‘It’s difficult to encapsulate the Wayside, except to say that it is experienced most keenly on backroads and in backrooms. Try it out, why don’t you? Try it out at ‘James Vapes’ and see what sort of ugly niches you can find in the way-back of a head shop now that weed is safe and legal.’
I have never vaped, myself, but in the dozen or so circumstances in which I found myself second-hand vaping, I’ve been surprised at how diverse the flavors tend to be and how pleasant they are in comparison to your traditional smoke-based inhalants. I say this as a man who has smoked plenty in his life- who has ignored the sharp, chemical edge of haphazard drugs for a moment’s fleeting relief. Who has burned his nose and esophagus and the tips of his fingers, trying to squeeze comfort from the embers of something unpleasant.
Vaping seems downright pleasant, if not a little uncool, but with no real intention of starting a new habit, I never suspected I would find myself in a vape shop and I arrive wholly unprepared.
‘James Vapes’ is the sort of business where everything is kept behind the counter without labels or pricetags, the sort of place where you’re expected to know what you want before you walk in. The man behind the counter looks up at me as I enter. His eyes eventually fall to Hector, in my arms.
“Weird,” he says, and smoke pours from his mouth.
“James?” I ask.
He laughs, billowing sweet vapor into the air. “No.”
“Cool,” I say. I haven’t said that in years.
“What can I do for you?”
“Uh-” I squint in the hazy shadows behind the counter and find I can’t identify a single thing. There are wattages and volumes- heat indications and potency meters. There are strains of nicotine and cannabis and mixes of the two that don’t make any sense to me. I grimace and hope I look discerning. “None of this is, uh, quite what I’m looking for.”
The vapor emitting from the man’s mouth comes out low and thick. “What are you looking for?”
This is a good sign, according to my research. It’s all a part of the dance we have to do in order to get past the bead curtain- a sort of Konami code for back room access: rebuff, rebuff, inquire, nod, and proceed.
If you’re keeping track, we’re on the second rebuff. “I’m not sure you’re going to have it.”
“Yeah?”
“Do you have anything…” and here’s where the nuance is. This part is all about using the right words. Wilder for meat. Lower for deeds. More engaging for people. I take a chance: “…more substantial?”
The man sighs and his face disappears in the fog. He’s grinning when it clears. “Can you keep a secret?”
Nod.
“Follow me, then.”
The beaded curtain clatters as we step into a pantry. There are a few vaping devices here, each advertising wattages and temperatures that seem outrageous for something that’s designed to enter a human mouth. Mostly, though, the shelves are stocked with vials of strangely flavored vape liquid. No more blueberry. No more cotton candy. The glass in the backroom advertises things like ‘nostalgia’ and ‘haircut.’ I see a vial labeled ‘locker room,’ another that just says ‘boy spit.’
Not-James has his eyes on me. He’s quickly filling the little room with his fog, thick and sour. “Is this more to your liking?”
The shelves are split by a thin door, one that leads even further back. I consider it and ask: “When’s your next shipment?”
“We’re fully stocked, if that’s what you’re asking. Should I put something on order?”
“If you don’t have it already, I’m not sure you’ve got the right supplier.”
“If you have a name…”
“Do you have anything… (headier? thicker?) more tailored?”
“Ah,” he says, a phantom in his own gas, “You should have said. I assume you’ve brought a sample?”
I nod.
“Then follow me.”
The man ignores the thin door and tugs one of the shelves instead. The vials toast each other as the wall comes forward on a set of hidden hinges. A machine sits idle in the room ahead, all pistons and pressurized canisters.
“How’s this?” The man is indiscernible from the shadows, a cloud in the dark.
There’s no more doors, thank god.
“This is exactly what I was looking for,” I say, without knowing what it is I’m looking at.
I leave ‘James’ Vapes’ with a small vial of my own blood, condensed into a thick goo that, inserted into any modern vaporizer, should allow me to inhale and expel it as a red cloud. After all that build up, it was all I could think of.
Not-James looked disappointed. He told me blood was the most common material component offered to the machine. I recognized that it was almost too commonplace for such a far backroom. He said much the same himself, before disappearing into a grate in the floor. A sub-backroom?
I’ll let that one slide, I think.
-traveler