“Jana
Hawkins is going to
the Halcombe Smithers rally tonight!!!!!
It’s gonna be awesome! lol :)”
Jana was very excited. Her first political rally! She wasn’t exactly sure what this Halcombe
Smithers guy was all about, but that didn’t matter. She felt so active, so patriotic, so…
American. She went out and bought an
entirely new outfit just for the occasion.
She made a huge sign with Smithers’ famous “Pick Up the PEACEes” slogan
in bright blue and red. She even posted
about it on her Facebook status so everyone could see how serious she was about
politics.
“Wow girl i am sooooo jealous lol
that rally is going to rock!!!!” commented an old friend she hadn’t seen in
more than a decade.
“That is wonderful. I remember when you were just a little junior
high schooler, giggling about the cute boy you sat next to in geography
class. And now you’re a responsible
adult, attending an important civic occasion.
I am impressed,” said one of her old church leaders.
“We'll see what the rally turns out
to be, but I have a hard time believing that it's a plea to both sides to
listen to each other when he's made it very clear that he has nothing but
contempt for the. . . see more”
said a friend of Jana’s sister, who commented on every picture Jana ever
posted, and whom Jana had not really wanted to “be friends with” in the first
place. Jana felt a thrill of excitement
run through her at all the comments. She
was just so involved!
Making sure to check that no new
comments had been added while she was getting ready, Jana looked at the clock
at 6:43 and decided it was time to leave.
Nervousness had given her a temperamental stomach, so all she had been
able to force down for dinner was half a bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios. The other half was sitting, slowly turning to
soggy mush, on the counter in the kitchen.
She carefully took stock of the things she was holding in her hands and,
with a thrill, walked to the garage, got in her car, and headed out.
******
“So, you’re
sure this girl is gone for the whole
night Kev?” Sitting in the passenger
side of the old Chevy truck a few houses down the street, Manuel watched
casually as Jana pulled out of her driveway and headed towards them. As she passed the truck and turned left at
the corner behind them, he scanned the neighborhood around them.
“Yeah man, I told you like a million
times, she’s been posting about it on Facebook for like three months. She won’t be back till like eleven at the
earliest.” Kevin smoked his cigarette
with the air of someone who thought he was on an MTV reality show. He made every inhalation seem important. The minutes ticked by. It was 7:30 when Manuel spoke again.
“Alright, let’s go.”
Kevin pulled the old truck slowly up
to the curb in from of Jana’s house and the two men got out. They walked confidently to the side gate and
Manuel took one quick look around him before he sprang nimbly over. A dull ‘clip’ and a few seconds later the
gate was swinging steadily open. Kevin
passed through and shut it quietly behind him.
They did not have to speak as they
broke the screen off a back window, broke through the glass, and reached
through to unlatch the lock. They had
done it all so many times. They moved
like two parts of a whole. By 7:34 they
were in Jana’s bedroom.
******
“Jana
Hawkins is totally
making history at the Halcombe Smithers rally!!!! this man is so the next
mahatima gandii lol!!!”
“And
that’s why we’ve got to pick our sorry carcasses off the cracked and crumbling
soil of this great American nation, dust off our pants, and put the PEACEes
back together.”
The crowd roared around Jana and she
found herself screaming in ecstasy, almost as though she couldn’t help it,
along with them. Brilliant, she thought.
Every word he said was just so deeply moving, it was like she had heard
the words before in a movie, but this time she was actually in the movie along with all the famous
actors. And to think, she was actually
witnessing it all first hand. Smithers,
a distant figure on a stand hundreds of feet in front of her, pumped his fist
in the air again, for added emphasis, and the crowd roared even louder.
Jana
had been getting a flattering amount of comments on every status update she had
done. She had been posting about once
every twenty minutes, and she couldn’t believe how many of her friends
cared. One of the new friends she had
made, a guy named Kevin Baldwin, had commented on every one of her updates. She couldn’t quite remember where she had met
Kevin, but in all the pictures she looked through on his profile he looked
really cute, and she was pretty sure she had known him in grade school or
something. Life was just so good right
now.
******
Manuel
stopped suddenly in the kitchen and Kevin, who was carrying Jana’s 21’
flatscreen TV, ‘oomphed’ as he barreled into Manuel’s back.
“What, dude?” Kevin grumbled but
Manuel just continued to stare at something Kevin couldn’t see.
“Kev, do you see that?”
“What are you talking about?”
“Right there, on the counter.” Kevin swore, shifting the TV from his right
arm to his left.
“Dude, what the…” Kevin’s voice
trailed off as Manuel moved enough for him to see what he was staring at.
“How the @$%& did she know?”
Manuel whispered, almost reverently as his eyes bored holes into the mushy
half-eaten bowl of cereal on the counter.
A siren screamed suddenly, from some distance away, getting closer at an
alarming speed. Kevin dropped the TV
with a crash and ran desperately for the garage.
“Manuel,” he screamed, slamming his
hand on the garage door opener affixed to the wall. He leaped into the truck they had pulled into
the garage earlier.
“Get
the &@$% out here dude!” The siren
was getting closer, a lot closer.
“How…”
Manuel whispered again, his voice almost a breath. Finally, as though snapped out of his trance
by some unseen force, Manuel looked up in horror and whipped his body into
action. He made a bolt for the
garage. Kevin had already started to
peel out as Manuel lunged for the passenger side door, wrenched it open, and
flung himself in. Kevin hit the gas and
forced his way through all the furniture and appliances they had been stacking
by the open bed of the truck, which went flying in all directions. Jana’s brand new desktop computer escaped
being crushed to pieces by about two inches.
The sirens were close now and Kevin
looked around the neighborhood wildly as he tried to decide which way to
escape. Manuel pointed frantically to
the left and Kevin sped off, never once looking back.
Seconds later two police cars and an
ambulance pulled into the driveway of the house across from Jana’s. Mr. Brooks, an elderly gentleman, came
hobbling out.
“She’s breathing easier now, but I’m
still glad you folks are here,” he said, wheezing slightly. A policemen and a paramedic walked calmly up
the path, following Mr. Brooks back into the house. Two other policemen stayed out on the porch,
looking disgustedly after Mr. Brooks’ retreating back.
“This is the third time this month,”
one of the men said to the other in an undertone. “I wish the old lady would just kick the
bucket and get it over with.” The other
man chuckled and nodded sympathetically.
“Well, at least it’s a nice night,
huh?” he said and turned to survey the pretty evening sky.
“What the…?” he said, starting, and
the other policeman turned in to look.
They noticed, for the first time, the utter mayhem across the street.
******
“Jana
Hawkins got ROBBED
tonight!!!!!! :( :( :( well almost!!!!! I am totally FREAKED OUT right now!!!!!
:( :(“
Jana sat slumped in a kitchen chair
in her now empty living room. It was
going to take forever to get everything back where it was supposed to go. Police officers were swarming everywhere,
jabbering excitedly to each other, walking briskly through the rooms of her
house. She felt so betrayed. So violated.
And on this night of all
nights. The glow of the rally had long
since faded, wiped brutally away by the sight of her savaged home. She got up and walked gloomily towards her
battered TV which was sitting in the middle of the kitchen floor, a piece of
the plastic frame cracked and scratched.
She picked up the plug, wondering vaguely if it still worked. She plugged it in to a nearby outlet and
pressed the power button ‘on.’
“Police are still looking for the
two men known as the “Cereal Robbers,” a smart looking woman in a bright red
blazer said, her face creased with professional concern. “There have been six break-ins in the east
valley this month alone, all by the same two men who leave a strange calling
card at every victim’s home. A half
eaten bowl of cereal…” The woman paused
for the strangeness of her words to have their full effect and a picture
flashed on the screen of a bowl half-filled with grayish mush. “Please contact the police if you have any
information regarding these terrible crimi-“ Jana pressed the power button
again and the TV screen went blank. Well, she thought, at least it still works. She
pulled out her phone and pulled up her Facebook page again.
“Jana Hawkins is totally not sleeping at home tonight!!!
:( im going over to my moms i dont think
i'll be able to sleep here for a long time oh my gosh how could someone do
something like this i'm so upset…”
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