The Penny Whistle Store

Most towns have a place folks forget on purpose. Piedmont had a place folks forgot by accident.

It sat on the far end of Ladiga Street, just past the old peach orchard that had long since turned into a jungle of thorn bushes and opportunistic grapevines. If you walked that way with no intention at all, you might catch a glimmer of somethin’ behind the kudzu. A sag in a roofline. A broken porch step. Maybe even the ghost of a sign that used to hang over the door like a crooked smile.

That was The Penny Whistle Store.

Nobody alive in Piedmont today remembers when it was open except the handful of old-timers who still know the words to hymns that haven’t been sung since Noah caulked his ark. But every child in town knew of the Penny Whistle Store, because in summertime it gave off the faintest, sweetest smell of peppermint and dust, like the memory of candy that had never finished leavin’.

I came across it by accident when I was about nine years old. I had wandered through the orchard tryin’ to catch a grasshopper that had made a fool of me one too many times. After losin’ the grasshopper and most of my dignity, I pushed through some vines and found myself standin’ in front of a building that looked like it had gone out of business during the Hoover Administration and nobody thought to bury it.

The door was stuck half-open, half-shut in the way of doors that have not made up their minds in years.

Inside was a whole world forgotten by time.

Wooden shelves bowed under the weight of empty jars that once held licorice, lemon drops, sour balls, horehound sticks, and jawbreakers large enough to crack the teeth a dentist had not even counted yet. There was a faded checkerboard on the counter, two pieces mid-game, as if the players got called home to supper sixty years ago and never came back.

And a single penny whistle.

It lay in the dust like it had been waitin’ on me personally.

Now, Piedmont rumors had always claimed that whoever played the penny whistle would call forth the last sound the store ever heard. Some said it was laughter. Some said it was a hymn. Some said it was the groan of the roof complainin’ about all the candy barrels.

I picked it up anyway.
I was nine.
You could have told me it summoned banjo-playing ghosts, and I still would have tried it.

I wiped it on my shirt, put it to my lips, and blew a single note.

Just one.

And Lord have mercy, the whole store answered.

The shelves creaked.
The jars rattled.
The sunlight dimmed like it was holdin’ its breath.
And somewhere from deep in the back, where the shadows gathered like gossip, came a thin, wavering hum.

Not a ghost.
Not a hymn.
Not a roof joist groanin’ under its burdens.

It was a refrigeration unit.

Long dead.
Long forgotten.
But tryin’ its best to start up again, bless its heart.

The place shivered once, like an old man rememberin’ he used to know how to dance. And then everything went still again.

I dropped that whistle so fast you might’ve thought it had burned me.

Turns out, I was not the first kid to find the Penny Whistle Store, and I was not the last. Every child in Piedmont somehow stumbled on it at one point or another, in a season of life when curiosity outweighed common sense. And every one of us told a different story about what we saw or heard inside.

Some said the ghost of the old shopkeeper still counted change behind the counter.
Some swore they heard ice tinkle in a bottle of RC Cola that had not been cold since Eisenhower. Some claimed the penny whistle summoned the laughter of children from long ago.

But all agreed on this part.

You only ever found the store when you weren’t lookin’ for it.

And once you grew old enough to forget what summer felt like on bare feet or how it sounded when a jar of marbles hit the floor, well, you stopped findin’ it at all.

Years later, when developers bulldozed half of Ladiga Street to put in new gas lines, they called the city council in a panic. There was no store there. Never had been, accordin’ to the records. Just trees and vines and an old well nobody had used in half a century.

The Penny Whistle Store had slipped right back into the crack between memory and imagination, which is where most childhood treasures eventually go.

But sometimes, on the hottest day in late July, when the air is thick enough to chew, folks claim they catch a faint little tune floatin’ over the orchard.

Thin.
Sweet.
Lonely.

The kind of sound you only hear if you once believed in magic and still hope it might be real.

And if you follow that sound, y’all, you just might stumble across a forgotten place that only reveals itself to those who never quite stopped bein’ nine years old.

*****

New Yesterdays can be found at: Books-A-MillionBarnes & Noble, and Amazon, as well as your favorite bookshops. The Audiobook is available from Libro.fm, as well as Amazon.

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About Ol' Big Jim

Jim L. Wright is a storyteller with a lifetime of experiences as colorful as the characters he creates. Born and raised in Piedmont, Alabama, Jim’s connection to the land, history, and people of the region runs deep. His debut novel New Yesterdays is set in his hometown, where he grew up listening to stories of the past—stories that sparked his imagination and curiosity for history. Today, Jim lives in Leeds, Alabama, with his husband Zeek, a tour operator who shares his passion for adventure and discovery. Known affectionately as “Ol’ Big Jim,” he has had a diverse career that includes time as a storekeeper, an embalmer, a hospital orderly, and a medical coder. There are even whispers—unconfirmed, of course—that he once played piano in a house of ill repute. No matter the job, one thing has remained constant: Jim is a teller of tales. His stories—sometimes humorous, sometimes thought-provoking—are often inspired by his unique life experiences. Many of these tales can be found on his popular blog, Ol’ Big Jim, where he continues to share his musings with a loyal readership. Jim’s adventures have taken him far beyond Alabama. For seven years, he lived in Amman, Jordan, the world’s oldest continuously inhabited city. His time there, spent in smoky coffee shops, enjoying a hookah and a cup of tea while scribbling in his ever-present notebook, deeply influenced his worldview and his writing. When Jim isn’t writing, he’s thinking about writing. His stories, whether tall tales from his past or imaginative reimagining is of historical events should read from his past or imaginative reimaginings of historical events, reflect a life lived fully and authentically. With New Yesterdays, Jim brings readers a rich tapestry of history, fantasy, and human connection. Visit his blog at www.olbigjim.com to read more of his stories, or follow him on social media to keep up with his latest musings and projects, one of which is a series that follows Bonita McCauley, an amateur detective who gets into some very sticky situations. His book, New Yesterdays, can be found at Amazon US, Amazon UK, Smashwords, and Barnes and Noble.
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3 Responses to The Penny Whistle Store

  1. Loved the tale, Jim

    Liked by 1 person

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