Window

Hated them kinds of places.  Faded pink flakes clingin’ to the walls, windows painted shut, cactuses linin’ every wall and dead weeds pokin’ out of the cracked asphalt.  All the same.  Even the shiny-domed guys with the horseshoe ‘do at the front desk seemed to be at every one of these roach stops.  Some franchise they got goin’.

I stepped up and you’d think a few footsteps on the shag’d at least get a glance and an “evenin’” or somethin’.  It took a few finger taps on the desk to get his face out of the paper.

“Can I help ya?”

“Evenin’.  I’m lookin’ for someone.”  So I showed him her photo like I’d shown every clerk and gas flunky in the few hundred miles between here and Hawthorne.  I’d picked the best one I could find in that album she was keepin’.  In it she’s wearin’ the necklace I gave her for her birthday last year, showin’ off that smirk that she calls a smile.  I always pretended that it was irksome but then I think she smiled that way just so I could play at getting irked.  Unspoken sort of joke.

I flipped the picture to show the guy, held it just above the counter. Boy did he eyeball the photo real good.  Damn horndog.

“Pretty girl.”

“Hey buddy, you seen her or what?”

Another few seconds and just shy of me smackin’ him on his shiny dome and he looked up again.

“Who’re you?”

Goddamn wise guys can never answer a question straight.

“Listen, just have you seen her or ain’t you?”

“Well, I ain’t just gonna say I seen somebody less I know why someone’s lookin’.  All I know you’re lookin’ to trouble this girl.”

Christ!  I couldn’t get any straight answers from no one.

“Look here mister.  This is my girlfriend, and I’m lookin’ for her because she’s missin’.  You seen her or not?”

He eyeballed me again, looked at the photo on the counter again, then shook his jowls.

“Sorry, son. I ain’t seen this girl.  You called the police?”

“Yea.  Thanks.”  Tucked the photo back into my shirt pocket and thanked him like I’d been doin’ for damn near a month.  Thankin’ people for nothin’.

Back out into that damn heat.  It kills me that people livin’ out in that hole could survive it.  I mean I’d expected to see at least the old folks droppin’ flat to the ground.  Like a damn furnace.  Don’t know why anyone’d want to come out and see that shabby joint much less some hole.  Death Valley.  The name alone tells you to stay the hell out.

I was back in a familiar place.  Days of lookin’, askin’, wanderin’.  No leads, no clues, no nothin’.  I’d gotten all the way here to Ridgecrest without as much as someone sayin’ she looked familiar.  It’s like she disappeared soon as she stepped out of the county.  Not a trace of her since the report from that Janey friend of hers that Olive had talked about goin’ to see that Death Valley desert.  Just a weekend trip.  The police heard it same as the rest of us, but a month on and they’d hardly done a damn thing.  Checkin’ with stations, detectives meetin’ with her folks, meetin’ with her friends, meetin’ with themselves.  Meetin’ and talkin’ their goddamn ears and mouths off.  Not doin’ a damn thing is what they were doin’.  Even Olive’s pop was fine with lettin’ them do their job and just spent all his time makin’ sure her ma stopped worryin’.  I mean I get it, but he should’ve been the one stoppin’ Olive from goin’ on some goddamn trip by herself.  I mean, Christ, by herself!  A girl drivin’ around some backwater holes on her own.  I mean, God, it’s great that she ain’t the sit at home type, and we had some great times wanderin’ the coast or drivin’ all up and down La Brea lookin’ for weird joints, back before I went off to college.  But she shouldn’t have been doin’ that stuff alone, not Olive.  What’d anyone expect but the worst.  That’s where I was most times.  Thinkin’ of where she was, where she could be, and still just hopin’ she was okay.

Drivin’ up the main drag that I’d already spent the day gettin’ familiar with and figured it was time to stop for the day.  Gone damn near to the valley itself and people were tellin’ me that there wasn’t much else out there except for the base and a whole lot of rocks and sand.  Look for a person that could’ve gotten lost out there and you may as well’ve been lookin’ for a needle in that damn sand.

Didn’t matter anyway. She was my girl. I’d search this entire planet for my Olive.

Drivin’ up the avenue I looked around for a place that wasn’t some Bates Motel lookin’ dive.  I’d heard that flick was based on some real life stuff over in them okie states.   Crazies.

I kept on drivin’ up until I was damn near outside the town. A place called Desert Jewel Inn looked good, and didn’t have some damn screwy rates. It was the last place before a whole lot of dark horizon. Seemed kind of empty but it was pretty damn late and I was feelin’ tired as all hell.  Pulled in and walked up to the front desk and I had to shake my head.  I’m tellin’ you I get the crazies, it’s my lot in life.

Behind that desk, and I couldn’t make this up, was a big, and I mean large, lady in one of them big wide dresses with yellow and purple flowers all over it.  Over that she had on this gold-type vest with a good half dozen pockets runnin’ down the front of each side over that big bosom under her chin, and inside each of them pockets a different colored bird feather.  Her face and neck were all brown and leathery lookin’ except where the skin turned white and spotty right around the chest.  The Arabian hat on her head shook a bit when she turned to me. She’d been watchin’ some small television set perched up next to the phone.

Couldn’t make this up, I swear.  Figured that if she was a psycho she prob’ly wouldn’t be able to catch no one.  But like I said, I was just tired as hell.

“Evenin’, ma’am.  I’d like a room.”

She turned to me and squinted a bit before reachin’ for some pair of movie star glasses with them pointy ends.  Or whatever they’re called, I’ve seen that Monroe with them. All the girls wore them.

Not Olive, though. Not them big, pretty eyes.

She said, “You like room?  Which room is that?” A ruski.

“Not any particular cabin.  Just somethin’ for the night.”

She squinted again with the glasses on and looked me over, givin’ me another dose of the old eyeball.  How many times did I have to get funny looks in that town?  Jesus.

“You sure you want room here?”

“Yea, alright.”  Well I was agitated.  Crazy old lady.

“Listen, if there’s no rooms I’ll—”

“No, fine, fine.  If you are sure then I have many rooms.  I have many rooms.”  She reached under the desk and pulled out a register, openin’ it somewhere at the end.  Pages were yellowed and dirty.

“You sign here.  Ten dollars.”

“What?  Why do I have to pay now?”

“Here, you pay first.  Now sign here, please.”

I looked at that book.  They had lots of names, and must’ve been here a while I guess given I was signin’ damn near the end, but none of the dates were close.  It seemed like a person every few weeks was checkin’ in, one at a time.  Didn’t seem peculiar then, though it should’ve, then maybe I’d have walked the hell out of there quick as I could.

But I was lookin’ for Olive. It’s all that mattered.  I signed, and gave her ten bucks.  I was tired.

I had a stupid question, and I knew the answer, but it had to be asked. “Your rooms have air conditioners?”

She raised her eyebrow.  What did I think?

She looked back at the wall behind her and opened a small cabinet to reveal a complete collection of keys, all brownish lookin’ and kind of dingy.  On the right side, though, was a row of little hooks with a single little wooden tag hangin’ on the end of each one.  Had some sort of number on them but just as they were gettin’ my attention the lady pulled out a key and shut the cabinet.

“You are room twelve,” she glanced down at the ledger,  “Mister Richard Olson.”

“And you, ma’am?”

She stepped, sort of waddled I suppose, out from behind the counter and walked toward the door, sayin’, “I am Mrs. Otkupshchikov.  Follow me, please.”

“That’s a mouthful of a name, ain’t it?”

She glared at me then stepped out of the door, so I followed.  No way I was goin’ to pronounce that name correctly is all I’m sayin’.

The cabins were lined up on two sides, and down the middle was just the empty space for parkin’ or drivin’ up.  There weren’t any lines or nothin’ painted on the ground, and when I drove up I’d just parked right in the middle near the office.  There were also two large palm trees sort of sittin’ over the entrance on either side, showin’ some of them late day shadows that make things out to be bigger than life itself.

She led me to the left side, the odd numbered doors, and we walked away from the office toward the entrance.  The white walls were sort of grayed now, but not stained or dirty, which was strange since it seemed like nothin’ out here could be clean of dust.  Each door was also real old lookin’ and the bare wood showed like it’d been through a hell of a lot of sunburns.  Counted off the doors as we walked.  There was one and three, each kind of next to each other like the rooms were mirror opposites, and then five and seven also paired up, then nine at the end, and then nothin’.  Or just a blank gray wall in any case.  I looked across the other side of the motel and sure enough there was a twelve.

I wanted to ask her about it, but didn’t know how without sayin’, “hey lady”, which seemed kind of a rude thing to do, even out in that dump.

“Sorry, can you pronounce your name for me one more time?”

She stopped again and this time shrugged her broad, lumpy shoulders.

“Are we friends?  You find need to say my name properly because you want to be friendly?”

“Listen,” I told her.  “No offense meant, sorry.  Just wanted to pronounce your name right.”

She sniffed angrily and kept walkin’ until we got to door nine.

“This is your room.  Here is key, and only key so do not lose.”

She shoved it at me and I took it. She started to turn back toward the office, but then she stopped and said, “You just call me Ot.”

“Thank you, ma’am.  Can I ask you somethin’, Ot?”

Boy she sure was anxious to get back, but she paused so that I could ask.

“Yes, yes, what?”

“I hope you don’t mind my askin’, but I noticed and…”, and I couldn’t finish askin’, stupid question as it was.  What business was it of mine?

“Never mind.  Sorry, thank you.”

She sniffed again—twice—then waddled back to the office.  Her gold vest kind of shimmered on and off as sunset hit the different folds in the cloth.

I started to unlock the door then, just to get the lay of the place before bringin’ in my bag, but I got curious about that blank wall.  I walked over and it seemed about the amount of space that the front of any of the other rooms took up, but nothin’.  No door, no hint of a door, jack squat.  I sort of surveyed it and just as I was goin’ to go open my door and enter the room, I caught sight of it.  Just like in the cabinet in the office, there was a hook.  Small one, made of brass.  Next to the hook, and I mean so close that you’d miss it if you were lookin’ at it from that angle, was some sort of hole, with a little glass piece on the end of it. Kind of like them peep holes that doors got, just smaller.  I walked over and looked at it, and got the first of them funny gut feelings.  I’d been drivin’ all over the desert, meetin’ all kinds of strange folks, but I’d never had a gut shot like that.  Just felt sort of like it was wrong.  I was lookin’ in the wrong place.  I should’nt have been lookin’ there.

It scared me a little, not that I’d tell no one.  But I had to see, you know?  I had to look in.  So I walked up kind of close and leaned in.  At first it was black, pitch black.  Not a thing.  I smiled a bit and tried to shake off that funny feelin’ because, hell, it was all stupid.  Crazy flower dress wearin’ ruskies and missin’ doors.  Too out there for me, man.

I was about to walk back to my door when the darkness inside the hole kind of lit up.  Like lightnin’, real quick and gone just like that.  But I swear on a Bible, I’d seen her.  It was so quick that I couldn’t really figure out what I’d seen until later, but it was her, sittin’ in a clear pool of water, arms wrapped around herself.  She was there. It was Olive. I felt how alone she’d been. I felt like dyin’

When I woke up, I was lyin’ here in this sand and the sun was comin’ up. That feelin’ of death was still in me, in a place in my head. Some place I hadn’t needed to think about.

Now I just want some water and a map. Olive’s here and she won’t be alone no more. The one who’s going to tell me where to start is prob’ly about up for the mornin’ and puttin’ on her gold vest.

plastic table

We were seated at a white plastic table. It had a big green umbrella posted right in the center and hovering over us, keeping moonlight out. It had begun to cool down after yet another unexpectedly warm day. I undoubtedly had a fine sheen to my forehead. There’d been too many glasses of beer (one passed around like a joint at some point). We discussed Obama’s forthcoming win as the lesser of two evils, or rather one evil and one fucking insane possibility of regressing to the most ridiculous rhetoric and policies I’ve heard in my lifetime. There was talk of period sex versus anal sex, and even those who were grossed out by talk of blood or shit had to admit one might be better than the other. We discussed fetishes and my lengthy monologue about the dangers of always going one step further, one rung higher, and why sexual satisfaction is the cornerstone of healthy adult relations, regardless of the extremity of said satisfaction. We discussed everything because I encourage it. No one wants to go too far, so I do.

Then we discussed love as it pertains to selecting a mate. It jumped back and forth across the table while I sat quietly and stared at the cars driving along the nearby street. It annoyed me that we’d selected that bar and that table, in a place less intimate than I like. We could see young couples pushing strollers just a dozen feet away.

I took a moment.

Someone encouraged me, finally. “You had a lot to say about girls who get off on violence. Nothing on love?”

I had a foolishly sophomoric thought just then: they wouldn’t understand. But, in the spirit of open communication, I spoke up.

“I don’t know. Love is fucked up and I feel I need it too much sometimes, so I never give it. Love is like a hunger. It’s like I want to eat every part of you, the feet and the eyes and the hair, and even the organs, even though I don’t like them. I want everything. Once I’m there, I don’t hesitate. I don’t understand how it builds up. For me, it starts here, when it seems like it should start down here, when it starts at all. It’s no different from fucking. I want and I take. Then, sometimes, I’m a stone.”

There was an awkward silence, typical after some of the things I say. Awkward for them, anyway. I was watching the neon lights of the plumbing store across the street. A wrench smiled at me.

“Anyway, I’m a fucked up case. What’re you gonna do?”

Someone laughed, finally, and said something. I made note of their reactions. I thought I might someday write about something like this. It would have been nice to remember the end of it.

plastic table

We were seated at a white plastic table. It had a big green umbrella posted right in the center and hovering over us, keeping moonlight out. It had begun to cool down after yet another unexpectedly warm day. I undoubtedly had a fine sheen to my forehead. There’d been too many glasses of beer (one passed around like a joint at some point). We discussed Obama’s forthcoming win as the lesser of two evils, or rather one evil and one fucking insane possibility of regressing to the most ridiculous rhetoric and policies I’ve heard in my lifetime. There was talk of period sex versus anal sex, and even those who were grossed out by talk of blood or shit had to admit one might be better than the other. We discussed fetishes and my lengthy monologue about the dangers of always going one step further, one rung higher, and why sexual satisfaction is the cornerstone of healthy adult relations, regardless of the extremity of said satisfaction. We discussed everything because I encourage it. No one wants to go too far, so I do.

Then we discussed love as it pertains to selecting a mate. It jumped back and forth across the table while I sat quietly and stared at the cars driving along the nearby street. It annoyed me that we’d selected that bar and that table, in a place less intimate than I like. We could see young couples pushing strollers just a dozen feet away.

I took a moment.

Someone encouraged me, finally. “You had a lot to say about girls who get off on violence. Nothing on love?”

I had a foolishly sophomoric thought just then: they wouldn’t understand. But, in the spirit of open communication, I spoke up.

“I don’t know. Love is fucked up and I feel I need it too much sometimes, so I never give it. Love is like a hunger. It’s like I want to eat every part of you, the feet and the eyes and the hair, and even the organs, even though I don’t like them. I want everything. Once I’m there, I don’t hesitate. I don’t understand how it builds up. For me, it starts here, when it seems like it should start down here, when it starts at all. It’s no different from fucking. I want and I take. Then, sometimes, I’m a stone.”

There was an awkward silence, typical after some of the things I say. Awkward for them, anyway. I was watching the neon lights of the plumbing store across the street. A wrench smiled at me.

“Anyway, I’m a fucked up case. What’re you gonna do?”

Someone laughed, finally, and said something. I made note of their reactions. I thought I might someday write about something like this. It would have been nice to remember the end of it.

Vibration

Stillborn and never to be, I awoke in a silence, not alone. The bones in the ends of my fingers vibrated, eager to begin their lives independent of me. I rose my eyes. The room, green in complexion, smiled, and invited me to stand. My hands guided me up and pulled me toward the corner leg of the long dining table beside me.

“Hello,” as quietly as possible, as if to no one but the backs of my teeth, tongue, and roof of my mouth. The walls, green as velvet, absorbed it all. I lay and felt the desire to sob, but resisted, urged on by reality. This was not this place. I was not here. Grumbling, I stood.

The light from the outside broke through the seams along the edges of the thick curtains. I feared what I might find and left them to their task. My fingers rose and moved the hair from my face, over my forehead, left to lie along the crest of my skull where it gathered, waiting for the time to fall and lie over my face again. It was not cold nor hot. My skin felt dry. I remembered a rain I never felt but once considered in my rush to fate. My fingers urged me forward, to the small table beside the door.

“I know,” I said. They ceased to vibrate in acknowledgement.

I padded along the carpet. The legs I used led to this, and of this came my long ago realization. I would be in this room regardless of what I followed or who I became. Born to little and made to feel like less. This was where it led me. My fingers awoke, sensing loss of purpose. I continued to the table. Among the bills and catelogs I found a string, red as the sunset that witnessed me bare as the angels, on the eve of my time here. I sat in a field, felt the grasses lick at the invisible hair on my hips. I played with a thimble I had found on the road, where I had left my car. I ran it along my arm, felt its gritty surface lightly scrape my skin.

“It’s only growing pains. I know it’s nothing more. I tried, I think, I did. It was so trying. But, this is alright. I don’t want to stay here anymore.” I tied the string around the tip of each of my fingers, as tightly as I could. When I was finished, I they looked like berries held together by a crimson web.

I looked back at the room. It was noiser now. I could hear spiders hiding in the corners, spinning falsehoods that they used to catch a meal. There was heavy breathing. The velvet walls triggered a feeling of confinement. It felt like a basement a long time ago. It felt like a basement I should never have been inside of. It felt like fat, greedy fingers, and I stopped, just stopped, because it did not matter. This room was not a basement. No one else was here.

I approached the darkened door, outlined on all sides by a lightness, like the curtains. My hair began to fall again. Fearing little and knowing that it would all be gone, I opened the door and stepped outside. I was in the field again. Each step away from the room was a loss of another memory, one moment at a time. It was strange to lose what can seemingly never be lost. I walked further still. There was no guidance, nor encouraging come hither. I lumbered forward into the space that was not the room, wandering about, caught in the daze of some parhelic distraction.

Vibration

Stillborn and never to be, I awoke in a silence, not alone. The bones in the ends of my fingers vibrated, eager to begin their lives independent of me. I rose my eyes. The room, green in complexion, smiled, and invited me to stand. My hands guided me up and pulled me toward the corner leg of the long dining table beside me.

“Hello,” as quietly as possible, as if to no one but the backs of my teeth, tongue, and roof of my mouth. The walls, green as velvet, absorbed it all. I lay and felt the desire to sob, but resisted, urged on by reality. This was not this place. I was not here. Grumbling, I stood.

The light from the outside broke through the seams along the edges of the thick curtains. I feared what I might find and left them to their task. My fingers rose and moved the hair from my face, over my forehead, left to lie along the crest of my skull where it gathered, waiting for the time to fall and lie over my face again. It was not cold nor hot. My skin felt dry. I remembered a rain I never felt but once considered in my rush to fate. My fingers urged me forward, to the small table beside the door.

“I know,” I said. They ceased to vibrate in acknowledgement.

I padded along the carpet. The legs I used led to this, and of this came my long ago realization. I would be in this room regardless of what I followed or who I became. Born to little and made to feel like less. This was where it led me. My fingers awoke, sensing loss of purpose. I continued to the table. Among the bills and catelogs I found a string, red as the sunset that witnessed me bare as the angels, on the eve of my time here. I sat in a field, felt the grasses lick at the invisible hair on my hips. I played with a thimble I had found on the road, where I had left my car. I ran it along my arm, felt its gritty surface lightly scrape my skin.

“It’s only growing pains. I know it’s nothing more. I tried, I think, I did. It was so trying. But, this is alright. I don’t want to stay here anymore.” I tied the string around the tip of each of my fingers, as tightly as I could. When I was finished, I they looked like berries held together by a crimson web.

I looked back at the room. It was noiser now. I could hear spiders hiding in the corners, spinning falsehoods that they used to catch a meal. There was heavy breathing. The velvet walls triggered a feeling of confinement. It felt like a basement a long time ago. It felt like a basement I should never have been inside of. It felt like fat, greedy fingers, and I stopped, just stopped, because it did not matter. This room was not a basement. No one else was here.

I approached the darkened door, outlined on all sides by a lightness, like the curtains. My hair began to fall again. Fearing little and knowing that it would all be gone, I opened the door and stepped outside. I was in the field again. Each step away from the room was a loss of another memory, one moment at a time. It was strange to lose what can seemingly never be lost. I walked further still. There was no guidance, nor encouraging come hither. I lumbered forward into the space that was not the room, wandering about, caught in the daze of some parhelic distraction.

Glen

It’s this. This, fucking ivory chopsticks. Here. Take them. Alright, yes, now hold one in each hand. Hold them and let’s think about this, alright? Let’s think about this because, hey, this isn’t going to be the worst moment in your life. I mean, there’s going to be some really terrible shit. Christ, I don’t want any of it for you. Put down one chopstick. There, on the table. Don’t waste time. It’s this moment here when—stop fucking moving—when we realize the hazard of being in the dark. You can lean against the wall. Do you remember Kunta Kinte? Can you live without a foot? I don’t know, don’t ask. Put that other chopstick in your hair and let’s us take a walk. I don’t feel like it. No, just leave my shoes there and come on. The other day, in line at the gas station, I saw an old buddy of mine. Glen, you won’t remember him. You were drunk that last time. I knew him from way back, you know? He whipped his dick out once when we were walking home from school. He did it to show some girls. Twelve, probably. Couldn’t have been anything more than baby dick. He was buying Zig-Zags. Those real big ones. He said he divorced already. Fucking kids. No one knows. You’re shivering but give me a minute here on the curb before we go on. It’s real dark, isn’t it? Now give me that chopstick. Now, see this carving? I don’t know what it means. But, think about this: someone fucking did it. Someone carved this net-looking thing into the chopstick. That’s alright. Here, just take this and throw it out there as hard as you can. Do it. Wait, wait. Don’t throw like you’re aiming. Just pull your arm back, real far. Alright, then throw it like you’re not going to do it anymore. Yeah, like that. I know it feels fucking great. That’s the oxygen in your blood. It’s the muscles you use to hold onto me. Let’s go back now and remember there’s another one. It’s right there where you left it.

Glen

It’s this. This, fucking ivory chopsticks. Here. Take them. Alright, yes, now hold one in each hand. Hold them and let’s think about this, alright? Let’s think about this because, hey, this isn’t going to be the worst moment in your life. I mean, there’s going to be some really terrible shit. Christ, I don’t want any of it for you. Put down one chopstick. There, on the table. Don’t waste time. It’s this moment here when—stop fucking moving—when we realize the hazard of being in the dark. You can lean against the wall. Do you remember Kunta Kinte? Can you live without a foot? I don’t know, don’t ask. Put that other chopstick in your hair and let’s us take a walk. I don’t feel like it. No, just leave my shoes there and come on. The other day, in line at the gas station, I saw an old buddy of mine. Glen, you won’t remember him. You were drunk that last time. I knew him from way back, you know? He whipped his dick out once when we were walking home from school. He did it to show some girls. Twelve, probably. Couldn’t have been anything more than baby dick. He was buying Zig-Zags. Those real big ones. He said he divorced already. Fucking kids. No one knows. You’re shivering but give me a minute here on the curb before we go on. It’s real dark, isn’t it? Now give me that chopstick. Now, see this carving? I don’t know what it means. But, think about this: someone fucking did it. Someone carved this net-looking thing into the chopstick. That’s alright. Here, just take this and throw it out there as hard as you can. Do it. Wait, wait. Don’t throw like you’re aiming. Just pull your arm back, real far. Alright, then throw it like you’re not going to do it anymore. Yeah, like that. I know it feels fucking great. That’s the oxygen in your blood. It’s the muscles you use to hold onto me. Let’s go back now and remember there’s another one. It’s right there where you left it.

Four Times, This Guy

The first time is when we meet in the bar by the power station where you can hear them buzzing during a smoke. The gravestones sit in the dark lot across the highway and the jazz is terrible. Inside it’s people in their thirties ready to give up, and then further along to the ones who worry about comfortable living. The fog rolls into hills of this phantom zone between San Francisco and who knows what the hell down there. He sees me alone, my mistake. When he offers himself like a boy raised on gruel I politely accept. He kisses my shoulder after the jazzies are gone and we’re sliding on a wet fender. He fucks like five years ago. It feels good in that kind of way.

When it’s supposed to be a memory he finds me again. I work the customer service counter at Ross a month or more after that. Again, my mistake. He grins and I don’t know. He tells me hello and I still don’t, I need help. It’s not busy and I wish and pray for a tracksuit with a pleather purse to come my way. You’re someone I know, but he uses my name. Name remembering frightens me. He tells me he didn’t get my number when I didn’t give it. It’s, I don’t. Here. He says okay, me. Nice to see you again. He says nice. I don’t. It’s over quickly and it’s more dead than before him. I go home and suck a pipe until it feels less dead even if it’s not. Then it’s coffee at a special bookstore he told me to drive to. Special for a Barnes and Noble might mean two floors.

We ride the escalators together. He never asks me if I like books even if I do. He likes The Catcher in Rye. I think it’s horrible and really childish. Polls don’t support me but I tell him it’s in my opinion. It’s a debate he wants. I don’t want to. He moves hair behind my ear and now I know this it. This poor person. He’s too deep in everything. The last time is when we’re sitting on this wooden bench at the mall next to the Barnes and Noble. He’s unhappy when I tell him. He doesn’t even try to keep himself inflated. He stares at the water and the tall potted palms on the four corners of the tile pool. The waxy floor is a kind of vinyl they can lay out like carpet. It’s white and beige spotted with little black streaks that will never come out. The sun is hanging down in strips. This is a life I could do without while he keeps his sad face at the pool. I tell him it’s just pennies in a well.

Four Times, This Guy

The first time is when we meet in the bar by the power station where you can hear them buzzing during a smoke. The gravestones sit in the dark lot across the highway and the jazz is terrible. Inside it’s people in their thirties ready to give up, and then further along to the ones who worry about comfortable living. The fog rolls into hills of this phantom zone between San Francisco and who knows what the hell down there. He sees me alone, my mistake. When he offers himself like a boy raised on gruel I politely accept. He kisses my shoulder after the jazzies are gone and we’re sliding on a wet fender. He fucks like five years ago. It feels good in that kind of way.

When it’s supposed to be a memory he finds me again. I work the customer service counter at Ross a month or more after that. Again, my mistake. He grins and I don’t know. He tells me hello and I still don’t, I need help. It’s not busy and I wish and pray for a tracksuit with a pleather purse to come my way. You’re someone I know, but he uses my name. Name remembering frightens me. He tells me he didn’t get my number when I didn’t give it. It’s, I don’t. Here. He says okay, me. Nice to see you again. He says nice. I don’t. It’s over quickly and it’s more dead than before him. I go home and suck a pipe until it feels less dead even if it’s not. Then it’s coffee at a special bookstore he told me to drive to. Special for a Barnes and Noble might mean two floors.

We ride the escalators together. He never asks me if I like books even if I do. He likes The Catcher in Rye. I think it’s horrible and really childish. Polls don’t support me but I tell him it’s in my opinion. It’s a debate he wants. I don’t want to. He moves hair behind my ear and now I know this it. This poor person. He’s too deep in everything. The last time is when we’re sitting on this wooden bench at the mall next to the Barnes and Noble. He’s unhappy when I tell him. He doesn’t even try to keep himself inflated. He stares at the water and the tall potted palms on the four corners of the tile pool. The waxy floor is a kind of vinyl they can lay out like carpet. It’s white and beige spotted with little black streaks that will never come out. The sun is hanging down in strips. This is a life I could do without while he keeps his sad face at the pool. I tell him it’s just pennies in a well.

Aisle

The crate beneath me trembled. I was too heavy, but God, I needed to rest. My feet were killing me. I’d been walking for weeks, sleeping in alleys and doorways along the way. My mind was as burned out as back of my neck. I could have chosen the fall or spring to set out, but my patience had worn thin. I needed to do it now.

The ledge above me would only keep the sun off of me for another hour. I took a pull of my flask and leaned back against the brick. It felt like the back of an oven. It took a few moments for the warm whiskey to settle me swimming.

I remembered her face. She was only three years and four months old when I left her and her momma. Back then her hair was short, almost like a boy’s. The way her momma dressed her, in pants and all, she may as well have been. I never liked what Norma’d been doing with my baby. She didn’t want a kid like I did. She wanted something to distract her cause I sure as hell wasn’t enough. Always angry, always fishing but never catching. Can’t live with a woman like that. It’s just not possible.

But I know, alright? I know I shouldn’t have left my baby with her. I’m making up for that now, even if I die doing it. Lord gives every man the choice of penitence.

There’d be another long walk on Highway 20 and then no more. Almost home.

I got to thinking about what I’d said when I left.

You crazy? What makes you think you’re keeping her? She’s mine, you crazy bitch. I take what’s mine.

No job. Barely enough to get out and even look for work. I never should’ve left. I would’ve had to live with that crazy woman, but by God, I’d have her. I’d have her.

I needed one more thing. So I got up, seeing as the sun was on me anyway, and got to walking. My jeans were dusty, but I didn’t want to spend on laundry. I probably smelled, too, but I couldn’t tell. I needed the one more thing before I got going. My baby needed them.

I walked into a supermarket and found a nice corner where no one’d see me. Someplace cool. God, that cool after that heat. I wrapped my hands around the metal poles of a Wonderbread stand and held on like the plane was going down. It was the feeling of forgiveness on my skin. Things were going to be good real soon. They were going to be so good. I mean, really, people change with time. I’d been doing my penitence. Maybe Norma’d gotten some sense in her head. She’d treat me right, like her man and the daddy of her baby. She wouldn’t keep me away from her and would call the lawyers and stop it all. We’d be happy. I felt it in my fingers.

Cookies and crackers were in aisle 6. I walked up on one side and looked at all the boxes and bags. They all shined under the lights, but none of them were right. I walked along the other side and found a lot more I didn’t need. They must have had them somewhere else.

I found someone, a redhead about high school age. She was stacking soda bottles.

“Excuse me, miss?”

She looked up at me and made a kind of nose wince. Her nametag said Heather. “Yes how can I help you,”  without so much as a pause.

“Well, I’m looking for animal crackers. I can’t see them over with the others.”

This Heather looked at me like I was a picture, studying features and things. Her face was as red as raw meat.

I finally asked what she was looking at.

“We don’t have animal crackers here.”

“Really?”

“Yup, Sorry.”

“Well, alright then. Thanks.”

That didn’t seem strange, at first. Then the other big store in town didn’t have them either.

“Not a one?” I asked.

Not one damn box.

I figured it’s a small place. Maybe they just had no use for them. I’d have to pick them up in Idaho Falls instead.

The walk out of town led me to an island just before the exit out onto the highway. It was empty, and they had a market. It couldn’t hurt.

Inside was a big market and one lonesome old Chinese man, or Korean. He was sitting in a card table chair.

Before I even looked I just asked him.

“Oh, I’m so sorry. They don’t make those any more.”

“What?”

“They don’t make animal crackers anymore. They’re gone.”

I didn’t understand. “No, no, I know they still make them. They always make animal crackers.”

“Not always.” His hand crept across the counter, finger over finger the way a spider walks. I glanced down and winced at the sight of his dirty fingernails. They were coated in a green liquid. Then he lifted it and pointed. “They don’t make them for you, mister.”

“What is this?” I looked around, searching for a camera or hint of some trickery. As I backed away he stood and kept his pointing finger on me.

“You,” he said. “You may not have animal crackers. You do not deserve animal crackers.”

“Fucking hell…” I didn’t know. I had nothing to say. I was walking out when he reached under the counter. I thought he might have been going for a gun or something but he came up with what you’d expect after all that.

“You do not deserve this.”

He had a small red box sitting on the glass, on top of the taped lottery tickets. The string handle was pulled loose. Right there, like they were calling to me. I could see a lion, bear, gorilla, and elephant, kind of blurry from being on the front of a crusty old box for so long. All I had to do was go over and take it, and I wanted to like it was all I had to do. It was simple. It was right there and it was as simple as walking to it.