She was an explorer, a photographer a sometimes writer with no one in her life to notice if she never showed up after a day or a week or a month or ever again.

It had never occurred to her that this was a bad thing.  That’s how she found towns like this one or maybe they found her, these concrete, brick and wooden corpses of dead little cities sitting alongside  highways  that tried to make their way to the outside world and tragically failed.

She was out on that Sunday  looking for something to write about or maybe something to take pictures of for her library when she ended up on this particular road that simply ended and miles and miles of sand and nowhere  stretched out in front of it.

Huddled there on the side of the Highway were the faded remains of a fast food stand that  sold chicken in a basket and milkshakes – as promised by the weather worn giant plastic chicken in  a  blue and white basket perched precariously on  the red tin  roof.

There was the skeleton of a building across the street from the Chicken Stand  that may have been a general store with a stack of empty shelves that served as it’s last remaining wall and a closed sign hanging from an empty socket where a window used to be.

Next to the all but dead store was a gas station with a faded blue horse painted on it’s side and a soda pop cooler with a missing door and an ice machine decorated with light blue snowflakes with it’s door chained shut

She slowed down and wondered about that chained ice machine- the chain was as rusted and worn as everything around it- but who chains an ice machine shut?

She stopped her Jeep and slowly backed up until she was right in front of the machine.

And it’s locked doors.

She shut her engine off.  She unlatched her seatbelt and raised her hips off the seat and fished a scrunchie from her back pocket and tied her long dark hair back into a pony tail.

Her walk to the Ice Machine and it’s locked doors was a slow one. She looked up into the sky and she whistled. She wondered how far it was to the next rest stop. She wondered if it was almost lunch time because she was getting hungry.

When she got to the Ice Machine and it’s rusted lock she reached into her back pocket and took out a ring of little keys. She flipped through them and stopped at one with a little red dot and fit it into the lock.

It clicked after a few tries.

She unhitched the lock and opened the door- just a little. Just enough to let a little light inside and just enough room for her to place her eye right up against the little opening so that she could get a  peek inside.

Satisfied she carefully  closed the door and locked it again.

Because who on earth chains ice machine doors shut in abandoned towns on forgotten highways where nobody goes?

An explorer, a photographer a sometimes writer with no one in her life to notice if she never showed up after a day or a week or a month or ever again.

That’s who.

Self Portrait A.M. Moscoso

Inspired By The Daily Addictions Prompt: Abandon

Something Of The Terrible

Leave a Reply