“Miscue” Dark Fiction by Steve Wilcenski

Almost every evening I sat in the park on the edge of the campus.  Usually got there around dusk.  So people didnโ€™t notice me.  After janitoring all day, cleaning up other peopleโ€™s messes, it was nice.  Especially after supper by myself.  Always by myself.  Walking made it like I was alive outside that ratty apartment.

One evening I saw this really good-looking woman. From a distance, you know?  Still, I could tell she was better looking than the other women Iโ€™d seen there.  She left the big brick building, turned, and headed down the street.  I wanted real bad to catch up to her. You know, to make conversation or something.  Iโ€™ve tried that with women before.  Usually doesnโ€™t turn out good. I donโ€™t know. Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™m ugly or something.

Saw her again the next evening.  And the next.  Most evenings.  She was regular. After I saw her the first time, I made sure to walk to the park every evening. Looking at her made my walks something to look forward to, you know?  I wanted bad to come out of the park to talk with her, but I knew how that would turn out.  I have a problem with women.  No courage, I guess.

One evening, there was a man with her. A big man.  Really big.

They were arguing. Then the guy started slapping her around.  Hit her hard twice.  I wanted to run over and stop him. But he was really big you know?  He hit her again.  I donโ€™t know how she stood it. The guy wasnโ€™t yelling or anything, just hit her. Then he let her go inside. He left.

Good thing too.  I might have got up the nerve. Boy! I wanted to show him!

It bothered me but I walked there the next evening.  That bastard beat on the woman, sure, but I couldnโ€™t let him mess with my life, keep me from going about my business.  It was nearly dark because I was late.  Hard to see good. She walked into the building. He followed her inside. I started for the building.  I just reached the street when he came out, turned, and walked away.  If Iโ€™d only had a baseball bat or something or was a fighter.  Someone should teach that bastard not to beat on women.  Especially that woman.

That night, I got my fatherโ€™s gun from the footlocker. All I ever got from him.  There were bullets.  I figured out how to load it.  Took it with me the next evening.

She wasnโ€™t there. He was.  The bastard!  Coming from the walkway, across the street toward the park. I watched him walk past the park entrance. From where I was in the bushes, I yelled at him,

โ€œHey you!โ€ I thought to yell something more, like,

โ€œCome and get what you deserve!โ€

But my courage was slipping, you know?  He turned, looked my direction, then looked left and right. Donโ€™t think he actually saw me. He entered the little patch of overgrown bushes. When he was all the way inside, I knew he could see me. I pointed the gun at him and said,

โ€œThis is what happens to bullies who beat up women!โ€

It was easier than I thought.  Pulling the trigger.  The gun wasnโ€™t loud like I expected.  The bastard grabbed his chest, opened his mouth all surprised. That would teach him!  He fell to his knees, then fell on his face.

I thought to go roll him over.  See if he was dead.  I wouldnโ€™t know.  I never seen a dead body.  Maybe Iโ€™d have to shoot him again.  I donโ€™t know much about guns.  Well, if he wasnโ€™t dead and he recovered, that would be a real lesson for him.  If he was dead, well, he wouldnโ€™t beat on pretty women no more.

People were gathering in the street. Figuring where the noise came from.  They yelled things like,

โ€œWhat was that?โ€
โ€œWas that a gunshot?โ€

โ€œWhereโ€™d it come from?โ€

โ€œOver there, by the park benches!โ€

โ€œSomebody call the police!โ€

I got scared.  I donโ€™t know why. Dropped the gun.  Couldnโ€™t leave the way Iโ€™d come in. 

Turned to run out the back way.  Hadnโ€™t got hardly two steps. Was almost out of the bushes so I could really run.  I had to stop. Two cops.  Right there.  Both of them pointed guns at my face. One of them yelled,

โ€œStop!  Donโ€™t move!  Put your hands over your head and turn around!โ€

I did what the cop said. Turned around. Except I forgot the โ€˜hands over your headโ€™ thing.  One of the cops yelled,

โ€œDonโ€™t move!โ€  Hands up! Do it now!

About the time it sunk in and I started to put my hands up, something grabbed my left arm.  Bent it back.  Felt something on my wrist.  Then something grabbed my other arm and I felt something again.  Cold and hard.   

At the police station, I explained all over.  Cops werenโ€™t impressed.  Guess in court, it wouldnโ€™t have made no sense to say I wasnโ€™t guilty. Iโ€™m not smart, but Iโ€™m not stupid.  I didnโ€™t pay no attention to all the hoop-de-do in court.  No trial and all, it was quick. Never got to tell the judge how Iโ€™d done good, rid the city of a monster.  Probably wouldnโ€™t have helped, you know?  Figure though, I made it so one bully wouldnโ€™t beat on women no more.

Today I got newspaper privileges here in the prison library.  Reading back issues. Why not? Nothing else to do.  Read where they buried a almost famous actor a while ago.  Seems he was shot dead by some nobody guy off the streets.  Thatโ€™s a shame. Whatโ€™s the world coming to? Went on to say they canceled the play he was gonna be in.  Said he was shot just after rehearsing a fight scene.  There was a picture of the woman in the play, too. Almost as pretty as the one I saw from the park.

ยฉ spwilcen 2022


Retired from fifty-three years as an IT engineer, SP Wilcenski now goes about life much as everyone else, managing to squeeze free a few hours each day to write. Except forย The Chamber Magazineย (February 2021), his blog spwilcenwrites, and on theProse, he is unpublished.


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