**NOTE: The main character's name has changed. Because it sucked before. "Shawn" is now "Angus".**
She just pointed at me! She looked over here and pointed at
me!” Benjamin quietly panicked. “Dah! She’s coming over here. Act cool, act
cool!” Jenny’s footsteps got closer and stopped at their table.
“HELLO,” Benjamin said a little too loudly, startling both Angus
and Jenny, and perhaps himself.
“Uh, hi. The gentleman in the corner wanted me to let you
two know that, uh, you shooould… ask him something?” Jenny struggled to
remember, “and then get on with your day? Something like that. I don’t know, I
think he wants to talk to you.”
“Sure,” Angus replied, “Thank you very much.” He heard her
walk away and the kitchen door swing open and shut.
Benjamin was breathing heavily.
“Wow… how could he
hear us? We were practically whispering.” They were now faced with the prospect
of approaching a potentially powerful old man who knew they’d been talking
about him and who may or may not be quite unhappy about it. Angus took a deep
breath. “Okay, I guess this is it. Want to lead me over there? I’ll do the talking.”
With another glance back toward the kitchen door, Benjamin stood
up, collected his ice water in one hand and placed the other under Angus’s
forearm to guide him.
“Why are we walking so slowly?” Angus asked.
“I’m nervous!” Benjamin whispered. “If it really is him, I-
well, I’ve never talked to a medicine man before, what if he doesn’t like us
disrupting his breakfast? He’s got powers, you know! He can… do stuff!” Their
steps were still short and slow, like an old woman shuffling along in her
slippers to nowhere in particular. “And if it isn’t him I’m going to look like an idiot in front of that waitress!”
“Not sure you can help that, pal.”
“Shut up or I’ll walk you into a wall.”
They finally reached the corner booth and stopped, but before
they could introduce themselves, the old man, without looking up from his
paper, said, “I do hope you like omelets.” Benjamin noticed that there were
three plates set at the booth, each with a fresh, steaming omelet. There was a long
pause as Benjamin waited for Angus to respond. “…Is that a no to the omelets,
then?”
Benjamin elbowed Angus. “What?”
Angus whispered.
“I thought you
were going to do the talking!” Benjamin hissed under his breath.
“I will, just keep walking.” Angus had no idea they were now
standing directly in front of the old man’s booth. “Wait, was he talking to us about the omelets just now?” Angus
reached his hand forward and unexpectedly banged it on the table. Completely taken
off guard, and feeling suddenly put on the spot, he stammered, “Oh! Hi! Hi
there. Omelets, yes! Who doesn’t like omelets? Ha! I know I do! I mean, we do. We both do. A lot. Both of us.
Uhhh…” He gulped hard. “Why do you ask, sir?”
The old man replied slowly, “Well, I’m certainly not going
to eat all three…”
“There are three plates on his table,” Benjamin whispered in
Angus’s ear.
“It’s true,” whispered the old man, leaning forward and including
himself in their failed private conversation, “And you’re welcome to sit down
and eat two of them. Though I think I’ll have the third, if you don’t mind.” He
winked at Benjamin under his great brown-rimmed glasses and went back to his
newspaper.
Benjamin let out a little nervous laugh as Angus’s hand
found its way onto the booth seat. He slid into the booth as far as he could,
until he was directly across from the sound of the rustling newspaper. Benjamin
followed.
Both waited for the old man to speak first, or at least to
look up from the comics section.
Finally Angus broke the silence. Nervous and dry-mouthed, he
cleared his throat. “They smell delicious.”
“Just a moment, please.” He continued reading his newspaper.
“Almost finished.” Benjamin and Angus sat motionless, now even more nervous to
disturb the old stranger, and quite aware of the fact that they had already
trespassed into his booth.
The moment felt like ages.
With one last snicker and a sigh of contentedness, the man
folded his newspaper, set it on the table beside his plate, and continued, as
though there had been no pause at all. “Yes! Yes, they are delicious. And the
peppers here are always quite fresh.”
Benjamin looked down at his steaming omelet, which was
covered in a thick layer of gooey cheddar cheese and bright green jalapenos.
Then he looked across the table at the old man’s plate. Instead of the familiar
green pepper, however, his was topped with a strange purplish-grey pepper. The
eggs had char marks surrounding each little bit of the unfamiliar produce. As
Benjamin stared, one of them suddenly burst into a tiny flame, like a trick
birthday candle.
“They’re very rare,
these.” The old man patted out the little flame with the back of his fork. “And
rather abrasive to more delicate pallets, I might add. It’s called the Capsicum Flamora, though locally I
believe it’s called by The Reaper.”
Benjamin, still so nervous that he couldn’t find words for a
reply, simply said, “Oh…. Mmmm.”
“Yes, ’Mmmm’ indeed. Well, dig in while they’re hot.” Angus
reached his hand up to the table and felt for a fork next to his warm plate. He
was still getting used to eating blindly, and an omelet was no easy task,
especially with a nervously shaking hand. He found that the first bite he scooped
up was far too big, and half of it fell into his lap. Embarrassed, he quickly grabbed
the bits that had fallen and placed them on his napkin.
“My dear boy,” said the old man in a surprisingly warm tone,
“you must be new to the world of the sightless. Am I correct?”
“Yes, sir. Quite new.” Angus froze for a moment while he
considered what to say, and decided this was as good a time as any to plunge
right into the matter. “Sir, my name is Angus Olgram, and this is my brother,
Benjamin. We traveled a good long ways to get here, because…” He gulped hard,
set his fork back on the table and took a deep breath, “…because we were told
we could find a medicine man here, a healer by the name of Crispin. Might that
be…you?”
The old man's deep brown eyes darted quickly over to Benjamin, then panned slowly back toward Angus. The man scratched at his beard and leaned back. He pulled out a long dark wooden tobacco pipe without for a moment taking his eyes off of the boys.
The boys hung on the unbearable silence of the moment as though what came next would decided their existential fate.
Finally he raised his large grey eyebrows, shrugged his broad, slender shoulders and said,
The boys hung on the unbearable silence of the moment as though what came next would decided their existential fate.
Finally he raised his large grey eyebrows, shrugged his broad, slender shoulders and said,
“Tadaaa!”