Lord of Woe
Inexorable
Tuesday, June 11th, 10:21 PM
2710 N Hwy 190, Covington, LA
'Valero' Convenience Store
2710 N Hwy 190, Covington, LA
'Valero' Convenience Store
Emergency Alert alarms screamed rhythmically from an ailing car stereo, overpowering the roar of the rain and the droning of traffic beyond the windows. An automated voice broke through the digital howling and spoke with artificial urgency of an ongoing immanence event. It mentioned Covington High School and the Parish Fair Grounds, stressing that individuals west of the Bogue Falaya should take cover immediately. The message began to repeat for emphasis before being promptly interrupted by Adrian fingering the power button on the receiver. Muffled exterior rain retook its place as the reigning ambiance within the cab of the rickety Honda that cruised down 2nd Street.
Purple lights strobed through rain clouds far to the west, imitating a lightning storm in slow motion. A spectacle that made it hard to concentrate on driving in the otherwise poor visibility of nighttime rain and fog. Adrian couldn't help but note how bad it looked, even as far as immanence storms were concerned. It was only fifteen minutes ago that he'd been on that side of the river. He'd almost consider himself lucky, though it felt nearly impossible to believe in luck when one found themselves trapped in the exclusion zone. Nearly four million square miles of United States soil, and it just had to be this little corner of southeast Louisana. Adrian let out a single syllable of ironic laughter to himself before flicking the lever for his turn signal.
Loose bits of asphalt hissed and scraped beneath his tires as he pulled into the parking lot of the Valero that sat at the intersection of 2nd Street and US Highway 190. It was one of the only gas stations still operational in Covington. A fact that it displayed proudly with a handmade sign shoved in the turf between the parking lot and the road. Awning lights flickered lackadaisically, clinging to function despite the weathering of already countless immanence events. Adrian pulled his vehicle into one of the store-facing parking spaces, now shielded from any further battering by the rain. A turn of the key killed the humming engine with an audible click from the outside.
Grunting, he leaned forward to pop the passenger-side glove box and fished out a leather accordion file bag. Thumbing through it, he fished out a photo of a young woman; Olivia Maddox. She had been missing since the immanence event that shook this side of the river almost two weeks ago. Just like every missing person nowadays, the authorities were at either an abject loss of what to do or were just flat-out refusing to do anything, to begin with. The rate at which people when missing now was so high it bordered on absurdity, which meant Adrian's phone often rang off the hook with inquiries for his services. He hadn't closed a single case yet, but at the very least he was making attempts.
This time, he was looking, perhaps fruitlessly, for a lead as to Olivia's whereabouts. Normally it was all guesswork and deduction, but this time he had something, even if it was small. Officially, she was last seen leaving the campus library of Delta College on 5th street, just a few blocks across the highway. However, despite most surveillance and digital record of the time of her disappearance being scrambled due to the immanence event, he managed to dig up a singular frame from the CCTV at a nearby used car dealership that suggested she was heading in this direction. It wasn't much, but it was a hell of a lot more than he had in every other case. Now it was just a matter of hoping the trail didn't go cold here.
Adrian stepped out of the car and weaved passed loiterers and regulars toward the inside of the Valero. Fluorescents threatened to summon a migraine upon him while their irksome spectrum assailed his pupils. A minuscule pain absorbed his exhausted eyes as they struggled to adjust to the bright lights meant to make products look appealing. Though all they really did now was cast glares on mostly empty shelves and sparsely stocked endcaps. Lack of product lent a sort of fatalism to the otherwise mundane sight like a grocery store during the death throes of the Soviet Union. That was the unfortunate reality of living in the exclusion zone. Things once abundant and unremarkable were now scarce, and the National Guard only handed out the absolute minimal essentials. Tylenol and Cigarettes held more value than gold now.
A functioning, filled coffee machine was nearly a small miracle. It was one of the reasons this place was still running at all, an inexplicable reserve of shitty gas-station coffee. They even had pizza pockets left to this day, though the warmer struggled to stay on after several destructive attempts at robbery. Cup beneath the spigot, Adrian pulled the lever and watched the black slowly fill the paper cup as the warmth it wrought overtook his left hand. A smell hit his unsuspecting nostrils. Coffee, of course, but it had an odd undertone to it, almost like it was stale. He dipped, took a more deliberate sniff of the steam that billowed from his cup.
"Yeah, you're better off not drinkin' it." A voice remarked from his left.
Adrian looked up, and saw an unassuming man with a small, knowing grin on his face. "That bad?" Adrian asked as he snatched the last packet of creamer and dumped it in, expecting to mask an additional bitterness.
"Nah, cause of what they put in the water, yanno? You smelled it, didn't ya'?"
Idle stirring filled the silence that followed. "I'll be alright," Adrian assured, skeptical of the odd assertion.
"Heh," the stranger emitted. "Suit yourself, man."
Venturing to the counter, Adrian placed his coffee on the counter after a small sip. iy wasn't nearly as bad as he'd thought it would be.
"Two forty-six," the man at the counter declared from memory before ringing up the drink a half-second later.
Adrian fiddled with his wallet, pulling out some cash before slipping a photo of Olivia in front of the clerk along with it. "Have you seen this woman?"
"She your daughter or somethin'?"
"No."
The Clerk gave him an odd look before taking his money and opening the register. Adrian tried not to be obviously annoyed with the wordless assumption. "She's missing," he stressed.
"Yeah, she comes in from time to time, I think."
"Recently?"
"I'unno man. You think I keep a log of customers?"
"Look, I'm just trying to pin down where she could have gone."
The Clerk shrugged indignantly. "Maybe two weeks ago?"
Shit. Of course, it wasn't going to be that easy. It never was. "Is there anyone else who works here that might have seen her?"
"Just me n' the boss right now."
"He here?"
"She ain't here on Tuesdays. Fifty-four cents, by the way." Money exchanged hands.
"Thanks," Adrian conceded after a moment before shuffling out the doors.
Another sip staved off the rain's chill for just one more moment. A glance was given to the lights still rising and falling in the distance. Not getting any closer, but not showing any signs of dying down, he thought as if immanence events were at all predictable in their patterns. If the employee knew nothing, and no one else worked until tomorrow, he'd have to grasp at straws and ask the regulars. Now it was just a matter of figuring out who looked like they spent a lot of time here.
Thus, Adrian's analyzing gaze began to wander.
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