Hard Times
Glass shards crunching under foot. He lifted his boot up off the broken picture frame and looked down. Destroyed, just like the rest of the place. Books from the shelves were everywhere, their charred remains underpinning his emptiness at the destruction around him. He’d liked the books, volumes of knowledge, some more rare than others but all of them interesting and a luxury few even bothered with in this day and age. The tattered curtains were breathing in and out with the wind, like wraiths haunting the memories contained in the picture under his raised foot. The place was empty. He’d known that before he had walked up to the building. Nobody would bother one way or the other, either he had been killed in the blast or he hadn’t.
He scooped the picture up out of the glass and looked at it. It was a picture of the shop just after he’d finished fixing it up. He was standing behind the counter smiling, the books behind him, trinkets of various uses contained beneath the glass case in front of him. Things he’d come across over the past few years. Not really worth much in themselves but crafted into useful items for the people that would frequent the shop. One of his customers had taken it for him the day he’d opened. Now it was all scorched and barren. What hadn’t been destroyed in the blast had burned until the rains leaked through the cracked ceiling and put them out.
There wasn’t really much to save by the time the civil services units had arrived. That was four days ago. He’d be away looking for some new inventory, the place wasn’t exactly a high security enclave. He even didn’t think it would have come to this, not after all this time. It was over. He’d finished. This was just a quiet place, a sanctuary from the more traveled space lanes, a dust bowl compared to many other places a few systems closer to the core. That was why he’d stayed. He was stopping by to refuel for another jump at the station and decided to go planetside. Station food was disgusting anyways, who the hell would eat noodles from a vending machine? Desperate people, certainly. He wasn’t that desperate. He wasn’t that poor either – well, now he was. That was only temporary though.
Nobody had questioned much about him. He’d worked hard to get enough extra to buy this place, not that he’d needed it, but it was nice just to be hired on and accepted for who you presented to other people. Just a simple man wanting an honest wage for the day. It had been nice the last few years – not really being anyone special to anyone else. Just a place to be, to work quietly and anonymously. It was a nice run, but maybe a foolish dream for him to have indulged in. Maybe he should have just stayed and kept doing the jobs. He’d made many enemies over the years. Most of them dead now, but not all of them. Most of the rest were smart enough to leave the ‘verse well enough alone, but this was different. He’d burned everything about himself. His past – he didn’t exist anymore; a ghost. Ironic, someone wanted to make him a ghost, though maybe not quite.
In this line of work, people usually just killed you if they found you. An energy weapon to the back in a darkened alley, a ballistic round to the head from the next hill, a nice stun and a pounding headache when you woke up, right before they started going to work on you in front of the boss while he hit you just to make sure you could still feel for the last few hours you’d still be alive. This wasn’t that. That would have happened right afterward. This late in the game, who would have the resources, the motive, or more realistically, the nerve? It was usually a close friend or family member coming back for revenge but who was left? Nobody, or so he’d thought. Somebody, though, somebody still.
He sighed and looked to the left where the blast happened; the west wall. It was easy to survey the area from where he was. His bedroom was now more or less a part of the yard newly furnished with an open floor plan that let you have an amazing view of the sky. Considering there had been a roof there the last time he’d seen it, the contrast was impressive. Maybe he should have put in the skylight after all. Surveying the damage, the crater the explosion had left behind had toppled three of the four walls. Deeper along the northern wall, the blast had come from where the bed was. It was a simple building, not designed to withstand more than the occasional storms that rolled through later on in the sun cycle.
It had been nice while it lasted. He turned his attention to the rest of the shop. The other wall had fared much better. The shelves on that side of the room were still intact, though the books were no less damaged on that side of the building. He walked to the small room off of the main entrance, debris scattered everywhere. Soot covering the floor just under the layer of water that had collected, sending eddies away from his boots with each step, circles everywhere the drop were falling, like the irises of some weird creature staring up at him from the floor.
He knew what he would find before he glanced into the room. There, on the far wall the safe was open. He walked over to it and looked inside. There, while he squinted in the fading light, where the few credits he’d put back for savings had rested, next to the data chips that were now missing, was a holopad with a flashing blue light.
Someone had left him a message.




