Flash Fiction: Ottoman Empire

By Sarp Sozdinler

 

I watched Backrooms and walked out of the theater, somehow, inspired by not the whole premise of infinity or yellow walls or the vast corporate nothingness but by the furniture store in the film, which probably says something messed up about me, or about my understanding of entertainment; other people watch a movie about infinite rooms and probably go, Ah, yes, the horror of modern existence, the quiet terror of our lives’ architecture without any real exit, the screaming fluorescent maze of late capitalism, etc. I watched the movie and the first thought that popped in my head was: I could sell ottomans for a living. I could open a store called Ottoman Empire that only sells ottomans. Chairs, couches, sectionals, dining tables, bed frames—no thank you, too much empire. I wanted a small empire. A foot-level empire. A plush, square, morally neutral empire over here in Mill City, where every customer who walked in would have to immediately accept the simple fact of our brand mission or leave. My girlfriend said it sounded classy but stupid. I did not take it as an insult. If anything, I pictured our showroom stretching farther and farther into oblivion, like the infinite backrooms in the film, aisle after aisle of ottomans in velvet, leather, corduroy, fake cowhide, real cowhide for the freaks, retail ottomans, cocktail ottomans, tufted ottomans, ottomans shaped like cubes, eggs, mushrooms, little sleeping dogs. There would be one employee, me, wearing a nametag that read sultan, sitting on the only chair on the premises, because chairs would not be for sale. Customers would say, “Do you have anything besides ottomans?” and I would say, “Look around.” They would say, “Can I sit on this?” and I would say, “I don’t know, can you?” like any sultan worth his salt would. The genius of the store would be that no one really needs an ottoman, but everyone can be convinced they are only one ottoman away from becoming the person in their dreams. I wanted that for people. I wanted to sell them the promise of rest without offering any real rest. That’s commerce, baby. That’s America for you. Halfway through explaining this to my girlfriend, though, I realized my Ottoman Empire would almost certainly kill me. Rent would kill me. Inventory would kill me. Turf wars in distribution would most likely destroy me. Anything could go wrong. My margins, my insurance, my health. A child might hide inside a storage ottoman and might be lost forever. His parents might sue me to my bare bones. Maybe that was the real horror, after all. The ultimate fever dream, the dreading void of an endless abyss, like in the movie. I imagined myself closing up the store one night and seeing, past the last row of ottomans, another row I didn’t remember ordering, then another, and another, all stretching into a warm beige eternity. I’d walk toward them with my little key ring, calling, “Hello?” like an idiot sultan. No one would answer. Of course, no one would answer. The fluorescents would buzz. The ottomans would loaf about like livestock. Somewhere very far away, a customer would shout and ask if we sold loveseats. I would reply, “Absolutely not,” and keep walking into a fully upholstered afterlife.

 

 

 

 

 

Sarp Sozdinler is a writer based between Philadelphia and Amsterdam. His work has found places in Electric Literature, Kenyon Review, Shenandoah, Wigleaf, HAD, Flash Frog, Pithead Chapel, X-R-A-Y, Maudlin House, and elsewhere. His stories have been selected or nominated for anthologies including the Pushcart Prize, Best Small Fictions, and Best Microfiction. He edits the literary journal The Bulb Region.

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