This short story was first published in the November 1999 issue of The Amateur Poetry Journal (no longer in publication). It now appears in the collection, Crossroads and Other Tales.


Crossroads
Copyright © 1999 by Gregory B. Banks
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The gun dangled from Jacob’s fingertips as he stood over the body. A dark pool of crimson seeped from beneath it and spread across the path. The surrounding woods were lit dimly by the light of the failing moon. The humid breeze whispered through the leaves, and crickets sang to one another from all around. A dog’s howl echoed in the distance.

Jacob stood at the Crossroads, the only spot in the entire park where the north/south and east/west nature trails met. It was said by some that the path you chose when you reached the Crossroads affected the rest of your life. Until now, Jacob had thought these were old wive’s tales.

He shivered, despite the oppressive heat which clung to his body like a latex skin. He felt dirty. He wanted to run away from this horrible scene and drown himself in the cleansing spray of a shower. But he realized no amount of water could ever wash away the filth of what he’d done.

He searched the umbral recesses of the forest, his flesh prickling as if the eyes of guilt were upon him. Kneeling next to the body, he felt the face with the back of his hand. The skin was soft, as if untouched by the hands of time. He snatched his hand away. The person he’d shot was old--a man with leathery skin and stubbly cheeks. He’d lain in the underbrush for hours until finally Mr. Stevenson came around the bend.

Jacob had known the old man would come here. He always went for a walk each night around midnight. He had kept up the ritual after his wife died eight years ago. Jacob knew Mr. Stevenson well. He once loved him and his wife like grandparents.

Jacob’s mother had moved into the apartment complex when he was a toddler. She was the widowed mother of a young child, and she was frightened and alone. Mrs. Stevenson had met his mother soon after they arrived, and immediately she and her husband began helping her out anyway they could. The Stevensons started caring for little Jacob while his mom worked. Mr. Stevenson was retired, and spent his days playing with the boy. The couple didn’t have kids of their own, so Jacob became the grandson they’d always wanted.

Jacob loved them just as much as they loved him, and he spent many nights with them even when his mother was at home. He grew much closer to them in many ways, and he found it strange and uncomfortable to be around his mother.

One day Mrs. Stevenson grew ill, and Mr. Stevenson had to care for her. For a while he tried to look after Jacob too, but it eventually became too great a strain on him. As the months went by, Jacob was often left to fend for himself. Then one day, Mrs. Stevenson died.

Her death hurt him deeply. He’d lost the woman that in many ways had been more of a mother to him than his natural one. He reached to Mr. Stevenson for support and comfort, but found that the man had changed.

After his wife’s death, Mr. Stevenson became a recluse. He pushed everyone away, including the seven-year who just couldn’t understand why. So Jacob started hanging out on the playground, watching the older boys shoot hoops. That’s how he met Shawn.

Shawn lived on the other side of the apartment complex, and liked to hang out in the courtyard with his friends. He was four years older than Jacob, and when the two met, Jacob immediately found himself looking up to Shawn like a big brother. The eleven-year old drank and smoked, and seemed to know everything about life. Jacob thought he was the coolest guy he’d ever met.

Shawn taught him the ways of the streets. He showed Jacob how to survive on his wits--how to beg, borrow, or steal whatever he wanted. As Jacob grew older, Shawn introduced him to harsher things. They spent many nights getting high together while Shawn told him that young black men like them had no chance in the world. Jacob became even more distant from his mother, and spurned all her attempts to spend time with him. He and Shawn grew closer over the years. Then this morning, his friend told him it was time for him to prove he was a man.

“It’s up to you to go out and take what you want!” Shawn said. “Here.” He reached inside his shirt and pulled out a semi-automatic. He handed it to Jacob, and showed him how to use it.

“I don’t know Shawn. It just doesn’t feel right.”

“Man, haven’t you heard nothing I’ve been telling you! The world don’t give a damn about you, or me, or anybody! Especially not two poor little Black kids like us! They don’t give you respect out there! You gotta take it from them!”

Jacob thought about his mother. While he knew she had sacrificed a lot to keep him fed and clothed, he still resented her for not making more time for him when he was younger. He thought of the bitterness he felt for never having the chance to know his father. He considered everyone who had let him down in his life, and his grip tightened on the weapon.

Nobody cares he thought. Nobody but Shawn.

“Look, I know the first time is gonna be hard. My first time came when I was fifteen too. But it gets easier afterward. Just go find some lowlife S.O.B. that deserves to die, walk up to him, and pow!” Shawn put his finger to Jacob’s temple and mimed pulling the trigger.

Jacob got high with Shawn before leaving the apartment. He stumbled through the streets in a chemical haze for hours while he sorted out things in his mind. He spotted Mr. Stevenson coming out of a store and he paused.

Jacob wanted to go to him and tell him everything he’d done and was planning to do. Maybe his grandfather could help him clear his head he reasoned. But just as he decided to approach him, the old man saw him standing nearby and quickly hurried away.

Jacob’s anger blazed anew. To hell with him and everybody else then he swore to himself. He watched Mr. Stevenson go, remembering that the man had no other living family. And most people in the apartment complex disliked and pitied him. An idea formed in his mind.

No one’s gonna miss that old fool Jacob told himself.

He walked to the city park and staked out a hiding place in the bushes near the Crossroads. He’ll have to pass through here sooner or later. He laid there for hours, watching the people stroll by. Both the young and old came and went, most of them smiling as if they didn’t have a care in the world. Jacob absently caressed the bulge beneath his shirt while he waited. The sun eventually set, painting the sky a brilliant orange-red--the afterglow of the steamy day. But nightfall brought little relief from the heat.

As the night wore on, the number of people passing by dwindled. Jacob grew anxious. Midnight passed, and he began to doubt Mr. Stevenson would show up.

Finally he appeared. Jacob’s heart raced when he saw him approach from the south. He waited until the old man reached the Crossroads, then leapt out of the bushes. He stood before him and fired at point-blank range without saying a word. One...two...three gunshots shattered the calm of the forest. He watched in stunned horror as the frail body spun in slow motion and tumbled to the ground.

Mr. Stevenson lay sprawled on the path like a marionette suddenly ripped from its strings. Tears welled up in Jacob’s eyes. He peered into the face of his victim, but there wasn’t enough light to see by. He ran his fingers over the contours of the face. The cheeks were round and smooth, unblemished by the passage of time. The hair was soft and thick like the down of a pillow. The nose and mouth were small--childlike. Although he couldn’t see the face, it was obviously that of a toddler’s.

“Oh God, what have I done?”

“You’ve killed me.”

Jacob scraped his hands and knees on the gravelly path as he scrambled away. The head of his victim turned, and a shaky hand reached toward him.

“Why have you done this to me Jacob?” The voice was gentle and melodious like that of a young angel.

“H-how do you know me? Who are you?”

“Don’t you know?”

“I thought you were Mr. Stevenson, but--”

“I am him, boy!” the voice rumbled with a power that rocked the nearby leaves.

Jacob tried to tear himself away from the shadowy face, but he felt as if invisible fingers were clamped on either side of his head, forcing him to face this demon.

“No. You can’t be him! Mr. Stevenson is an old man. You’re only a child!”

“Look more closely.” The gloom seemed to lift for just a moment, and Jacob saw the child’s face clearly. Big dewdrop eyes glared at him in the darkness. They shone like smoldering jewels in the moonlight. He realized he’d seen them before.


Continued on next page.

This story is copyrighted material, which means you CANNOT use it in any way without the prior permission of its creator. If you wish to contact the author of this piece, please send e-mail to Gregory Banks at: EmailMe@wheelmansplace.com.

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