LOLA'S FANTASTICAL STORY -Flash FictionA Story by Stephanie DaichCould a mayor be powerful enough to rewrite the city's past? Depends on how corrupt the city is.“Why, God,” I said as I slammed my
fist into the steering wheel, watching the city bus slowly pull to the curb,
blocking me as it let passengers on and off. No cars in the next lane will let
me pass, trapping me like a prisoner to the bus driver and his no apparent
hurry. “Sure, because I have nothing better
to do than wait,” I say, hitting the steering wheel three more times. My hand
throbs. As a lady climbs off, she trips on the last stair and lands in the
gutter of gray slush. The other passengers step over her, no one helping. What jerks. The lady drags herself out of the
gutter and crawls onto the sidewalk, dripping wet as the bus pulls away. I
can’t in good conscience leave her like that. I power open the passenger window. “Can I give you a ride somewhere? Get
you coffee?” Why am I wasting my time like
this? She looks up with fear in her eyes. I
am a man, so she will probably turn me down, and that is what I secretly want
to happen. Then, I can get heavenly credit for offering to help without
actually helping. She shakes her soggy papers and says, “Yes, please.” “I’d get out and help you, but I
can’t leave my car parked in the road. Do you think you can make your way over
here?” “Yes.” She stands and sloshes her way
to my car. Gray water drips from her pants. As she gets in, a blast of cold air
follows her. I am grateful I have a car. “Can I drive you somewhere?” She shakes like a wet dog, and water
flies off her and asulats me and my car. Grr. I grimace but don’t say
anything as I watch the little droplets taint my interior. What was I
thinking, offering her a ride? She doesn’t even respect the leather. “Coffee would be lovely,” she says. After twenty minutes of lost
time to find a joint, we sit in the warm cafe. The warm air blows the scent of
coffee and scones at us. “I am Lola, and my grandma is
missing.” I hadn’t expected that. “Oh, I am
sorry. What happened?” “Grandma comes from Sanderville. In
fact, it was named after her in 1972. Used to be Lakeview City. Grandma started
a community college in 1981 -Betty Sander Community College. The park on Center
and Main are named Sanderville Park. Grandma opened an art school in 1993.
Betty’s Beauties.” Such an information dump. Why had
I gotten involved? “All that is important, and I will
tell you why in a second.” Has Lola read my mind? "You see,
Grandma meets me for high tea every Thursday at 2:00 p.m. She never misses it.
Never." Lola took a napkin and ran it across her wet face. Well, she
missed.” “How old is Grandma?” “92.” “I don’t think you should worry. Give
her a break. She is old. If she wants to miss a tea, let her.” Lola glares at
my comment. “Well, that isn’t how it works. So I
got worried and drove to Grandma’s house, and she didn’t answer the door. So I
try to use my key, but the locks are changed.” She has my interest. “Finally, the front door flies open,
and some Spanish lady is cussing at me for waking her baby. We get into a big
fight because, after all, she is in Grandma’s house. So I call the police, and
they answer ‘Lakeview City Police.’ And I say, wait, I am looking for
Sanderville City Police. So I Google it, and there is no Sanderville City
Police. There is no Betty Sander Community College. There is no Sanderville
Park or Betty’s Beauties. NONE OF IT EXISTS!” Lola has hooked me. But is she
delusional? This sounds too fantastic of a story. “Maybe someone just hacked the city’s
website, so I drive around, and all the signs are also changed. Nothing in the
city reflects Betty Sander and the impact she had made. I have to wonder if I
am tripping out. Maybe there was a Mandela effect. I go home, rummage through
my things, and find pamphlets about Sander Community College. I have a few
ticket stubs from plays at Betty’s Beauties. I have proof that all of this
exists. I am not going crazy. “So I go to city hall, and I research
the city records, and there are zero entries on anything that my grandma owned.
According to the city, her house had five different owners. How can that be?
Grandma had built that home and was the only owner. “As I went to leave the city offices,
I noticed the name of the Mayor. Marc Petechiaen. That is my cousin. We were
the sole heirs to Grandma’s estate. But he erased all her bank records, stock
holdings, everything." “Do you think he is behind the
fantastical illusion?” “I know he is. I just don’t
understand how he had the power to change the town’s name, the public records,
and everything.” “I’ll be honest; this is the
strangest story I’ve ever heard. Like something out of Twilight Zone.” “Right.” I notice her rosy cheeks and am glad
she has warmed up. “Well, you are in luck. It so happens
to be that my wife is an investigative journalist. If anyone can dig up the
truth on this story, she can.” And my wife
did. The story opened a deeply corrupted city. I feel guilty for cursing God when
the bus made me stop the day I met Lola. I now realize God had a divine hand in
bringing Lola and me together. After a lengthy investigation uncovering layers
of corruption, Lola’s story launched my wife’s career to worldwide fame. Lola
eventually found closure with the disappearance of her Grandma. As for Mayor, whatever that last name
was, he and twelve others ended up in jail. And I learned to find gratitude for
minor setbacks. © 2024 Stephanie Daich |
StatsAuthorStephanie DaichSLC, UTAboutBio- Stephanie Daich writes for readers to explore the soul and escape the mundane. Publications include Making Connections, Youth Imaginations, Chicken Soup for the Soul: Kindness Matters, and others.. more..Writing
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