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When The Birds Fall Silent

Entry No. 2

Entry No. 2

May 27, 2022

01.13


Dear Mother,

I think you'd be highly amused, in a sort of demeaning way, about my first day in the shop.

It wasn't at all busy when I came to the doorstep on Monday, strictly on time like Father always taught me to be. 10 o'clock sharp and I was there, knocking on the glass door...

...the locked glass door.

I thought for sure they must be open by now, but there was only the one entrance and exitway. I had to send them a text saying I'll be right back as the door was locked, and went off down the narrow road to see what else was there.

Which was nothing much, to be honest; the road went on to other neighborhoods and side streets before another turn left would lead it back to the main road. Here and there were houses, with fenced front yards and (I assume) families too private to even use them. The houses looked cared for, but I assume ghosts used their facilities more than people do.

(Now that sounds like a nice premise for a novel; i'll have to flesh it out...)

Anyway, as I was turning back, I noticed a little café hidden in the pocket of a building. There's a neon sign at the front, bearing small Japanese characters, and it clattered a little when I opened the door.

Even though it looked narrow from the front, the back was well spacious enough, and even had some tables on the second floor. It reminds me of that one up-and-down café we went to in Fujikawaguchiko. Only there is a sea of roofs in lieu of a view of the tranquil lake, and the mountain near our city isn't as resplendent as Mt. Fuji, but you get my gist.

I ordered a brown sugar latte. It's nice. If you were near, I'd like to bring you there sometime, I'm sure you'll like it.

By the time I came back to the shop, which was a full hour after the supposed opening time, I just saw the manager and the owner of the shop leisurely having coffee outside in the sun. Which I found odd, considering it was well within an hour before lunchtime, but I guess to each his own. 

They invited me to sit with them, but I didn't want to be too chummy with them on the first day. (That would leave a bad first impression, no? Professionally, anyway? Or am I overthinking too much? I probably am.)

Ahh, but I asked if there's anything to do in the shop that I could busy myself with. And they told me the shelved needed to be resorted. Asked me to make a system out of everything.

I guess to some people that would've been a herculean task, but you know me. Organizing and being systematic is something innate. 

So I got to work immediately. Even though I've stepped into this shop once already, the utter chaos that seems to be of design somehow still takes me aback. The lights are still dimmed around the shop, but the shadows of piles and piles of books, precariously stacked on top of each other, still loomed at me. 

It was an avalanche of yellowed paperbacks waiting for gravity to do its work. I had to tackle it first.

You see, mother, I know you'd be disapproving of this kind of work. You always told me to put my mouth to good use -- ergo, being a spokesperson for a public figure, or even enter public office myself. You always pushed me to be in a profession that always had me thinking on my feet -- never considering the very real possibility that I find solace in the doing mind-numbing, routine work.

My hands are still functional, dear mother. And just by a couple of hours, and by the dim light of the yellow lightbulb overhead, I've made significant progress by the time both of my bosses came back. Then, they gave me the tasks of sorting the books by genre, by edition, and put them on the shelves as I see fit.

It's been a few days since my first day, but so far I've already finished with half of the shop. It's more presentable nowadays, and there's actually a path for people to walk through instead of precariously stepping over piles and hoping to high heaven that none of the books teeter and fall. 

My bosses are quite appreciative, and every time I go back home, I feel satisfied with the work I've done, even with arms sore and aching.

Ah, I should probably talk about who I work with more, no?

The first, and my immediate superior, his name is Septimo. He introduced me as 'Sep' or 'Cep' (wasn't sure about the spelling of it) when he came in, asked me if I liked coffee, then proceeded out back to what I suppose is the kitchen when I nodded yes. Only when the boss had yelled his full name from upstairs did I find out. 

Sometimes, to me, names either a) fit people like a glove, b) are something the person grows into, or c) seem like a different personality altogether. 'Septimo' sounded like someone who had it all together and Sep is... well...decidedly the opposite.

But that's not to say he's a blumbering idiot. He definitely has his wits about him, and he knows all the ins and outs of the shop operations whenever I ask. He's a bit slow, but it's not because of him procrastinating or dawdling. He has a lot on his mind, and I often see him spacing out in the middle of a workday. I wonder if the cogs of his brain are whirring at the speed of light; and everything else simply looks slow in comparison.

He's an artist, too. Some days I go into the shop and there are sketchbooks and charcoal strewn about. He works well into the midnight, and his craft is nothing short of amazing. I've handled some books with his name stamped in small print on the copyright page under "Illustrator". Then I look up from my stoop and see him sipping on a half-forgotten cup of coffee that he had made himself three hours ago. 

It's a little hilarious, if you ask me.

The second boss, the one at the tippy-top, is Walden. I see him only a few times a day, when he comes down to the shop to check on what progress we've done so far with managing the whole thing. But mostly he keeps to himself, like a hermit of some sort, up on the second floor where his and Sep's living quarters are. By the way he looks, he's not much -- short of stature and definitely looking like he's gone through a lot even though he's quite young. But his legacy around the shop speaks for himself.

Behind the teetering books of Kafka there's a framed picture of him smiling, holding up a plaque, with a small inscription at the bottom saying that it was an award for his essays toeing the delicate line between religion and personal philosophy. Up on the ceiling there hangs small posters of the illustrated covers of books which he had a hand in either writing, editing, or translating. On a dusty shelf of knick-knacks, right beside the kitschy figurines of lesser-known saints, are trophies and awards bearing his name for directoral works.

I once asked Sep what sir Walden is preoccupied with when he stays upstairs for hours at a time. He answers with, "It's either his manuscript or his arthritis." and a laugh to go along with it.

Every time I step into the shop, mother, a hush falls over me. It's as if I could feel the creative energy of both of these men seeping through the floorboards, dripping down the walls. Maybe some part of me, deep down, wonders whether or not I could be inspired by the very same fervor that seizes them every time the shop closes and they are given their own devices.

Perhaps I can finally realize my dream of finishing a novel here.

I don't know. But for the first time in years, I am hopeful, and inspired, and definitely in a mood to write.

Perhaps you have wanted a more detailed account in my entries, dear mother. A detailed account of my sinking regret after a haphazardly-made decision.

But to tell you the truth, the more days I go into the shop, the more I truly believe I am meant to be here.

Til next time.

- Faye

YugenPH
Yugen

Creator

#bookshop #drama #horror #dystopian #diary #Political #fiction #Found_fiction #general

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"Turn right from the main road, and go down a narrow street to your immediate left; there sits a bookstore, hidden at first glance, but in no way a secret.

There are no sign boards bearing its name, no arrows pointing to the door; merely a wooden sign bolted to the wall, where one can see the crude image of a crow painted bright red, still visible among the overgrowing ivy.

In this part of the city, the birds are loud, they are angry. They will not be silenced."
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Entry No. 2

Entry No. 2

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