- Home
- J. A. Cipriano
The Pen is Mightier
The Pen is Mightier Read online
The Pen is Mightier
J. A. Cipriano
Copyright © 2017 by J. A. Cipriano
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Want to get this FREE?
Sign up here. If you do, I'll send you my short story, Alone in the Dark, for free.
Visit me on Facebook or on the web at JACipriano.com for all the latest updates.
Also by J.A. Cipriano
World of Ruul
Soulstone: Awakening
Soulstone: The Skeleton King
Bug Wars
Doomed Infinity Marine
Doomed Infinity Marine 2
The Legendary Builder
The Builder’s Sword
The Builder’s Greed
The Builder’s Pride
The Builder’s Wrath
The Builder’s Throne
The FBI Dragon Chronicles
A Ritual of Fire
A Ritual of Death
Starcrossed Dragons
Riding Lightning
Grinding Frost
Swallowing Fire
Elements of Wrath Online
Ring of Promise
The Vale of Three Wolves
Crystalfire Keep
The Shaman Queen’s Harem
Ghosts and Grudges
Kingdom of Heaven
The Skull Throne
Escape From Hell
The Thrice Cursed Mage
Cursed
Marked
Burned
Seized
Claimed
Hellbound
The Half-Demon Warlock
Pound of Flesh
Flesh and Blood
Blood and Treasure
The Lillim Callina Chronicles
Wardbreaker
Kill it with Magic
The Hatter is Mad
Fairy Tale
Pursuit
Hardboiled
Mind Games
Fatal Ties
Clans of Shadow
Heart of Gold
Feet of Clay
Fists of Iron
The Spellslinger Chronicles
Throne to the Wolves
Prince of Blood and Thunder
Found Magic
May Contain Magic
The Magic Within
Magic for Hire
Witching on a Starship
Maverick
Planet Breaker
1
“Um… is everything okay?” I asked, watching the last customer of the night exit the restroom and look around hurriedly.
“Yeah, uh, sure.” He glanced at me. “Everything’s fine.” He took a quick breath and looked over his shoulder, scanning the empty store. Then he scooped up his bag and moved toward the exit, which seemed odd because he still hadn’t paid for the items in his bag.
“You going to pay for that?” I asked, holding the broom in my hands. We were technically closed, and while I didn’t want to bother the guy while he was in the restroom, I did want to make sure everything was okay. I really needed my job as a cashier at Super Mart, and my boss was a bitch. If I got another complaint, she’d give me even worse hours, and I was already working the closing shift even though I had classes early in the morning.
“Yeah, uh, sorry.” He looked at my nametag, “Roger. Everything is fine. I just needed to get something from that check stand.” He pointed at the check stand closest to the end of the store where we had a ChapStick display. “The weather is just crazy on my lips.”
He smiled, but it didn’t come close to his eyes. No. In fact, it made him look more worried. Sweat began to drip down his forehead as he turned away from the door and headed toward the display. Then he began thumbing through the different kinds.
“You’re welcome,” I said, nodding at him. “Let me know when you’re ready.”
“Will do,” he said, pulling one from the rack and flipping it around so he could read the back.
I watched him for a couple more moments, trying to decide whether or not I thought he was fucking with me before I went back to my sweeping. It was past closing time, and with any luck, I’d have this floor done by the time he finished picking out his ChapStick. Then I could just shut off the lights and go home.
That was when I heard the door alarm sound. As I spun back around, I saw him racing away outside through the glass door, grocery bag clutched in his hand.
Fuck.
If my boss found out about this, I’d be in so much trouble. No. Not just in trouble. I’d get my pay docked for sure, especially since the guy had come in five minutes before I was supposed to lock the door. At the time, part of me had wanted to tell him we were closed, but I’d relented, and not just because my boss was in the back room, but because I’d felt bad for the guy. Only now the scumbag had skipped out.
“No!” I cried, dropping my broom and sprinting for the door. I hit it a second later, and as I pushed it open, I saw the guy leaping into his shiny douchebag BMW. He took one look at me as I approached and slammed his door.
“Stop!” I called, waving at him as I approached, my footsteps thudding on the cracked asphalt. “You forgot to pay for that.”
His only response was to start his car, causing the engine to roar to life. Fuck.
Chest heaving and heart hammering, I sprinted toward him as he slammed his foot on the gas, causing the tires to squeal, spraying gravel across the parking lot.
“Please just pay,” I said, grabbing the door and trying to jerk it open, even as he began moving backward. My feet started to go out from under me, and as I realized I was about to be turned into street pizza over eighteen dollars’ worth of groceries, the guy hit his brakes. My entire body jerked to a stop, my shoulders squealing in pain.
I blinked, trying to regain my footing as the guy’s window rolled down.
“What are you doing?” he growled, fixing me with angry eyes.
“You…” I huffed, trying to catch my breath. “You forgot to pay.” I swallowed hard, my mouth suddenly dry.
“I didn’t forget,” he snapped and started to roll up his window. “Let go.”
“I can’t—”
My words were cut off as his door jerked violently open. The metal caught me on the side of the head, knocking me backward. As stars flitted past my vision, he slammed the door closed once more. My hands lost their grip on his door then, and as I crashed to the ground, the guy took off, tearing out of the parking lot.
As I lay there, the harsh light of the streetlight overhead illuminating my shame and the sound of his car leaving me in the dust filling my ears, time seemed to slow down. Then my mind replayed the last twenty minutes. The guy had come in asking if we had a restroom, and when I’d informed him it was for customers only, he’d grabbed a reusable shopping bag off the rack and thrown a few things in it.
I hadn’t thought anything of it because, believe it or not, this happened a lot. We were the only market on this particular truck stop after about fifty miles of barren wasteland. At first, we had stayed open later, but Chuck, the district manager, had quickly found out that after about nine PM or so, barely any customers came in anymore, and it was actually more expensive to be open than to just close for the night.
Still, none of that knowledge would help me now. No. Only God could help me now.
Grumbling, I pushed myself to my feet and made my way back toward the Super Mart. As I pulled open the door, I sighed and turned off the door alarm. With the sound still ringing in my ears, I surveyed the place.
&nbs
p; Despite what had happened, most everything else was already clean, so once I took out the trash, set the alarm, and turned off the lights, I’d be free to go home and try to forget I’d been knocked down by a car-door-wielding thief. Then, if I was really lucky, I’d get to study for my exam tomorrow. Assuming, of course, my roommate Marty didn’t have a chick over.
As I pulled the lid off the trash can so I could empty the bag, my boss Amy stepped out of the back room and glared at me.
“What’s going on?” she asked, and I’d be lying if I said Amy wasn’t pretty. She was a fair bit older than me though she still leaned more into the milf category than the cougar category. I’d always thought she had a pretty nice body, and if I was being really honest, I’d admit she’d been the subject of more than a few of my, well, fantasies.
Amy stood nearly six feet tall with snow white skin, mousy blonde curls, and I often wondered just what she looked like under her clothes.
“Some asshole just ran out. Again,” I replied, rubbing my face with one hand. I could already tell I was going to have a headache.
“The jerk off you let come in after we were supposed to close?” She shook her head, more annoyed than ever. “And he didn’t even pay?”
“No,” I said, gripping the trash bag so I could pull it out. Only as I did, the bottom tore open, spilling food across the floor. As I stared at the mess in horror, a combination of old soda, greasy wrappers, and snotty tissues rushed past my legs and covered the floor.
“What the fuck are you doing?” Amy snarled, taking a step toward me before stopping. I could already see the vein pulsing on the side of her neck that meant she was three seconds from blowing a gasket. “First, you let a guy come in after hours and steal shit, and now you spill shit all over the floor?”
“I’m sorry.” I tried to breathe, to calm myself. I just needed to do something, anything. “I’ll clean it up?”
“You better fucking clean it up, you fuck.” She shook her head. “Why I should fire you. This is the third time you’ve let someone do this.”
Summoning all my courage, I fixed my eyes on her. “Actually, that was Marty—”
“I don’t give a fuck who it was. You should have been more aware. Watched him more closely. This is your fault,” she growled. “If it happens again, you’re fired.” She dared me to argue for a long moment, and as much as I wanted to tell her to go fuck herself, I didn’t.
I barely had enough hours to get by. Without this job, I’d probably be foraging for roots and berries, and I really hated roots and berries.
I stuffed down my anger and sighed. “Sorry.”
“Good.” She nodded once. “I’m going to let you off with a warning instead of writing you up.”
With those words, she spun on her heel and made her way to the back where I knew she’d pretend to work while mostly watching television.
Sighing, I turned my attention back to the mess. “Fuck!” I grumbled as I reached for the bag and slipped. I crashed to the ground on my elbows and pain exploded through me, ripping up my side.
As I laid there, sludge soaked through my slacks in an instant, and the realization that I was kneeling in three inches of slime hit me. Rage surged up inside me, only that wouldn’t help things. Not even a little. Trying to summon my inner, I dunno, Batman, I guess, I crawled to my feet and looked down at myself.
My uniform was ruined, and even if it wasn’t, I wanted to burn everything. Unfortunately, I couldn’t do that. I only had two pairs of slacks, and I’d never be able to afford another pair. Hell, I wouldn’t even be able to buy a new shirt.
As I surveyed the damage, I wanted to just walk out. Only, I couldn’t do that either. I had to clean up this shit spectacle.
“No,” I said aloud, hoping that would keep me from losing my shit. “One step at a time. First, clean the floor. Second, clean myself off.” I know, it seemed crazy. I should have just left, but I really needed the job. My rent was already overdue, and my scholarship had informed me it didn’t actually have money to give me, and it was nearly breaking me. I needed to stay in school, to get my degree and move past all this. It was why I had put up with this shit.
With tuition due next week, I needed every penny I could scrape together, even if it meant I had to work twice as hard as everyone else for less.
“I’m just glad my parents aren’t alive to see this,” I mumbled, my hands tightening into fists as I fought to keep my eye on the prize. I could do this. For them, I could do this. I could make something of myself.
I made my way toward the janitorial closet. As I pulled the door open and removed the bucket and mop, I realized I’d have to move across the part of the floor that was still clean to fill up my bucket. Only that’d just leave me with more to clean. I stood there for half a minute, trying to figure out another way, but there wasn’t one. Worse, the smell, combined with the overhead lights was starting to give me a headache. I wanted to prop open the door, but that would leave me with the same problem.
“God,” I asked, looking up at the ceiling and finding only crappy overhead tile staring back. “Why do you hate me so much?”
Instead of getting the Almighty’s response, I got Amy.
“How are you not done cleaning this mess up yet?” she asked, glaring at me, and before I could respond, she waved a hand at me. “After you finish, I need you to take a delivery order to the carnival.” She glared at me, daring me to say something.
As I stared at my boss, part of me wanted to shove my mop down her goddamned throat. She knew my car was at death’s door, and I didn’t like deliveries. Hell, I usually lost money on them because gas was crazy expensive and tips were for shit.
“Okay,” I said, nodding. “I’ll take it.”
“Good.” She jerked a thumb over her shoulder as she turned back toward her office. “It’s in the deli under the heat lamps. They were supposed to have a guy come get it, but he had an accident of some kind. I don’t really know. Something about diarrhea… They need it delivered. Don’t mess it up or you’re fired.” She stepped through the door and closed it before I could even respond.
2
“What do you mean I have to pay for parking?” I cried, rage bubbling up inside me as I stared at the pimple-faced teen in the neon green vest at the entrance to the carnival. Behind him, I could see a multitude of brightly-colored tents, an enormous Ferris wheel, and a bunch of people spending more money than I even had in my bank account. Even still, it looked like fun, and something about the sight served only to make me more frustrated.
“If you want to go inside, you have to pay to park.” He crossed his arms over his chest.
“I’m just delivering sandwiches.” I pointed through my windshield while trying to maintain my cool. It was hard because every part of me wanted to wring his neck. “To that tent.”
“Rules are rules, man,” he said, sighing in a way that made me think he was stoned off his ass. “Anyone who goes through has to pay.” He shrugged. “I’d love to help you out, but my hands are tied.” He gestured to the left where a camera sat watching the entrance.
“If I pay the fifteen dollars to park—”
My cries were cut off as the car behind me honked.
“Can I just turn around and park across the street?” I asked, sighing. The last thing I wanted to do was pay the fifteen-dollar fee to park. If I did, I knew it’d come out of my pocket since delivery orders were paid up front on a credit card.
“No can do, man. There are way too many cars behind you for you to back up, and even if they weren’t there, those metal things will chew right through your tires.” He shrugged as I glanced in my rearview. He might have been right about there being too many cars, and that knowledge made me even angrier.
“Come on, bro, just raise the gate.” I tried to keep my rage out of my smile.
“I can’t put the gate up without the fee being paid.” He shrugged again.
“Fine,” I snapped. I was done dealing with this asshole. Here he wa
s, a minimum wage slob like me, and he wasn’t being cool. I’d have let him in to deliver his stupid sandwiches if our roles were reversed.
That was when I realized something. If the gate guard didn’t want to waive the charge, I’d just make the delivery on foot. Then when I got back, he’d have to let me through to turn around, and if he didn’t, well, we’d be in the same spot, but my delivery would be done.
I opened my door. As I got out of my car, the guy stepped back in confusion.
“What are you doing, man?” he asked, stepping out of his booth, and the smell of weed and sweat hit me like a freight train.
“Getting the sandwiches,” I said, glaring at him as I opened the back door and pulled out the bright red cooler bag with Super Mart Deli stenciled on it in fading golden letters. “I plan on delivering it.”
“You can’t leave your car here,” he said, confused.
“It’s just for a moment,” I said as the car behind me honked again. “I’ll be right back.” I slung the strap over my shoulder. I was done with this bullshit. Sure, there would be the matter of not being able to back out, but I’d deal with that later.
“Bruh,” he said, looking at me and wiping one hand over his face. “You can’t do that. There are all these people…”
“Seems you have a choice.” I felt like an asshole, but I was done. Simply done. I smelled like old mayonnaise, was tired, and I was still halfway across town from my apartment. “Let me drive through and park or tow my car.” I moved around the gate which was hard because there was barely any space even though I wasn’t exactly fat since it was hard to put on much weight when your meals consist of ramen noodles nine out of ten nights.
“I, er, but…” he mumbled before getting out of the booth and blocking me from going further. “You can’t leave your car here.” He leaned in toward me then, his Cheetos-stank breath wafting over me. “Just drive in, and I’ll put the gate up, okay. Just pretend like you’re paying me.”