Broken World Stories by Lance Manion - HTML preview

PLEASE NOTE: This is an HTML preview only and some elements such as links or page numbers may be incorrect.
Download the book in PDF, ePub, Kindle for a complete version.

 

Annie

It took him until his mid-twenties to stop chewing his fingernails. It was no small feat. He had a certain pride about how well-manicured he’d kept his hands since the fateful day he last pulled a finger away from his mouth.

Which is why he was tearing apart the bedroom he shared with his wife.

He’d had enough.

Every day, it seemed another pair of fingernail clippers went missing. As quickly as he bought them, they seemed to vanish. His wife claimed she had nothing to do with the mysterious disappearances, but at some point, he’d have to come up with answers. Every time he goes to the grocery store, mall, or pharmacy, he buys another pair and then only days later, he will ask his wife a simple question. “Have you seen the clippers?” and she will shrug and say she hasn’t.

It made no sense to him. The house should be teeming with them. Every drawer should be clogged with them.

But again this morning, he went to find a pair and came up empty.

It was time to get to the bottom of things. He needed to know. He couldn’t live with distrusting his wife.

He opened each one of his wife’s drawers and rifled through them, but instead of carefully replacing things, as he’d done so many times before so she wouldn’t suspect anything, he just hurled the entire drawer across the room. When he came upon the half dozen fake passports hidden in the false bottom of the bottom drawer, each one with a different picture, name, and country of origin for his wife, he was sure he’d find a stash of clippers but none materialized.

He remembered the nasty infections he’d get from his chewed nails. The way he’d been embarrassed by the look of them. He’d found some temporary relief from anxiety when he did it, but in the end, it caused him more stress than it was worth. So eventually, he made the difficult decision to stop.

Under the bed, he found a box filled with at least a dozen different currencies. What had to be hundreds of thousands of dollars-worth of yen, francs, rupees, pesos, and rubles were packed tightly in the old wooden container.

But no fingernail clippers.

Where could they all be? Why were they obviously so damn important to his wife?

He flipped the bed over and began to pull up the carpeting. He remembered the day they bought it. They decided on the StainMaster over the TrafficMaster, reasoning they were in much more danger from stains than they were from heavy traffic in their bedroom. They’d paid a little more for the sound-dampening option.

In her closet, in the back, under her wedding dress, he found a gun. Loaded. He realized his mistake in ransacking the bedroom as opposed to his typical discreet investigations. Wherever she was hiding the clippers, she didn’t want them found.

But why? What was her end-game? Did she want him chewing his fingernails again?

Was she jealous of the time and energy he spent on his hands?

He guessed he’d find out soon enough. She would be home soon and she’d see that he’d been looking in earnest.

The only thing he could do was to pop out and buy another pair before her return.