Between the Lanterns

BOOK: Between the Lanterns
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Between the Lanterns

J.M. BUSH

MilkMan Publishing

Copyright
©
2016 James Michael Bush, MilkMan Publishing

All rights reserved. This Book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

Edited by Matt Rance @ Proof Professor

Cover design by Stefanie Saw @ Seventh Star
 

Interior artwork created by Ammar Khalifa
 

Printed in the United States of America

First Printing, 2016

ISBN: 0-9972842-3-4

ISBN-13: 978-0-9972842-3-2

MilkMan Publishing

914 El Dorado Drive

Dothan, AL 36303

www.eatplaywritetravel.com

This book is dedicated to my hometown, Dothan, Alabama. I resented you when I was young, but now I understand what makes you great. Distance makes the heart grow fonder, as they used to say, and I’ve been about as far away from you as possible for a long time.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I’d like to thank everyone who bought my last novel. The outpouring of positivity from readers has been incredible. I hope that this book can match and surpass the success of Storm in Shanghai. In addition, I would like to thank my beta readers for Between the Lanterns: Brad Clayton, Candace Strickland, and my wife Merissa Lulling Bush. With the feedback I received from you, this novel went from pretty good to wonderful, and I am forever in your debt for that.

Perhaps most importantly for this particular novel, I would like to thank my friend Bobby Lee Hill, whose song “In Between the Lantern” inspired the story found within these pages. Your music has always made my heart dance, and I hope that I did your beautiful lyrics justice with this book.

Between

the

Lanterns

Preface

They met between the lanterns on West Main Street. The ones at the very end of the downtown strip of shops, all the way down past the bars and restaurants. All the way down past the clinic, the Baptist church, and the new office buildings. Those two lanterns hung in the air, levitating like all the other ones in New Dothan. There was nothing special about them. They gave off the same light as the others fueled by the Tesla generator outside of town, providing pure, clean, wireless energy. No poles were holding them in place. The magnetic levitation plates on the bottom kept them at the perfect ten feet above the automated sidewalks. They were normal, everyday lanterns. And that is where they met for the very first time.

Samantha was returning home from a long day waiting tables at Cheryl’s Diner. A throwback to the old days, reminiscent of the food you would find at Waffle House…when those still existed. The food was probably the best in town. Home-style cooking made with love, heart, and soul. Most of the people in New Dothan wouldn’t eat there, though. Cheryl’s Diner still used real meat, real vegetables, and real, home-made bread – a. All of the ingredients obtained from a small farm in Headland Town, where the last remaining farmers in the area still held onto the old ways.

Nowadays most everyone had a Nutricator in their homes. A technological marvel, as they advertised Nutricator, could create whatever you wanted to eat using processed protein and fiber to provide a nutritious meal for the whole family. Ask for pizza, you get it. Hamburgers? Sure. Duck à l’orange even. The problem was, it was all fake.
 

Samantha hated food from a Nutricator. She loved taking the time to break ingredients down and then use them to create something that took time and patience. She felt that Nutricator food was bland. It only “kinda sorta reminded you of what you really wanted,” she was fond of saying. But it was quick, easy, and most importantly, it was popular.

August was on his way to the hardware store. He had just rented a new apartment out past the end of West Main Street and was trying to fix the place up. It was a dump, sure, but it was his dump. It was all he could afford from his meager wages working on the line of the industrial factory outside of town. The one where they made all the major components for everything computerized in the area. They built the chips, motherboards, controllers, and activators for just about every modern device available. They were part of a worldwide conglomerate that owned almost everything and everyone. Montek paid their employees extremely low wages, even though they were a financial giant, which is why August could barely afford his tiny, run-down apartment.

As they walked down the street, both avoided the automated sidewalks because, well… legs were made for walking… not standing idle. So they strode towards one another from opposite ends of West Main. The moment they crossed between the lanterns, all of the lights in town went out.

Samantha and August each gasped loudly at the exact moment utter darkness fell upon New Dothan. Instinctively, they both reached out for something... anything to hold onto. Their hands connected in the dark and their fingers intertwined like the wool woven into an intricately patterned sweater.
 

“Don’t worry, I’ve got you. I’m here,” August blurted out for some reason.

“And who might you be, sweets?” Samantha said, adding, “And may I ask why you are holding my hand?”
 

She grinned saying this, feeling no threat coming from the man in the dark. Samantha had seen him coming towards her, and he was a rather attractive fellow. Probably in his mid-twenties, with very dark skin like that of a West Africann, close-cut hair, and an average physique; neither fat, trim, nor athletic - jjust somewhere deliciously in the middle. His eyes were bright, and his face was gorgeous.

August had no idea that it was a woman in the dark until she had spoken to him. He felt rather embarrassed now at having said what he did, not to mention he was still holding her hand… Bbut then again, she was still holding his hand right back. He now wished that he had been paying attention, so he would know what she looked like.

But August, as usual, had been lost in his thoughts. Often he thought of song lyrics, or sometimes stories, but mostly he just imagined himself anywhere but living in New Dothan. It’s not that he hated the town. In fact, he thought it was full of decent enough people, even if they flocked to buy any new gadget on the market while throwing out tried and true traditions like yesterday’s potato chips. The history of New Dothan was also rich with great characters and steeped in wonderful stories of kindness; even if most of the residents had forgotten them all.
 

No, it wasn’t the specific town of New Dothan that bothered him. It was just that he had always lived there. August had never, not even once, left the Wiregrass area. So it was pretty much all he wanted out of life these days – to save enough Credit and find a way to travel the world.

Just as August was wishing that he knew what this mystery woman looked like, the lights in New Dothan came back on as suddenly as they were extinguished a minute before. And August almost fell down from the shock of seeing her.
 

It felt like getting hit by a truck. It felt like for his entire life up until that point there had been a giant hole in August’s chest, but with just one look at the shining light of this woman’s face that abyss became full, even if only temporarily.

This feeling wasn’t mere sexual attraction, either. He felt no animalistic urges to lie down with this gorgeous lady and continue the overpopulation of planet Earth. It was something much deeper than that, and more painful, too. It was agony and nirvana at the same time. She looked at August, and he felt that nothing, no matter what else he ever accomplished in his pathetic life, would ever be as wonderful as when she looked at him.

“Are you ok, sweets?” Samantha asked.

August could only stare for a moment, before stuttering in reply, “Uh, what? Sorry… what’d you say?”

Samantha smiled. It felt good to be noticed by an attractive man.
 

“I said, are you ok?” she repeated herself. “You’re staring, you know?”

August realized he was making a fool of himself in front of the most beautiful womean he had ever seen. She wasn’t beautiful by the standards of modern insane media. She was nothing like all the women he saw in movies and on TV, who were too thin and plastic. And, just like food from a Nutricator, they were all fake. These women may have been composed of organic parts, but a machine had artificially assembled those parts; they weren’t natural.
 

This woman, though, with her straight, shoulder -length black hair, almond -shaped eyes, that perfect skin tone that only East Asians could obtain, and the small spread of freckles across her face;: she was radiant like a sun.
 

Not Earth’s sun, though. It was too dim to describe her. No, she was radiant like the sun of a distant planet that could melt the Earth from across the galaxy. Of course, the way that navy blue dress with white dots all over it fit the delicate curves of her small breasts and backside wasere also quite compelling to the young man.

“Hello?” Samantha said., “You’re still staring. Kinda freaking me out there, sweets. Are you ok, for real? Did the blackout fry your brains or something?”

“Am I ok?” August dumbly asked, “I ain’t sure, to be honest. But I think now that I’ve seen you, I could be. I’m…” Hhe cut off abruptly.
 

August almost gave her his name. Almost. But he had been rejected and broken his whole life. Not just by women, but also by co-workers, his parents, and his friends; even his dog had run away. So, he decided not to open himself up for more heartbreak.

“I… I’m fine, ma’am,” he stuttered. “I’m sorry for spacin’ out like that. I’ll take off now. That is if you’re ok?”

Samantha smiled even wider. She thought this boy was too damn cute. “Yes, sweets. I’m alright,” she said kindly. “Thanks for your concern.”

“Ok, great. Great. Well, I’ll, uh, stop wastin’ your time, then,” August told her.

“See you around.” August realized he sounded foolish, but he couldn’t help it.
 

She was that entrancing.

“I hope so, sweets. Maybe we’ll meet between the lanterns again,” Samantha said, and she meant it. He was put together real well and seemed like a very nice man.

August, too, sincerely hoped they would meet again.

Chapter 1

THAT AIN’T FOOD

Several weeks passed. Samantha continued to work away at the diner. It had been six years since she had started working there. It wasn’t glamorous, and it barely paid the bills. But none of that mattered to Samantha. She was happy making real food. She was pleased to make anything with her hands, actually.
 

When she was off work, she made origami swans or paintings of the night sky. Sometimes she attempted woodworking. Sam found that very satisfying and she was getting pretty good at it. The sense of satisfaction in taking some wood and turning it into whatever she could imagine was wonderful.

Sometimes she made figurines of fish or bears. Other times she tried bigger projects, like the bookcase in her living room. Maybe it was a little bit crooked, but she hadn’t gone down to Montek.Mart and bought it. Samantha had made it with her own two hands, and that was worth a few books falling down every once in a while.

One afternoon at work, the diner was unusually busy. Most of the time they only had ten to fifteen customers all day, but on this day all twenty seats in the restaurant were full, and two more people were waiting outside for a table to open up.

“Tara, why on Earth is it so busy today?” Samantha asked with wide eyes.

“I have no clue, Sam! Isn’t it wonderful?” her co-worker and financial partner, Tara, replied. “I wish every day could be like this. With tips like this, I could afford a Nutricator for my apartment within a week!”

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