Perfect Little Town

Perfect Little Town by Blake Crouch Read Free Book Online

Book: Perfect Little Town by Blake Crouch Read Free Book Online
Authors: Blake Crouch
lights and automated pedestrian crosswalks now at every intersection.  Some of the older buildings have been demolished, but most remain to be dwarfed beneath the five- and six-story apartment buildings.
    The “Welcome to Lone Cone” sign boasts a population of just under nine thousand.
    Ron glances at the hillsides above town, overridden with condos and trophy homes.
    Above them all, a Wal-Mart sits perched on a manmade plateau, and behind it the immense gray peaks stand snowless under the brutal summer sun. 

    -40-
    Ron waits twenty minutes in line for a cup of dark roast, then joins his wife at a table near the window.
    “How’s your latte?” he asks.
    “Delicious.”
    Starbucks world music trickles through speakers in the ceiling like a slow-drip IV.
    “Could we spend the night here, Ron?  It’s so beautiful—”
    “I’d rather not.”
    She reaches across the table, holds his hand.
    “When we leave here, do you want to show me where you stumbled out of the mountains?  Maybe we could stop on the side of the road, say a few words for Jessica?”
    “Sure, we could do that.”
    “You regret coming here.”
    “No, it’s not that.  I always knew I would.”
    “Must feel strange after all this—”
    The knock on the window startles them, and Ron glances up to see the janitor peering through from the sidewalk.
     
    -41-
    Ron and the janitor sit on a bench at the termination of 7 th Street, on the bank of a filthy pond inhabited by a single mangy-looking duck.
    “We thought you’d come back,” the janitor says.  “Right after, I mean.  Wise you didn’t.”
    “Town’s changed,” Ron says.
    “Beyond recognition.”
    “Does Lone Cone still practice—”
    “God, no.  People went soft, couldn’t stomach it.  Quit believing in the usefulness of such a thing.”
    “Usefulness?”
    “You hear about the avalanche?”
    Ron shakes his head, swats away a swarm of flies that have discovered the sweat glistening on his bald scalp.
    “Second winter after we quit the blot, we caught a blizzard.  Hardest we’d ever seen.  The slide came down that chute right there.”  The janitor points to a treeless corridor on a nearby peak that runs right into the town.  “Destroyed fifty homes, killed a hundred and thirty-one of us.  I still hear them, broken and screaming under the snow.”
    “Some might call that divine retribution.”
    “I lost my wife and two sons that night.  Almost everyone left after that.  Sold their land to developers.  Then the second homes started cropping up.  Chain stores.  Texans and Californians.”  He sweeps his hand in disgust at the bustling little city, heat shimmering off the buildings and streets.  “Until it became this.  I keep saying I’ll leave one of these days.  Nothing really left for me, you know?  Not my town anymore.”
    “Why are you telling me all this?”
    “‘Cause you at least saw this place when it was a piece of heaven.  When it was perfect.  I almost feel a kinship with you.”
    “I had to quit practicing medicine,” Ron says.  “Lost everything I’d worked for.  Fucked me up for a lot of years.”
    “Sorry to hear that.”
    “But then I met a beautiful woman.  We had three beautiful children.”
    “Glad to hear that.”
    Ron pushes against his legs, groaning slightly as he struggles to his feet. 
    “My wife’s waiting for me in the Starbucks.”
    “We weren’t monsters.”
    “I better get back.”
    Ron starts walking toward the commotion of Main.
    “They’re gone,” the janitor says, Ron stopping, looking back at the small, sad man on the bench.
    “What’s gone?”
    “The old ways.”
    “The old ways had a dark side.”
    Ron turns away from him and walks across the heat-browned grass, trying to remember what the mountains looked like without all the glass and steel.
    The janitor calls after him, “So do we, Mr. Stahl, and now there’s nothing to remind us.”

    -42-
    We are spread across the country now, old

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