The Good Folks
by Robert
Pettus
Light shone
through the thick, large windows. The place smelled like popcorn, pancakes, syrup,
and sweet tea. That’s what it always smelled like, at least until that
inevitable, rotting stench swept briefly through the place. They didn’t seem to
like that – they worked to prevent it – but it happened every once in a while. It
was unavoidable. A stench like flies, piss, dirty dishes, sticky floors, and muggy
dishonesty. It didn’t smell like that now, though – it smelled like sweet tea
and salty, buttery popcorn.
I sat at my table,
as I always did. Good Folks shuffled in from the store into the dining area. I
knew they were Good Folks because my Watchers assured me they were Good Folks.
They were important – more important than me, even though I was also a
Good Folk, technically speaking – just a Good Folk who seemed to have lost
favor.
I lifted the
plastic, golf-tee-like piece from its wedged place and jumped a red piece. I
had never won the game – I wasn’t sure it was possible – but the Watchers
assured me it was. They encouraged me to keep trying. They were always so
encouraging.
I was miserable.
Kenny Rogers
played: You’ve got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em…
Kenny Rogers
always played. Him, Randy fucking Travis, Lee Ann Womack, George Strait. Every
day – every single goddamn day.
I jumped another
golf-tee, removing the jumped tee from its wedge and placing it by-rote onto
the sticky wooden table.
“There you go!”
said Felicia, adjusting her hijab and waddling toward me, brushing away dust
from her brown apron. She was a five-star hostess – that’s what her apron said.
“You’ll get it!”
she continued, “Hey! Would you like some fried okra, some country-fried chicken
– maybe some pancakes?”
I winced. My eyes
twitched erratically in torture. My stomach grumbled and cramped.
“Pancakes,” I said,
“Please, fucking pancakes.”
Pancakes were what
The Watchers wanted Good Folks to order – it was their preferred meal; their
specialty.
“Language,
mister!” She said, “I’ll bring that right out! A couple big ole pancakes with
butter and some sweet tea!”
Felicia turned and
walked back into the kitchen. I always asked for food; I couldn’t help it. I
was starving. I hated this damned restaurant, but I couldn’t deny that they had
the best pancakes. At least I was pretty sure they did, from what I could
remember – from what nostalgia my sniffing nostrils allows me. My memory was
getting foggy.
I was hungry.
I jumped another
golf-tee. I couldn’t win, I recognized that. It was impossible – it had to be.
I would have to try again. They said they would allow me to leave – or at least
give me some pancakes – if I won, but I could never win. Time and again, I failed.
This damned wooden triangle. These fucking golf-tees.
I thought about
throwing the game against the window – or maybe at one of the allegedly polite
guests; or perhaps at Felicia – but I didn’t. They hated that, The
Watchers. They would force the stench upon me if I did that. The stench was
much worse than the ungraspable pancakes, popcorn, and tea. I set the game up
again; I had to keep trying.
There was a knock
on the window behind my table, which sat at the back corner of the restaurant.
I turned to look outside. Cars sped chaotically down Dixie Highway. Focusing my
gaze, I saw an old man glaring happily at me from his rocking chair. He waved
at me. He was sitting at a cloth-matted checkers table, in the middle of a game
against nobody – like that guy from the Pixar short film.
I turned back to
my triangular wooden prison key. Felicia walked back out, a sweating pitcher of
sweet tea in her hand, a plate of hot, buttery pancakes lifted triumphantly high
above her head – her elbow snapped skyward, the plate at the summit of her palm
like a steaming, fragrant spire. She approached my table, making to set down the
food. Just before the plate touched the wood of the table, she retracted:
“Oh!” she said,
“There’s something wrong with this order. I’ll be right back, honey!”
She turned and
left. She always turned and fucking left.
I looked down at
my glass, which was empty other than its ever-present ice. I tried to swig it
again, lifting the glass to my lips to eat the ice, but it didn’t work. It
never worked. The ice stuck to the back of the glass as if glued. The ice never
melted, and never cooled – always pulsating only enough refreshing mist to
alert me of its existence, but not enough to help my worsening dehydration.
I jumped another
golf-tee.
My hands were
sweating, as was my brow. I was starving; I had no idea how long I’d been in
this shit-heap of a place. Perhaps forever. When time doesn’t exist, how is
movement possible? Without comparison, can perception exist?
Felicia walked by,
sitting a trio of Good Folks at the four-top table next my two-top.
“I’ll be right out
with the sweet-tea and pancakes!” She said before sauntering off. Those Good
Folks had no idea of what they were in for. It was a family – a mom, dad, and a
boy five or six years old. They looked at the menu as if there were options.
They were happy, though they wouldn’t be for long. They wouldn’t be here for as
long as me, though – I was sure of that. I had seen every Good Folk come into
this wretched place, sit waiting for what seemed like years, and finally
receive their food – their goddamned ice-tea and buttered pancakes – before
being gestured from the dining room, Felicia smiling and wishing them well as
they left. I had been here longer than any of them. What was this place? Why
did The Watchers hate me?
“A fucking ‘nother
one!” came a distant though booming voice from the back, in the kitchen.
It was Tater; I
knew Tater. He had been here nearly as long as I had; he was the only
apron-wearing employee – the only one associated with The Watchers – who seemed
to bitch and complain. Who seemed dissatisfied.
“I already have
three full tables in my section!” he said. He was yelling at Felicia.
“I just go by my
chart,” she said with authority. That was what she always said when Tater got
pissed. Tater then paced out from the kitchen into the dining area.
“What can I start
you off with?” he said sarcastically to the family of Good Folks, “Maybe some
iced-tea?”
“How did you
know?” said the mother, “We know what we want – three iced-teas and three
orders of pancakes! Maybe some salty, buttered popcorn as a starter!”
Tater stared at
them in deadpan irritation. “I’ll be right out with that,” he said, walking
back into the kitchen.
I jumped another
golf tee. I was out of moves; I would have to start over. I banged my fist
against the table in frustration.
“Sir!” said
Felicia, “Sir! Please don’t do that. I don’t usually ask Good Folks to leave,
but we don’t stand for aggression. This is a family restaurant.”
“Kick me out!” I cackled.
“If only that were possible.”
“Oh, shoot!” said
Felicia, “You know us too well. We appreciate our Good Folk guests too much to
do something like that. There’s nothing ruder – nothing more inhospitable –
than kicking a guest out onto to the curb; out to the street! Such a heathen
thing to do. No, you can consider this place home; just imagine you’re sitting
down at grandma’s Sunday table.”
I glared at
Felicia.
“I’ll be right out
with that tea,” she said.
I re-racked the
golf tee game.
Tater walked back
out of the kitchen, a tray of sweet teas and popcorn on his palm. Tater didn’t
lift the tray high above his head like Felicia; he sat it wobbling chaotically
on his shoulder.
“Here’s your tea!”
he said, setting it down to the other Good Folks’ table before obviously
retracting it. “Oh,” he said, “There’s been a problem with your order.” He said
monotonously, “I’ll be right back.”
The table of Good
Folks looked predictably confused, though not yet angry. They hadn’t been here
long enough yet.
“Pssst,” I
whispered loudly as Tater turned away.
He glanced over to
me while making the turn back into the kitchen. The tray sat on his shoulder
wobbling – the glass of tea spilled from it; the bowl of popcorn scattering across
the floor. He glared down at it angrily, as if pissed off with the result of
his popcorn divination.
I didn’t think it was
possible! A change in the hellacious monotony!
The glasses of tea
shattered, likely washing the ever-filthy fake, brick-like tile of the floor.
The popcorn sat collecting tea – becoming progressively soggier – small,
buttery sponges.
“Fuck,” Tater
said, looking at me with animosity, “Look what you made me do.”
“I didn’t make you
do shit,” I said.
“Hey!” said
Felicia, scrambling over from her place at the hostess’s stand, “No cursing!
Please! This is a family restaurant. And what is this mess? We have to get this
cleaned up ASAP, before Rose sees it.”
“Who the hell is
Rose?” I said, looking back and forth between Tater and Felicia.
“She’s the GM,”
said Tater. “She’s a tough bitch – you don’t want to fuck with her. She’s
probably going to light my ass on fire when she sees this mess.”
“She will never
see this mess!” said Felicia, her expression frantic – her hijab unfurling in
disorder and gluing itself across her sweaty face.
“Can I help?” I
said.
“No!” You stay
there, Mr. Good Folk – I’ll be right out with your tea and… and pancakes! And
some popcorn – on the house!”
“I’ll get the
mop,” said Tater.
Just as he turned
back into the kitchen, Tater stood stone frozen. I looked in his direction,
seeing in his shadow – which was shifting metronomically across the dirty floor
with the spin of the ceiling fan – the flickering silhouette of a slouching, cane-wielding
elderly woman.
“The hell have you
done, Felicia?” she said from the doorway.
“Please!” pleaded
Felicia, “It wasn’t me! I didn’t do it.”
“It was me,” said
Tater, “I wasn’t holding my tray properly, and one of the Good Folks asked me
something as I was heading back to the kitchen. I made the spill.”
“Which Good
Folk spoke to you?” said Rose.
Tater was silent.
“You better tell
me, boy,” she said, “Else you’ll be returned to the back to wash dishes.”
Tater’s legs
buckled at that. For some reason, he was horrified at the thought of going back
to the dish room.
“It was him,” said
Tater, pointing at me.
I jumped another
golf tee. I knew I was supposed to be afraid, but this sudden change in the
previous, never-ending monotony had me excited.
“That’s what I
figured,” said Rose.
She then limped
toward me, her cane and elderly feet briefly slipping on the spilled tea, which
caused an anxious drawing of breath from each of the onlooking wait-staff.
“You made Tater
spill his tea,” said Rose upon reaching me.
“I didn’t make him
do shit,” I said. “I didn’t touch him; I didn’t push him – he’s a waiter, he
should be able to handle his tray.”
“You’re right
about that,” said Rose. She turned back to Felicia: “Take Tater back to the
dish room. I made a mistake. He’s not ready to be a waiter yet.”
Felicia, though a
look of horror apparent on her face, quickly obeyed. Tater’s eyes widened, but
he didn’t fight it. He knew it was no use.
“Watch yourself,”
said Rose to me, “You may never get out of here, at this rate.”
I jumped another
golf tee. Rose chuckled. “Are you ever going to learn this damn game?” she
said, turning to walk back into the kitchen. As she slid away, her brown,
oversized apron, which she was wearing backwards, dragged across the wet floor,
collecting the tea like a sponge. When she reached the doorway back into the
kitchen, the floor was spotless – totally clear.
I gave a confused start. This place
was unexplainable – I already knew that, but I hadn’t yet seen blatant,
in-my-face magic. This somehow threw me off.
I jumped another golf tee. The game
was finished. I lost again – I would have to start over.
Felicia came back to my table, a
tray lifted high above her head: “Sorry for the wait, but here’s your sweet
tea, pancakes, and pop…”
“Please shut up,” I said, cutting
her off.
She stepped back in offense.
“What’s wrong with the dish room?” I
said, “Why was Tater so afraid to go there?”
“Oh, Tater?” she said, “He wasn’t
afraid! He’s been a dishwasher for years; he’s completely experienced. Maybe he
was little upset, because the dishwashers make so much less than the waiters,
but he wasn’t afraid. Of course not! Anyway, there’s been a problem with your
order – I’ll be right back!”
“Wait!” I yelled.
Felicia stopped, momentarily
glancing back, but then continued back toward the kitchen.
“There’s been a problem with your
order,” she murmured, stressed, “I’ll be right back out.”
“What in the absolute fuck?” I
thought to myself. I needed to get into the kitchen – perhaps to the dish room.
The answers to at least some of my questions were back there; perhaps I could even
help Tater, assuming he was actually in a bad situation.
I waited until the dining room was
clear – when all the wait staff were back in the kitchen or out front at the
host-stand – and darted into the back. Before leaving my table, I pocketed the
golf tee game.
The kitchen was dimly lit and grimy.
Dishes clattered, griddles sizzled, and pots simmered. This clanging, bubbling
percussion fused with the music – which was still blaring loudly even back in
the kitchen – adding a more aggressive edge to the softer country sound of
George Strait’s Troubadour.
None of the kitchen staff seemed to notice me,
or if they did, they were afraid to get involved. I saw them glaring nervously
at me side-eyed before turning back to cooking pancakes or popping popcorn.
A knob of butter
sizzled, melting on the griddle. Its sweet aroma invaded my nostrils – I was so
hungry. I couldn’t think about that, though – there was no time. Squatting, I
ducked through the kitchen back toward the dish room, looking like an
inexperienced, poor-man’s James Bond. I slipped on some of the grease covering
the dirty floor but caught myself before falling to the ground. I saw imprinted
on my palm a layer of grease. The dish room was just ahead.
Before making my
way through the doorway, I heard a voice from behind: “Where the hell do you
think you’re going?”
I turned around;
it was Rose. Felicia stood trembling behind her.
“I had to tell her
you left your table!” Felicia said, “I have to do my job! I must!”
I began backing
into the dish room.
“Don’t fucking go
in there,” said Rose, “You don’t want to do that.” Lifting her cane, Rose
unscrewed the plastic tip at its base, revealing a glimmering blade.
“Shit,” I said.
“Goddamn right,”
she responded, stepping toward me, now walking confidently.
I fell back into
the dish room, slipping again – this time falling to the floor. Behind me,
water sprayed and soap suds floating colorfully, peacefully. The dish washers
refused to acknowledge me. I looked around the room; I saw Tater in the back
corner. He glanced at me over his shoulder, a tried, fearful expression spread
across his face. His light-brown beard was covered in soap and dirty water.
“Looks like we
found another dish washer, didn’t we?” Rose was looking back at Felicia.
“Uhm, Yes!”
responded Felicia, “This Good Folk will make a good one! We’re always in need
of new dish washers, as busy as this place gets!”
“You’re right
about that,” said Rose. She then took a step toward me. I scrambled backward
like a frantic crustacean, toward the large sinks lining the wall. I had
nowhere to go.
Rose lifted her
cane with both hands, making to plunge it into my thigh: “You may have gotten
out of here, eventually,” she said, “But now you never will. You were merely
sinful – now you’re both sinful and nosy. The nosy Good Folks get made to be
dish washers – and dish washers never leave the dish room. First time in
hundreds of years I made that mistake, when I let Tater out onto the floor as a
waiter, but I’ll never do that again! He tricked me with his eccentricity – I’ll
admit. Dish washers never leave the dish room!”
She looked at her
blade, “Once you’re branded – which you will be in just a moment – you won’t be
able to leave.”
“Branded?” I
shrieked. I looked over to Tater, who nodded at me sullenly.
I continued scrambling
around on across the dirty floor. Rose raised her cane-blade, readying to
pierce me. At the last moment, I took the golf tee game out of my pocket.
I jumped another
golf tee.
I won the game!
The brittle wooden
game opened like an eldritch container; reality immediately being sucked into
it – a reverse Pandora’s Box. The golf tee game shook and rattled in my hand as
if to escape, but I held tight. The entire interior of the restaurant was
inhaled by that wooden triangle. All the tables, the pancakes, the sweet tea,
the popcorn – even all the Good Folks. They flew screeching spectrally into the
container. Lastly, Rose herself was sucked up legs first, flying into the box.
She fought at the last moment, clawing like a demon, trying to escape this new
prison, but she was incapable. Her eyes widened, turning bleach-white before
bursting like a crushed pair of white-chocolate truffles.
I gazed ahead as
reality disintegrated around me, eventually leaving nothing other than a bright
white, ethereal nothingness. I fell to the ground, but there was no ground – I
was floating.
“You fucking did
it!” came a voice, “About time!”
It was Tater. He
was standing above me, staring down happily.
“Thank God!” said
Felicia, joining him, “You beat the game! One of you Good Folks finally beat
the game! We’re free.
I sat up. The
white nothingness took shape – a wide field, a windy wood, a rolling stream,
mountains.
“Thank you,” said
Tater, walking away.
“Thank you,” said
Felicia, doing the same.
I sat up, feeling the
grass under my ass. The sun shone down onto my face. I was confused, but I was
free.
THE END
© 2023 Robert Pettus
Bio: Robert Pettus is an English
as a Second Language teacher at the University of Cincinnati.
Previously, he taught for four years in a combination of rural Thailand
and Moscow, Russia. He was most recently accepted for publication at
Allegory Magazine, The Horror Tree, JAKE magazine, The Night Shift
podcast, Libretto publications, White Cat Publications, Culture Cult,
Savage Planet, Short-Story.me, White-Enso podcast, Tall Tale TV, The
Corner Bar, A Thin Line of Anxiety, Schlock!, Black Petals, Inscape
Literary Journal of Morehead State University, Yellow Mama,
Apocalypse-Confidential, Mystery Tribune, Blood Moon Rising, and The
Green Shoes Sanctuary. "The Good Folks" is one of the stories he
recently wrote.
E-mail: Robert
Pettus
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