It was a grey morning in my small town. I stopped to unlock the door of my shop.
“Hey, buddy, want a dog?”
I turned to see who spoke, but didn’t recognize him. He seemed to be in his mid-twenties, but his tattered, grey baseball cap covered much of his face.
“No, thanks,” I replied.
“Why do you hate dogs?” he asked.
“I don’t hate dogs. I’m just not in the market for a do right now.”
He stopped a woman in a red dress who happened to be passing. “Can you believe this guy hates dogs?”
She looked at me with disgust. “How can you hate dogs? Dogs are wonderful.”
A man in overalls walking by stopped to ask, “Who hates dogs?”
The woman pointed to me. “He hates dogs.”
I shook my head. “I don’t hate dogs. This guy just asked me if I wanted a dog and I said no. I never said anything about hating dogs; that’s just something he made up.”
The man in the cap said, “Have you seen those commercials where the dogs are chained up outside and the owners beat them all the time?”
The second man frowned. “What kind of jerk does that to dogs?”
“Probably somebody who really hates them,” said the man in the cap while gesturing toward me with his thumb.
By now, a handful of other people had gathered and were murmuring about mistreatment of dogs. The woman was still scowling at me and lecturing about how great dogs were and how ashamed I should be. The chatter from all of them was getting to be too much. It was hard to keep track. A few hurled accusations and others demanded to know how I could do such things. Somehow, the wind picked up, adding noise to the din.
“I don’t do any of those things,” I tried to explain. “It’s entirely made up by this guy right here.”
The man in the cap suggested, “Someone that sick is probably a pervert too.”
That set the crowd off. They turned to their nearest neighbors to vocalize their disgust.
“What, here in our town?” some demanded.
I stared at the man in the cap. Where did he get this stuff?
Some old man in the crowd shouted, “He beats dogs and he’s a kiddie diddler? What the hell is wrong with you?”
“No, I don’t do any of that,” I yelled. Is that what he got from “pervert”?
They didn’t listen, but they did move closer toward me. The crowd had grown. Where did all of these people come from?
It looked like the red dress of the first woman was more reddish-brown now. In fact, the clothes on most of the crowd seemed muted, greyer.
I stepped back, bumping against the door behind me. I raised my hand and pointed down toward the man in the grey cap. “This idiot made all of this up. He’s lying to all of you. I never said any of those things. I have never done any of those things.”
The man in the cap called to the crowd, “Did you hear him call all of us idiots?”
“I’m not an idiot!”
“Some pervert thinks we’re idiots?”
“He’s the idiot!”
The wind picked up even more.
At this point, my heart raced. There just didn’t seem to be any way to convince these people that they were wrong about me. I pulled out my cell phone. “That’s enough! I’m calling nine-one-one.”
Someone slapped the phone out of my hand and yelled, “You’re not adding my picture to your porn collection!”
The phone clattered against the sidewalk at my feet, breaking into pieces.
I stared at my empty hand. My brain provided no response for what was going on. They couldn’t hear anything I said. They didn’t want to hear anything I said. The man in the grey cap had wound this engine and now it ran on its own.
I think the clouds darkened.
Among the angry shouting I heard, “… porn! Let’s get him!”
As I looked up at the onrushing crowd, my hand fell to my side. There, it found a length of rebar, the steel reinforcement rod used for concrete. It shouldn’t have been there in front of my shop door. I didn’t know where it came from, but my hand closed around it. Why was there rebar by my door? It’s rough surface felt real, solid, like something I could get a grip on. It became the only secure thing in my life at the moment. I held it up in front of me.
Someone yelled, “He’s got a weapon!” and then there were screams.
The crowd scattered, running over each other to get away. How had the crowd grown so big? Who were these people? Were they even from my small town?
I don’t know why I didn’t just turn and enter my shop. The door was right there. I think my keys were still in my other hand. Those hands shook. My knees shook worse. The sound of my pulse drowned out much of the crowd.
The wind blew down the street, carrying bits of garbage and leaves. The urge to run with it filled me. I leapt away from the door and down the sidewalk.
“Drop the weapon!” The voice came from behind me.
Turning to see who said that, I saw the uniform about the same time I saw the flash.
The worst case of heartburn flared through my ribs, knocking me over and to the ground. It felt like a fire started in the back of my head and raced across my scalp. Dark circles formed in my vision, encircling the scene around me as though I wore goggles.
The man in the grey cap shimmered and was someone else. Whistling, he walked away with his hands in his pockets. My eyes followed as best they could. The dark circles extended to become long tubes with the scene growing smaller in the distance until the tiny spots disappeared completely, leaving only the dark.