I walked up to the address, which was written on the back of a torn Fruity Pebbles' cereal-box top I had been given by my mother, and opened the store's door. A rusty bell connected to the door clinked and the people in the shop stopped their chatter just enough for me to grab a long enough stare at the criminal-looking man behind the counter. I pretended to produce a casual laugh that came out more nervous than congenial, when I asked "So, you sell happiness here?" As though I asked for something as simple as the weather forecast, the grungy shopkeeper practically burped "Yes," and as though he expected me, he hefted a large book out from underneath the dirty counter. For a brief second, I tried not to stare directly at him or his food-encrusted beard, when I thought I saw two eyes staring at me from a hole in the wall directly behind the counter. Almost on cue, the customers, who had been talking loud enough to cause a loud hum when I walked in the door, now quietly walked out the door, silent, except for the chiming of the bell as the door jiggled both less and more for the different sized people.
The outside of the store I now found myself in was very discreet--actually, it was more than discreet, since there were absolutely no signs or markings on the outside of this buildingI. Finding the address was an embarrasing ordeal, since I must have walked up and down the block 5 times before the laughter drew me in for directions. Now, standing inside the shop without the comfort of the customers, I felt even more uncomfortable alone with the "shopkeeper." He opened the book and leafed through the first couple hundreds of pages, until he asked "Happiness, right?"
swybs
The outside of the store I now found myself in was very discreet--actually, it was more than discreet, since there were absolutely no signs or markings on the outside of this buildingI. Finding the address was an embarrasing ordeal, since I must have walked up and down the block 5 times before the laughter drew me in for directions. Now, standing inside the shop without the comfort of the customers, I felt even more uncomfortable alone with the "shopkeeper." He opened the book and leafed through the first couple hundreds of pages, until he asked "Happiness, right?"
swybs
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