece on a career path of her own. Vikki has taken on the task of administering the estate and liquidating the business and collection. However, she has come to find out that many of the goods have been cursed or enchanted with amorous powers that affect those who encounter them. These are the stories of some of those encounters with objects found at Amorous Goods.
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The shopkeep reminded me of my grandfather. "Tell me about her." He topped off my tea, then sat back in his overstuffed chair.
I hesitated; telling this story had never caused me anything but heartache. "... I met her when we were fourteen years old. She had just moved to town; her dad got a new job, and the family moved during the middle of the school year. Something about her... I don't know. I don't believe in love at first sight, but I found her compelling in a way I just don't have words for.
"I mean, she was cute, but not gorgeous: a cute button nose, curly strawberry blonde hair, and rail thin. Puberty clearly hadn't really hit yet. She had this elfin smile, though, and it came to her face so easily. I... Maybe love at first sight isn't real, but I just felt like we were meant to be together."
I shook my head. "She and I became fast friends, then best friends, then more as we got older. We weren't just each other's firsts; we were each other's onlys. My memories are... fuzzy in some places. I know that she and I went to college together and got married as soon as we graduated. We had two kids, a five-year-old girl and a three-year-old boy. I worked, and she stayed home to raise them."
My throat constricted. This part always hurt the most. "I remember laying in bed with her that morning so clearly; not all of it, but images so clear they're like photographs. Nothing sexual, nothing... It wasn't like that. That morning, we just cuddled and talked. It was bliss. And- and then..."
I couldn't go on, but Mack, the shopkeeper, seemed to know the next part. "... And then you woke up, and it was all a dream. You were back in your bed, at home, and fifteen years had passed?"
"... Twenty. How did you know?"
Ignoring my question, he shook his head with a sad smile. "Twenty years of your life, gone."
"Yeah, but... but not gone. Never existed." I took a sip from the steaming cup. "I looked for her the next day at school. She wasn't there, of course. I talked to the other students, the administration... No one had any idea who I was talking about. And it didn't help..." I sighed. "It didn't help that I couldn't remember her name."
"Oh? Is that all you couldn't remember?"
"There are gaps, like I said. We lived a life together, but I only remember bits and pieces of it. Meeting her. Some time in high school. A few days in college, ones that seemed important to our relationship or our lives. Our wedding day. A few without her in it, like random days at my job or with friends. The birth of our daughter, but not our son. And, of course, that last morning in bed before I woke up.
"But I'm missing other things, too. Her name. And... I can't remember her voice. Not really. It's always just out of reach, like... like the opposite of something being on the tip of your tongue. Like it doesn't quite reach my ears. I can remember what she said, but not her voice saying it. I just can't remember the sound of her voice.
"Except for her laugh. God, I love that laugh, and I haven't heard it for so long. I'd give anything to hear her laugh again, to have another minute with her, just so I could..."
I shook my head. "I know it's crazy. I know that. Trust me, I spent enough time being told by my parents and school officials that, then therapists. 'You can't live a whole life in one night.' 'It was just a dream.' 'Puberty anxiety manifesting in an ideal life.'
"But it's not. It can't be. I saw... other stuff. iPhones, back when Nokia bricks were all we had. References to the war in Ukraine. Games I played with my kids on their Xbox, ones that really exist that I couldn't have even conceived of back then. It's not... It can't just be a dream."
Mack sat back in his chair. "Mmm. It could be your mind backfilling details. Memory is tricky like that."
"It's not!" I lowered my voice. "It's not. I'm sorry I shouted, but it's not. She's... She has to be real. They have to be real, my kids, my..." My shoulders slumped. "I can't remember their names. My little girl and my little boy. I can hear their voices, but I can't see their faces." This was why I didn't talk about them anymore. It wasn't just because people thought I was nuts; it was because it sent me into a spiral every time.
"The opposite of how you remember their mom. Your dream children, I mean."
"Yeah."
The old man took a deep breath and let it out slowly. "What has your life been like since then?"
"Not great." I flopped back in the chair. "I tried to let it go. I did, I promise. Move on. I went to college, graduated with okay grades, got an okay job. Married someone. Got divorced."
"Because the woman you married wasn't her?"
I slowly nodded. "Jennifer deserved better. She's a wonderful woman, and I'm glad she's found someone that... Well, that isn't still chasing a dream he had when he was a kid. That wasn't..." A laugh escaped my lips unexpectedly. "That wasn't settling for her even as she settled for him. By any sane measure, I should have been overjoyed to be with Jen, and I was. Some of the time, anyways. But not..." My gaze shifted to the window, ashamed at the actions of my past self, actions I know I'd still repeat to this day, even knowing how wrong they were.
"I'd see a woman on the street with curly strawberry blonde hair. Just for a second, I thought it might be her, and I'd stare. Jennifer knew about the dream. She tried to be understanding, but how long can someone live with always coming in second to a literal dream girl?" I shook my head and turned my gaze back to Mack. "I don't blame her for leaving. She never should have had to put up with me in the first place."
Mack frowned, taking in a deep breath through his nose, then exhaling steadily. "Do you know why you're here? In the shop, I mean?"
"Yeah, I... Because- because, I..." My brows knit together as I tried to remember. A thunderclap outside seemed like a hint. "It's raining. I came in to get out of the rain." 'Of course,' I thought. 'That has to be it.' "I, ah, I pass by the shop on the way to and from work sometimes, and it started raining, so I came inside."
The shopkeeper favored me with a sympathetic smile. "It started raining after you came in. Half an hour after you came in." He inclined his head at my hand. "Do you know what you're holding?"
"What?"
"In your right hand. You've been clutching it for the last hour like it's a winning lottery ticket." He chuckled at a joke I didn't get. "Which, I suppose, it might be."
I looked down to see my fist clenched tightly around something. It took an effort of will to uncurl my fingers; inside, I found a key. It shined like polished silver, its intricate design reminiscent of something from the nineteenth century, like a key you'd expect to open your great-grandmother's hope chest. Its length made it too long to fully fit in my clenched fist, but it felt almost weightless, like a plastic toy instead of a sizable hunk of metal. But the marks it had left on the skin of my palm and my fingers meant I'd held it in a death grip before Mack bade me open my fist; a toy would have snapped under that pressure.
"What- I- I don't remember..." I glanced up at him, but my eyes returned quickly to the mesmerizing object in my hand. "Where did this come from?"
"From the shelves of our little shop with the strange name. You didn't come in because of the storm. You came in because it called to you."
I laughed, looking up at him once more, the key almost--but not quite--forgotten. "Called to me?"
He nodded, a vaguely smug expression on his face. "Don't believe me? Put the key on the table, then, and try to walk out the door."
My hand felt like it moved through molasses as I reached forward, but I managed to gently place the gleaming key on the hardwood surface. It made a beautiful, pure sound, chiming like the tuning fork a choir of angels would use to harmonize. Having it out of my grasp felt almost painful, but I managed to step back from the table. Politely, almost ashamed, I muttered, "I, um, I'm sorry. I try not to talk about this anymore. But thank you for listening." Then I turned to head towards the door.
"Oh, it's quite alright. But Daniel? You seem to have forgotten something." He gestured toward my hand, and I found that I'd somehow picked up the key once more, my fist closed tightly around it. When had I done that? "Please, Mr. Jeffries. Sit down. We need to talk. Or, at least, you need to listen."
I felt myself sweat.
You should run!
'Wait, what? No, I shouldn't!'
But he might take the key!
Where the hell did that come from?
"Mr. Jeffries." I shook my head to clear it. "Please. Sit. I won't take the key. I promise. But you need to understand some things about it before you leave."
Shakily, I pulled the chair back out and lowered myself into it. "What was that voice?"