Today his mother told him to never go into the basement.
“Why?” he asked.
“Because I said so,” she replied.
“But I’m 13 years old now. I understand things. Is it toxic? Is it haunted? You can’t just say ‘never’ without an explanation.”
Long silence.
“Ask your father.”
“For fucks sake.”
“Jackson! I told you to—never—use that word.”
“Everything’s never now.”
His mom quietly folded the last pair of her son’s undies.
“I will always love you,” she said.
“Is it because of the still?” he asked while demolishing his chocolate chip cookie in one satisfying bite.
“Ask your father.”
~
At 5am he walked into his parents room and poked his dad in the back with a broom handle.
“For FUCKS sake!” his father roared.
“Pops. I wanna learn how to make corn liquor. I need a job that pays, man. I want to buy a MacBook Pro and write about faith and fiction. I’m a good worker. Steady. I can clock before school, after school, weekends. I want to be your deputy. POPS! You awake?”
“Now I am. Meet me in the kitchen. Five minutes.”
Jackson ran out of the bedroom, brushed his teeth, donned the yellow hard hat his Uncle gave him for his birthday and skipped down the hallway with bona fide momentum.
⌘