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Home›Fiction›Still in Transit

Still in Transit

By Kaylee Molina
June 22, 2026
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a group of faceless white mannequins standing and facing different ways.
Snag Eun Park / Pixabay
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Each night when the lights went out and the music ended, the four mannequins in the front window began their most productive hour. Oddly enough, they couldn’t move or show facial expressions, but they were excellent talkers. After the security gate rattled down, they had a very serious discussion about the day. The one in the sequin cocktail dress channeled a couturier as it criticized customer fashion choices with hushed horror.

“The trend is orange. Not burned sienna. Not persimmon. Straight orange!” the couture crusader spat in disgust. “I won’t survive this year.”

The athlete in the gym clothes tailed ‘near collision with toddlers’ like sports statistics.

“Avoided twins today,” the athletic gloated. “It’s not just natural talent, you know. It’s training.”

In the meantime, the philosopher in a yellow cardigan, thinking deeply, examined the seasonal colors as if they were creating quarterly reports for the shop.

“Orange is a summer color. It’s warm and bold,” defended the philosopher. “Complements coral pink to emulate a heatwave.”

The zen hipster in the leather jacket offered dry commentary on humanity at large.

“Heatwave? We don’t even have pores. Let the walkers worry about tan and SPF.”

As they settled into their routine of gossip and imaginary union negotiations, someone banged open the back door, and many footsteps echoed across the tile. The sequined mannequin stopped mid-gasp, and the zen hipster swallowed the rest of a sarcastic remark. Their immobility was predictable, yet somehow amplified. They’d never been apprehended before, nor would they now. The walkers’ panic would be the least of their worries if faceless mannequins were caught chatting. They would expect fashion advice. Hard pass.

A state of low, suspended awareness took the place of their sleep. By the time the heavy footsteps reached them, they were pristine once more. They were glossy, vacant, and possessed the serene confidence of creatures who had never contemplated toppling their display stands.

Worker hands reached out and pulled each mannequin down from the window display, one by one. They transported them through the store, to the storage room. Workers covered each mannequin with a clear plastic bag and placed them into the back of a moving truck. As the truck pulled out onto the frontage road, the mannequins sat silent in the darkness and dust of the cargo area.

The athlete broke first.

“Alright,” he said sharply, as if addressing a mission briefing, “when those doors open, we establish dominance. Quick formation. Confuse them with asymmetry.”

“There is no formation,” the philosopher replied calmly. “Ultimately, we’re bolted into aesthetic poses.”

“Of course, that’s what they want you to think,” the athlete insisted.

The couture crusader let out a trembling sigh. “We’re being kidnapped and transported,” they whispered. “Like… valuable artifacts. Or evidence. Or doomed treasures.”

“We are literally inventory,” the philosopher corrected.

As the van continued to its destination, the conversation paused when it hit a bump. All four of them swayed in unison.

Then, from the back of the truck, the zen hipster suddenly spoke, its voice dry with resignation.

“Oh, good,” he deadpanned as the plastic rustled around him and the engine hummed louder beneath them, “you’re all awake. Now we can panic together.”

“We’re not panicking,” the philosopher said.

“I think I’m having an anxiety attack,” the couture crusader said. “I can’t breathe!”

“None of us are breathing,” the zen hispter said. “Our faces don’t have any holes for hyperventilation.”

As the vehicle made a sharp turn, they swayed again. The athlete fell forward and hit its face on the metal floor with a sharp bang.

“I’m fine. This is good. Just testing the structural integrity of the vehicle,” the athlete said.

“Bold strategy,” the zen hipster said.

Concerned, the couture crusader asked, “What if we’re crossing state lines?”

“It’s possible, but we don’t know that,”came the philosopher’s voice, smooth and unhurried.

“I can feel it,” the couture crusader responded still poised in posture expect for the distress in their tone.

“Okay, everyone, quiet down. I think we’re stopping,” the zen hipster shushed.

The truck screeched to a halt. The mannequins listened as the truck tilted with the movement of its front end and the doors slammed shut.

“What’s happening?” the athlete asked, voice steadfast but taut.

“This is it. We’re done for,” the couture crusader cried.

“Will you shut up? We don’t even know what we’re in for,” the zen hipster snapped, still unmoving but composure broken by tone.

“I think the plastic wrap is for protective purposes,” the philosopher added, the certitude hanging in the air.

“Protect us from what? Auction lights?” the couture crusader shrilled.

“Nobody auctions mannequins,” the zen hipster sighed.

At that moment, it grasped why the walkers rolled their eyes.

“You don’t know that. I have excellent bone structure,” the couture crusader said.

“Except we don’t have bones!” the zen hipster argued.

“We all have good structures. That’s how we’re made,” the philosopher said.

An argument was about to erupt, but the screech of the cargo door latch silenced them.

Mannequins were lifted from the truck into a bright, humming backroom by the workers. The sway of the road vanished, replaced by dim fluorescent stillness and the sterile smell of tape, cardboard, and overworked ambition.

The stockroom, a cramped and chaotic space filled with marked boxes and rows of the same clothes, opened into a glass doorway that felt like a significant discovery. After the dim, airless darkness of the moving truck, the doorway seemed less like an entrance and more like a threshold into another world. The front window was cold with air conditioning that felt cleaner and cooler with faint notes of perfume and new fabric. The bright glare of nighttime street lamps poured in through sparkling windows.

The workers set them into position with careful hands, turning and angling them into something resembling intention. Subsequently, the plastic was removed.

One man snapped a measuring tape open. He leaned in, casual and practiced, as though he’d done this before. “Adjust the athletic figure a little, as if it’s in the middle of a run.”

They all departed after a few more adjustments. A pause followed, the kind that only exists when no one can blink.

“This is just an observation: I heard the walkers mention ‘summer launch’,” the philosopher noted.

“Summer…as in…the season?” the couture crusader piped.

The athlete hesitated. “This means no extraction protocol, correct?”

The zen hipster sighed. “We’ve been transported to a different store.”

Silence.

“Logistic transfer,” the philosopher said.

“Once more, the conspiracy didn’t meet the hype,” the zen hipster said.

It was then the athlete straightened in spirit, if not in body. “Fine. New plan.”

Something in the athlete reset. Settling into a calm, deliberate resolve.

“We don’t need a plan,” the zen hipster replied.

“We’re in a new store. That counts as a strategic opportunity,” the athlete stressed.

“Because we are stationary assets experiencing geographic redistribution,” the philosopher added.

With that in mind, the couture crusader exhaled metaphorically. “I hate retail.”

After closing, the outside world, with its dark streets and neon signs, passed by. People saw their quiet as simple and their stillness as empty, unaware of the intense inner turmoil contained with something that remained so outwardly unchanged.

 


Editor: Lucy Cafiero

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Kaylee Molina

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Latest Comments

  • LC Ahl (Lucy)
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    May 4, 2026
    Great story Scarlett! Excellent delivery!

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    I loved this series. You have a gift for world building!

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    April 14, 2026
    Thank you very much for your kind words, Derrick

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    Thank you so much for visiting my poem here at CHW, Beth

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    Another fine combination

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