Monday, August 22, 2016

Mr. Charleston sat in his mothers bakery. As a child he'd been ever so found of his mothers bakery, her sweet sticky cinnamon buns, cakes, and of course his favorite; her chocolate croissants. The chocolate croissants were only made on Saturdays and if he was lucky he was treated one. However they were widely known by the townspeople and so often sold out so it was in fact a very rare treat. When Charleston finished school his parents urged him to go into a suitable field that would give him steady work. And since he'd always been good with numbers he decided to get a job at the bank. So for the past fifteen years Charleston had been an employee at Rich and Richardsons bank in the town located on the corner of Main and 2nd. Unwed and childless Charleston could say he was an unhappy man but on the other hand he had a steady job and a decent apartment. His parents had always been very happy in their life. He had grown up with the knowledge that as long as you had a roof and warm meal then there were things to be thankful for. The small bakery kept them afloat but on a bare minimum, this could be seen in Charlestons hand-me-down clothes often too big from his father or his older cousins. Charleston now sat on the stool in the bakery behind the register. The same wooden stool his mother would take a seat on as she would greet the customers, as her achey knees were beginning to catch up to her age. It had been a week since he'd been inside the bakery. The last time was just a pop in as he usually did to grab a biscuit for his lunch. That following day was when his parents car slipped on a patch of ice and everything had changed for Charleston. He'd been in a fog since the funeral hardly sleeping or eating. The two people he was closest to, the two he'd eaten every sunday lunch with preceding church, and the two who taught him the simple joys of life now suddenly gone. It wasn't until the lawyers had rung him that he was pulled back into reality. The bakery suddenly felt cold and bleak. No bustle of patrons, no warm smell of fresh bread, and no greetings from his parents. It seemed the place almost had a hollow echo throughout it.

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