The first thing I noticed was the old
faded sign in the window, “Antiques”, it read. It was a green velvet signboard with red letters, tattered
with age and faded by sunlight. From its
boarded-up side doors and barely visible interior, the store looked like an
abandoned warehouse. It was almost as if
the old building didn’t want to be noticed.
It was the perfect hideout.
I breathed deeply, trying to relax a
little, and pulled off the ski mask. I can do this, I thought, I can make a clean getaway. Just
don’t panic. I took the elegant
brass doorknob, cold in my hand, and opened the door. It complained with a long creak. The tinkling of bells announced my presence,
and I entered the shop’s foyer, leaving the too-close noise of the Akron police
sirens outside. It was cool and dark and
I was still breathing hard.
The store’s musty smell hit me right
away. Jam-packed with antiques from wall
to wall and floor to ceiling, the place looked bigger on the inside than it had
from the outside. I heard movement in
the back room, the sort of I’ll-be-right-there noise one hears from the backs of
such places. I used the moment to stash
the ski mask and the overstuffed bank bag in an old urn, grabbing a wad of
money from it first in case I couldn’t get back here for a while. As I replaced the urn’s top, an older woman in a black vintage dress emerged, stepping over boxes and clutter.
“Welcome, come in,” she said,
approaching. I couldn’t exactly place
her age—late middle-aged, I thought, but even so she was striking. In her day she must have been quite
pretty. She was certainly still
attractive, and her flowing walk complemented what was left of her figure.
She smiled. “Looking for anything in
particular?” she asked.
“No,” I answered, stepping into
the store proper. “I just never
noticed this was a store before—that you were open, I mean. ”
The woman nodded. “Most folks say that their first time
in.” She reached into her pocket
and withdrew a silver cigarette case—from the Thirties, I’d say—and took a cigarette
from it.
“How do you stay in business
then,” I asked, “if people don’t know you’re open?”
She lit up with an old Zippo. “I have a few regular customers. And I do a lot of mail-order business. Besides,” she exhaled smoke, “we’re
in the phone book. Have been ever since
we opened the doors.” She smiled
again. “But that’s been ages
ago.”
Returning her smile, I looked around
and thought, the thrill of actually
robbing a bank increases tenfold when you’re making your getaway. I just wished I’d planned a better one.
The woman’s black leather boots
click-clacked on the dusty wooden floor as she walked to the long glass case
that spanned the entire length of one wall.
I quickly lost myself in a world of green glass vases and World War II
relics. Funny that I should end up in an
antique store, since I’d worked in my grandpa’s when I was a kid.
This lady had some good stuff, better than most of the junk stores you find nowadays. As I wandered, I noticed a jet-black cat silently appear out from the back room, apparently aware that someone was here. The cat stopped to look at me, and then headed for the glass case and its owner.
This lady had some good stuff, better than most of the junk stores you find nowadays. As I wandered, I noticed a jet-black cat silently appear out from the back room, apparently aware that someone was here. The cat stopped to look at me, and then headed for the glass case and its owner.
“C’mere, Jasper.” The woman sat down in the chair next to the
case, and the cat padded quickly over to her and jumped into her lap. It was soon purring loudly. Returning to my browsing, I saw among the
tables of stuff that the old woman had collected an assortment of small,
unpainted figurines. Although uniform in
their size and make, each was an incredibly realistic, detailed, distinctly
individual work. I didn’t recognize the
medium. I picked one up to examine it and found it was a smooth and clean
piece. Not something I would want, but
interesting all the same. Putting the
statuette back, I moved on, hoping I had given the cops the shake. I was nervous and invigorated at the same
time.
One thing stood out from the divans,
lamps, silver and pewter chess sets, brass beds and other antiques out on the
floor: a narrow shelf attached to the wall about ten feet up, running all the
way around the store. I assumed it must
have been for items of unusual value or delicacy. A wheeled ladder leaned up against the shelf,
for easy access. I pointed to it.
“Would it be all right if I climb the
ladder to see what’s up there?” The
woman gently dropped the cat to the floor, and got up.
“Yes,” she cautioned, “but mind
yourself. My husband killed
himself on that fool thing. People
rarely go up there these days.” She
twitched.
“Oh, I’m sorry,” I said, looking
at my watch. “You’re a widow?”
“Yes.” She walked over to the ladder. “Have been, well on ten years now. Here, let me hold this for you.” She grabbed the ladder, and rolled it against
her boot for stability. I offered
thanks, and started up. It was fairly
sturdy, and I climbed it carefully, intrigued at the thought of what treasures
might have gone untouched in this out-of-the-way antique store.
When I reached the top, the widow called
to me, “Here, while you’re up there, dust up a bit, will you? I’m too old to be up there like a monkey, and
I’m sure it could use it.” I leaned
down and received the worn feather duster she extended. Once I turned around, I was surprised to find
all kinds of odds and ends to be sorted through, and it was indeed dusty. I ran the duster over the shelf, lightly
touching its feathers to the objects located there. It was so dusty in fact, that some of the items
were too obscured to recognize.
To my surprise, I found a ceramic bowl
brimming with old glass marbles—the real thing, not the crappy manufactured
repros they make these days. They must
have been pre-World War II, rare and valuable.
Marbles are pretty common fare in most curio shops, but not this good—amber cat’s eye shooters, bright green ones flecked with gold—they just
don’t make ‘em like that anymore. I
looked them over and made a mental note to take them down when I had finished
examining the rest of the shelf. Next to
the bowl of marbles was a set of china, which I wasn’t even remotely interested
in, but dusted carefully anyway, while looking further down the shelf. This was a perfect cover—if the cops looked
in here from outside, I would look like an employee, working with the owner.
An iron weathervane rooster and its
matching horsehead hitching-post top stared each other down as they probably had
done for unknown years. They
met the wrath of the duster, and I moved on.
Some porcelain eggs sat nestled in a wicker basket, a pretty Easter
decoration that undoubtedly held some interest at one time for someone. I came to the end of my reach, and asked the
widow to roll me down the wall further.
She complied. After dusting off a
bulldog clock, more porcelain, several pillboxes, green glass bottles, and some
jewelry boxes, I saw nothing else of note.
“See anything you like?” asked
the widow.
“Nothing so far except some
marbles,” I called down.
“Oh, those,” she
acknowledged. “Those belonged to
Jasper when he was a boy. They’re old ones,
you know.”
“Uh, yeah, I noticed that.” Jasper?
Hadn’t she called the cat Jasper?
It must have been named after her dead husband—a rather morbid practice,
I guess, but people do bizarre things to cherish loved ones passed on. I let it go, more concerned with my own fate
than some old lady’s neurosis.
I continued on. I came across what I initially thought to be
a log, but when I saw its flat bottom and set it on end, it turned out to be a
statue, strangely free of dust. I turned
it to face me, and saw that the statue was crafted from dark wood, smooth, and
about two-and-a-half feet tall. It was
obviously some kind of devil or god, with its leering face and a long barbed
tail, the end of which it held in one hand like a phallus. It was carved with master skill—so much so
that it was eerily lifelike in every detail, down to the ten clawed toes on its
feet. All in all, the statue radiated an
evil presence. The thing was
obscene. I had to have it.
It was plain that the statue was not
created in the Western world, nor could any civilized man have had anything to
do with its creation. It was almost as
if the artist had created it from life, using an anatomically correct
model. The thought of such a thing ever
actually having lived filled me with dread, yet fascinated me at the same
time. Who knows what savage peoples had
danced around this thing by flickering firelight, making blood sacrifices to it
in some unholy ritual? I had always
thought of devils with barbed tails as Judeo-Christian images. Perhaps there were darker, older influences
on our unconscious beliefs than we knew.
The statue was mysterious and compelling. I found I was letting my attention wander.
“Wow!” I said, before
remembering what my grandpa had taught me.
Junk Shopper’s Rule #1: Never show
interest in a piece you’re interested in.
I didn’t care, though. It wasn’t like
money was an issue now. I grabbed the thing off the shelf and proceeded down the ladder with
care.
“What’s that you’ve got there?” the old woman asked, cocking her head to see.
“An old statue,” I replied, “and a real prize by the looks of it.” I set it down gently on the long case and ran
my fingers over its smooth surface, proud of my find.
“Oh, it’s a prize, all right,” said the widow, fishing for another cigarette, and staring at me. I wondered what she meant by that. She screwed up her face to light her smoke,
and shook her head. “I had almost
forgotten that was still around,” she said with a twitch. She stood there for a moment, holding her
cigarette in one hand, and her elbow in the other. “I suppose you want it?” she
inquired, eyebrows raised.
“You bet I do,” I replied,
realizing I had disregarded the Junk Shopper’s Prime Rule twice. Grandpa would have been so disappointed in me.
She walked over to a plush red velvet
chair by a nightstand and sat down, crossing her legs. I hadn’t noticed her fishnet stockings until
now. She had nice legs for an older
woman.
“I don’t know... my husband’s mother
brought it back from Africa,” she recalled, a faraway look in her
eyes. “She was a strange bird...
let me tell you about—”
“It’s incredible,” I said, interrupting. “I don’t think I can
live without it.”
The woman looked at me and smiled, taking
another drag off of her cigarette, the blue smoke from the tip slowly curling into the air. I could see she was
mulling something over; I could feel thoughts running around in her head
like a dull telepathy. The cat jumped
into her lap again, completing her contemplative pose.
She tilted her head and exhaled blue smoke
into the air. “I have to warn you,
the thing is cursed,” she said. “I keep it up there because I can’t get rid of it, and I don’t want
anyone else to inherit the curse.” The cat squinted.
I laughed. “Oh, come on. I’ve been into
a few antique shops in my time. I don’t
go for that old ‘cursed’ routine. That’s
like something out of a bad TV show.” The widow didn’t seem to think it was funny at all; if anything, her
expression soured.
“No, young man, I mean what I
say. If poor Jasper hadn’t ever seen
that fetish, he might still be with us today.
You see…” said the woman, taking another drag from her cigarette and
sitting upright. “…Jasper’s mother
brought the fetish back from Africa, where she had been traveling with her
father. He was an anthropologist,
studying the tribal customs and religious ceremonies of the animists indigenous to the jungles of Africa. He
fell under the ill will of the tribe’s shaman,” she flicked ash off of her
cigarette, “when he crossed the line by participating in, rather than
observing, their strange rites. The
shaman knew it was taboo to remove the idol, so he made a present of the fetish
to Jasper’s grandfather. According to
the curse, if the idol is removed from its native ground, the new owner meets a
strange and horrible end, or changes into some weird form.
“Jasper’s grandfather knew full well
about the curse, but, like you—he scoffed.
Not long after they returned to the ‘States, he died amid mysterious
circumstances, the coroner’s report vague as to the cause of his death. Then, after Jasper’s mother inherited it, she
disappeared, also not without queer happenings.
Finally, after Jasper got a hold of it, he fell to his death on that
very ladder.” The widow twitched. “That’s when I was finally convinced. The thing is simply cursed.”
With
an air of finality, she stubbed her cigarette out into the ashtray on the
nightstand.
I bent down to pet the cat, which came
bounding up to my outstretched hand. “Assuming what you say is true,” I offered, “wouldn’t you
be cursed by it, too?” The cat
nuzzled my fingers, scratching its nose.
The woman got up and started to walk down
the aisle, running one hand along the case. “Ahh, I’m immune to the magic of the fetish, you see,” she
said, her boots click-clacking slowly on the floor. She turned toward me, smiled and said softly, “because I’m a witch.”
I wanted to burst out laughing, but the
woman’s face was so serious, and her tone so grave, I stifled it. Besides, it was obvious by now that she was at
least a little off her rocker.
But at the same time, I knew I had to
have that statue. I could leave with it
and come back for the rest of the money later.
I’d buy the urn and she’d never know.
“If it’s got such a horrible
legacy,” I inquired rationally, “why don’t you just throw it out?”
“I have, many times,” she answered,
twitching again. “It always finds its
way back somehow. Eventually I just had
it put up there face down, so no one would try to buy it and continue this
horrible madness.” She twitched
again, turned around at the end of the case and shot me an unwavering gaze that
made me uneasy.
This lady’s story was getting harder and
harder to believe, but she seemed quite serious. I looked her in the eye and asked, “Others have tried to buy it since your husband died?”
“Oh, yes, plenty. The last couple in here who bought the fetish
was never seen again. And, of course,
the next day, the thing was back in here.
It used to spook the bejesus out of me,” she said, blinking oddly and
turning away again. “But I’ve grown used
to it.” After a moment’s pause, she
started back from the end of the case, and looked at me soulfully. “You seem so nice,” she said, and
reached toward me for a moment, then slowly withdrew her hand. She shook her head. “Look, just believe what I say, and nothing
will happen to you. Leave it. Buy some china or something. I have a complete set of Napoleonic era
wooden soldiers, just wonderful—”
I laughed again, shaking my head. “You’ve only convinced me all the more
that I have to have it. It has such a
fascinating history.”
“All right,” She said, looking
at me with resignation. “The price
is five thousand dollars.”
“Five thousand dollars?!” I was incredulous. “That’s a lot of money!”
The widow shrugged. “Actually, idols of comparable size and
age from that region regularly sell for around thirty-five hundred. And, considering its condition and the
sentimental value, I think five thousand is a fair price.”
I could tell she just didn’t want to sell
the thing, plain and simple.
Cursed. Yeah, right. She had
probably just forgotten it was up there in the first place. What she didn’t know was that money was no
object.
“Cash all right?” I pulled out a rubber-banded roll of C-notes
from my pocket. “I just got my tax
refund.”
The widow smiled, with a dubious look and raised eyebrow. “Tax refund,
huh?” She took the money and it
disappeared into a pocket in her dress.
The old woman walked behind the case,
pulled open a drawer, and removed a bottle from it. She also produced a glass from the drawer and
poured herself a generous portion of scotch. I wondered, why the nutty story about the curse?
And her being a witch? I
wasn’t falling for it, but I wasn’t going to let her put one over on me. I really wanted the statue, and since it
wasn’t my money anyway, what the hell did I care? Besides, buying the statue was all the alibi
I had. She could’ve charged several
thousand more for it, and I’d still be able to retire comfortably in my choice
of several Latin American countries.
Screwing the cap back on the bottle, she
gestured toward the fetish. “Go
ahead, it’s yours now.” She set the
bottle down, and picked up the drink.
I’d almost forgotten about the
marbles. “How much for these wonderful
marbles?” I asked, grabbing the idol and carefully climbing up the ladder again.
“Oh, nothing,” she said, “You can just
have those. Call it a gift. Just come back soon. Make sure to tell all your friends about the nice
lady you met at the antique store.” She twitched
again, nervously.
“Oh, I’ll be back, you can bet on
that.” I went for the marbles and
wondered if the cops had left the area yet.
The devil’s grinning visage loomed next to me as I lifted it. Maybe I should buy the urn now, just to make
sure....
The widow sipped her drink, and then said
curiously, “But you’re sure you understand the ramifications of what you’re
doing?”
“Yes.” I said, smiling. “I know I’m playing with forces I can’t possibly understand. An ancient curse that will kill me, or
transform me into something hideous.” I
chuckled, and shifted the bowl of marbles into my left hand, under the idol. I stepped back down the ladder.
She looked at me darkly; she was different
somehow. “Then you inherit the
curse.” Her voice was raspy now, no
longer sweet. “May you live long enough
to enjoy your new antiques.”
"Yeah, um, well, okay, thanks.” I said to the kooky old widow, and turned to leave.
Moving toward the foyer, I looked out the
window to check my escape route. My load
shifted and I almost dropped the bowl of marbles. As it was, a few fell out onto the floor in
front of me and I tried to regain my balance so the rest wouldn’t spill. It was too late. The bowl tilted and the rest of the marbles
spilled out while I frantically searched for solid ground. I was already slipping on the rolling
marbles.
The fetish fell from my grasp, and in slow
motion, I saw the leering face rotate around, mocking. Unwilling to let the idol be damaged, I
reached out to catch it. In doing so, I
sacrificed breaking my own fall. My head
hit the hardwood floor and I could hear the marbles rolling everywhere as I lapsed into unconsciousness.
When I awoke, I heard a male voice. I was surprised to find I didn’t have a
splitting headache. My neck was sure
stiff, though. My eyes were open, but I
couldn’t move them at all— or any other part of my body. I was still on my side, on the floor, but
everything looked wrong, somehow. The marbles....
“We’re looking for a bank robber,
ma’am, about five-nine, Caucasian, maybe wearing a ski mask? He just knocked over Akron First National
down the street.” The police were here! One of the policemen pulled out a small
notebook.
“No, haven’t seen him.” The widow picked me up off of the floor, and
my view swept the room as she righted me, and set me on the table among the
other figurines. From that vantage point,
I saw that the undamaged fetish had appeared back up on the shelf, and could
see its insane, unholy face grinning down at me. Those blank, unmoving eyes seemed to look
right through my soul.
The other cop fidgeted. “Well, be careful. He may still be in the area. Here’s my card. If you see him, or remember anything—”
“I’ll give you a call,” she
finished.
“Yes, ma’am, thank you.” The policeman turned and left.
The widow went back to her red velvet
chair, sat down, and Jasper jumped into her lap. She somehow looked younger, now. She reached for her drink, and running her
hand down his soft black fur, she looked in my direction, and said, “They
never listen, do they, Jasper? They
never listen.” She drained her drink to
the last drop and gave a satisfied sigh.
“One more and we’ll have another complete set.” She reached for a small
pine box and began crumpling up newspapers and lining the bottom of the box
with them. I could just make out the
address label. The box was heading to
the Congo, in Central Africa. Where ever
I was going, it was going to be a long ride, a very long ride. And I had left an urn filled with who knows
how many thousands of dollars inside it behind for my trouble.
A widow’s ransom.
A widow’s ransom.
Appropriately menacing for a story centered around creepy figurines. Two wooden thumbs up.
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