The last thing Tyler could remember was
looking down at his receipt as he removed his card from the ATM
machine. He had a bad habit of walking away from the machine as it
beeped, alerting him to the fact that he was not as smart as he told
himself.
$9,483.07.
That was how much he had in his account
and it was the most he'd ever had. For the last ten months he'd been
saving money from every single paycheck from the mail room. Every
ache and pain he felt during the long bus rides home, paper cuts,
constant sneezing from dust, and unimpressed looks from dates he got
for his occupation was worth it for that $9,483.07.
“Almost awake.”
Tyler froze in place. Awake? Where was
he? Who said that? Was he asleep? It was now registering that he
could not feel his limbs. He tried to open eyes he could not blink.
“Wheeeeeeeeeeere...?” he droned in a voice he did not recognize
as his own.
“A few more moments, please. You are
almost awake.”
“Heeeeeeeelp...meeeeeeeee...” Tyler
moaned. Now he could feel someone holding his chest down. He was not
aware that he was attempting to rise. Slowly he began to feel
something, a belt perhaps, restraining him at his arms, chest, and
legs. Maybe he was in a hospital. He'd been told that he worked too
hard sometimes and pushed himself. Maybe he fainted at the ATM. Oh,
Christ, no. His wallet!
“Quiet, now. You're almost awake. Be
patient.”
Patience Tyler could do. Most of his
friends took his patience for lack of activity. But they were wrong.
Tyler knew that to do something correctly you needed to analyze it
from every angle possible to predict the proper results. This went
for friends, family, chores, and relationships. Headlong decisions is
how he ended up divorced at the age of 26. Now at the age of 35 he
figured he had a handle on things. Four good friends. His
relationship with his family doing better than it ever had. Job going
well. Relationships? Well, there was time for that. He felt a hand
remove something from his head.
“When you are ready I want you to
open your eyes.”
“Wheeeere...”
“One thing at a time. For now I need
you to focus your vision. That's right. Just slowly...there.”
A wail came from Tyler that took a
moment for him to recognize as his. He thrashed against the
restraints and slammed his head back as hard as possible which meant
very little since he was laying on what could best be described as a
cloud. “Where am I? Oh, God!”
“I will wait until the effects of
your multidimensional delirium subsides. Most do not take the news
well and in your current state keeping you in this current dimension
would prove rather difficult.” Tyler felt a warm hand cover his
eyes. “Sleep for now.”
Tyler drifted into what could be called
half asleep. He just kept thinking of the money he left behind.
$9,483.07 was a lot of money and it took him so long to get it. He
wondered if anyone had contacted his family and friends. He had a
date this Friday. He wondered if he'd be able to get out of here
before then.
“Do you like turkey?”
The voice startled Tyler. He wasn't
aware how deep in thought he was. “Uh, yeah, I guess. I don't
really think about it. I eat it on Thanksgiving of course and when I
stop by Subway. That question came out of nowhere.”
“Do you know how big a turkeys brain
is?”
“I've never really thought about it”
Tyler had to admit.
“It is about the size of a walnut. A
whale's brain, sperm whale to be exact, is about 17 pounds.”
“No wonder they are so smart” Tyler
said. He had no idea where this was headed.
“A human brain is close to 3 pounds.
So does that mean that whale's are almost six times smarter than
you?”
“Of course not” Tyler said
defensively. “If they were they'd have the things we do. Humans, I
mean.”
“And what do you have?”
“A job for one” Tyler said.
“Friends. Family. A house. Freedom.” Tyler struggled to think of
more things. “You know. Stuff.” Tyler heard the voice sigh in
disappointment.
“You're not ready yet.”
“Ready for what?” Tyler asked.
“Reality.”
Tyler hesitated before continuing.
“What do you mean? What do you mean by reality?”
“Close your eyes.”
“They are closed” Tyler responded.
“Its dark.”
“Before you leave I will give you
this bit of information. You will forget it soon but still, it makes
us feel better just letting you all know. None of what you are doing
means anything eventually. This is not to say that you should become
complacent and ignore your duties. But we suggest you refocus. Your
job makes you happy but you do not love it. Do what you love. Be a
better friend. Be a better son. Money is no way to value yourself. It
can be easily taken from you at the press of a button or the squeeze
of a trigger.”
Tyler removed his card from the ATM,
proud of himself for remembering before the machine beeped. While
removing it he dropped it on the ground sighing at himself. As soon
as he bent down to pick it up the ATM machine exploded. Tyler spun to
see a young man holding a gun less than a foot from him. He looked
just as surprised as Tyler imagined he did.
Jumping up, leaving the card on the
ground, Tyler wrestled with the man for the gun. Three more shots
were fired, ricocheting on the ground and wall. “Stop!” Tyler
shout in his face. The man continued to resist. Tyler gripped his
wrist causing the man to scream since his finger was still in the
trigger guard. Tyler heard a snap, the man opened his mouth, and the
gun went off.
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