Breadcrumb #42

MADELEINE HARRINGTON

Shelby cried underwater. She treaded in the deep end and sank beneath the surface slowly so that the pine-tree horizon shrunk while the blackness grew right before her eyes. She cried into her goggles, coming up for air only to pour out the sad saltwater globs onto the surface of the lake and watch them swim away from her.

     The counselors noticed this, and one day after Free Swim, they pulled her aside to ask if she would want her mother to send new goggles, since the ones she had now must obviously be cracked. Shelby, green foam noodle in hand, white bathing cap still on head, shorts already high on her waist so that a round stain of lake water shone between her pudgy legs, shook her head conclusively.

     “These goggles are a family heirloom,” she said in a way that made it sound obviously untrue, yet was also hiding a very large truth beneath it. 

     The counselors nodded and took the noodle from Shelby. They didn’t press the matter, but they did strongly suggest she change her shorts.

     Shelby cried in the shower. She cried with shampoo in her hair, with soap on her stomach. When a counselor pulled her aside, she explained that her eyes were red because she had gotten shampoo in them. The counselor didn’t press the matter, but she did suggest that Shelby start using a larger towel to cover up her body.

     Shelby decided she didn’t need friends to have a good time at camp. She read books. She became an expert canoer. During breakfast, she counted the blueberries in her muffin and the raisins in her cereal bowl. On group hikes, she studied the trees and moss, clearly enjoying the scenery far too much to contribute to the conversation.

During breakfast, she counted the blueberries in her muffin and the raisins in her cereal bowl.

     Shelby cried in the morning. The counselors said that nighttimes were the loneliest, but Shelby liked the night because it meant she would get to sleep soon. In the morning, every camper woke up to the traditional trumpet song played by Anthony, the camp director’s 15-year-old nephew. It was the same tune every day, yet Anthony never got it right, and his trumpet squeaked and squawked through the loudspeaker as Shelby wiped hot liquid from her eyes and tried to remember her dreams.

     Shelby’s least favorite part of the day was also every other camper’s favorite part of the day. When it was least expected, a counselor would shout “Mail Time!” as loud as they could. The camp was too big for one person’s voice to carry all the way across, so another counselor would hear the “Mail Time!” call and join in. Then more counselors would call “Mail Time!” from the canoes, the horse stables, the tennis courts, and the bathrooms. Then, of course, the campers would bob up and down in the water, sit up in bed, do a little dance in the dining hall, singing “Mail Time!” until the entire camp was shouting and it no longer sounded like decipherable words but hysterical noise, like several hundred women in a burning building, pleading for help.

     The other campers liked to read their parents’ letters because they had a spoken agreement that they loved each other. At one point in their lives, usually more, every camper’s mom and dad said “I love you” to them like they meant it and the camper said “I love you back,” and they have been saying it and feeling it ever since. These letters were long and handwritten. Sometimes, a mom would write a word and then think of a better word, a word she knew would please her child even more, and you could see the crossed-out word replaced by the new word, the physical evidence of love. These letters had multiple colors, P.S.s and stickers. The campers liked to compare letters, to discuss whose mom and dad loved them the most. Everybody won.

     In the middle of the summer, the camp director called Shelby’s mother and gently suggested she mail Shelby a letter or two. The director told her about Mail Time and how it was every camper’s favorite part of the day. However, the director did not mention the crossed-out words that were replaced by new words, because no one should have to be told about that.

     “I hadn’t thought about doing that,” said Shelby’s mother as if a neighbor had shown up at her front door and suggested she examine the inside of her gutters for mold.

     Shelby did get a letter during the second-to-last week which, after reading, she folded a dozen times and tucked beneath a loose wooden plank in the cabin floor. The letter was typed and on the back was an old invitation for a New Year’s party.

      Hi Shelby,

      Your father and I went to a dinner party at the Millers' last night. Tons of fun — the blackened cod was exceptional. Have a good time at camp and make lots of friends.

     Mail was distributed every day by Pete. Pete was the camp director’s other nephew, but only through marriage, and he was older and his future was far less bright than Anthony’s. Pete was in charge of maintenance and drove a particularly noisy golf cart that made it easy to tell when he was nearby. In fact, since Pete hardly spoke and was never too far from his cart, an impression of Pete by camper and counselor alike was typically a poor reenactment of an exhaust pipe.

     Pete got out of jail two years ago. Every once in a while, when a camper was brave enough to approach the cart and ask what it was like in there, Pete would shrug, scrutinize a far-off pine tree, and say “one big party.”

     Pete used to toss Shelby envelopes he had stuffed with different flavored bubblegum until the other campers caught on and the camp director pulled him aside. 

     Also, every Tuesday night at 3 a.m., Pete would walk down to the lake, strip off all his clothes, and dive into the water. He would tread water in the deep end, where he kept his eyes open and watched the different shades and shapes of blackness swim like fish, dodging the moonlight. No one knew that Pete did this, and no one would ever find out — not the director, the campers, Shelby, not Pete’s friends, nor his future wife or future children. It was a secret so well kept sometimes Pete had to wonder if it actually happened at all, or if he really was as crazy as people kept suggesting.

• • •

Breadcrumb #41

BOB RAYMONDA

It stands alone in the display window of The Little Ranch, a desolate “western wear” store on Hugenot St heading toward the gas station. Its denim pants are faded from too many years unwashed in the sun, with a hand resting unmoved on its hip, sporting a thick brown belt held together with a gaudy golden buckle. The buckle itself emblazoned with the visage of three deer in varying degrees of grazing. A cowboy hat rests on the crown of the sad old mannequin, but no countenance — not even an artificial one. You’d think they’d give it some sort of discerning characteristic, like a mustache or a corncob pipe to cement its plastic persona. A row of offensively dyed leather cowboy boots stand at attention on the floor in front of it, begging the local passersby to come in, try on a pair, and wear them home.

A cowboy hat rests on the crown of the sad old mannequin, but no countenance — not even an artificial one.

     One can’t help but wonder what an establishment such as this is doing on this side of the state, or whom it might call its patronage. What sort of function would they have to attend to necessitate a trip into its overcrowded and musty-smelling storefront. It seems like it’d be much better suited to an area where the primary mode of transportation is a rusted old pickup, rather than a complicated system of shiny (and some not-so-shiny) trains and buses. Where people owned sprawling homes and acres of land instead of renting a thousand square feet.

     Even as restaurants, stores, and art galleries come and go around it, The Little Ranch persists. And not only does it persist, but it remains unchanged. Seems to go untouched for ages at a time. What are they doing so successfully that they don’t need to change up the facade every once in a while? Maybe not every month, but at least ever four, even six. Give us some reason to come back other than the same misplaced cowboy they’ve plied us with for the past three years.

     Is it run by some misinformed transplant? Someone so in love with the aura of their origins, but happy to be a part of a different landscape? Or is this person so confident in their wares, naive enough to think that their supply is in high demand?

     No, they can’t be. It has to be some sort of front, right? Like every pair of boots comes with a little bag of coke. Like every dollar taxed is nothing more than a way to launder the hard-earned and not-so-hard-earned money of the local college students. That would be fun, wouldn’t it? At least in theory. Give something so seemingly bland and lacking in personality an air of intrigue.

     Always driving by, asking all the questions, never willing to just walk in and get the answer. Or at least the illusion of an answer. Because where’s the satisfaction in that? What good does knowing that The Little Ranch is some retired couple’s midlife crisis serve?

     Is that even it? Does it even matter?

• • •

Breadcrumb #40

PETER SCHRANZ

In September Denise conceived twins with Roger, a dashing gentleman whose face-genes she hardly doubted would succeed so wildly that the men of the future would all look like him. Denise took no part in this project as the twins were girls (not that she knew anything but that she was pregnant with some number of some sex) but Roger's mother had acquired from his grandmother a face like a Cézanne apple and those genes were stored away all over the place in Roger and ended up building the girls' faces so it was a win either way.

     In December Denise read the pleasing line from Syrus, "The loss which is unknown is no loss at all," and recognized the truth of it not only with her brain but with her heart and lungs and most relevantly her active uterus.

     Roger began to do a lot of things because Denise could not. At the swing of her wrist he would rocket to the grocery store and gather all the usual unusual-food-combination-for-the-pregnant-woman components. Denise realized one day when Roger was out doing her bidding that she had married him largely because of his sundry masculinities. Now that he kept running off submissively to the grocery store whenever she wanted an egg cream and ketchup or something, running off without even noting what a strange request she had made as a result of his sitcom-induced overfamiliarity with the whole craving trope, she found him girlish, weak, and unattractive.

Denise realized one day when Roger was out doing her bidding that she had married him largely because of his sundry masculinities.

     In March she read this displeasing line from Tudge, "The family Odontaspididae ... are among the groups whose offspring practice oophagy — eating their siblings in the womb," and recognized the truth of it with all her aforementioned body parts.

     Denise was a hair away from asking Roger for some kind of a separation after some pregnancy thing gave her dandruff. She asked Roger whether he still found her attractive and he said yes. She believed that if he was lying, they should separate on account of she was married not only to a liar but also to someone so soulless as not to find the many-hued surprises of human reproduction a joy. She believed that if he was telling the truth, that they should separate on account of he was either a sexual deviant with some sort of repulsive and unspeakable dandruff thing or an apathetic slug with no interest in his wife's health in the shape of the dryness of her skin, or in his own child's health in the shape of the dryness of its mother's skin.

     In June she gave birth to one single, beautiful, apple-red, nine-pound girl named Catherine. All it took was a look at Catherine for Denise to realize silently that Roger was just as much a man as ever since after all she, Denise, couldn't have made such a magnificent squealing ruby without any of his input. Denise and Roger remained married and nurtured that one single child to the very best of their fully sufficient abilities and nobody was the wiser about anything.

• • •

Breadcrumb #38

@333333333433333

312

11:28 PM unsure, theyre ending up there eventually
11:30 PM why do you feel shitty and stupid
11:31 PM im sorry you feel shitty and stupid
11:31 PM youre not shitty nor stupid
11:34 PM do you want to meet up
11:40 PM dont
11:42 PM it sounds like you dont want to see me or else... youd... see me... like
11:53 PM i feel terrible
12:11 AM i feel like i would have a better time with you
12:12 AM yeah i want to do that
12:14 AM like not hanging out is more of a bummer, idk, ok
12:16 AM yeah
12:19 AM jesus youre just laying there and not seeing me
12:26 AM just invite me over
12:29 AM yeah thats fine with me
12:33 AM yeah can i come over
12:36 AM i could take a cab
12:38 AM this is dumb
12:39 AM i mean like this is dumb i want to go im cool w it
12:43 AM cmon
12:46 AM please tell me where to go or directly tell me to give up
12:50 AM i feel like i wouldnt see you again if i dont see you now
12:58 AM i feel like i would be fine with me, i would know what i was getting into, i feel bad because i only saw you for like two hours, feel very disappointed
1:02 AM yeah i mean i feel hurt
1:03 AM i know youre telling me not to take it personally but i like, idk, cant not
1:07 AM youre saying it's not worth it when i feel it is, so yeah, hurt, but im not going to bully you into liking me
1:08 AM feel embarrassed now
1:11 AM i wish you said that before we texted for two hours
1:12 AM i mean maybe you did, whatever, ok get some sleep

 

631

when i was on mushrooms i wanted to “make it stop”
when i was on mushrooms i wanted someone to “yell facts at me”
i threw up in my bathroom to make it stop and hallucinated my vomit swirling, i saw gifs behind my eyes in the bathroom
i put myself to bed 

at ninth avenue saloon megan said take the whole bag and gian showed us a picture of his mom with her head split open and sam did coke on the open table

i’m twenty-four

in the bed you said “talk in facts”
when i buried my head in my covers
and “you can talk for three hours something that shouldnt be three hours”
i said i was thinking out loud and you said when do you not 

i sat on the scaffolding while you smoked, holding the cigarette in the corner of your mouth, holding your phone, walking backward,

you came back, shaking your head - “head down, awkward smile”

you said
you need to eat weve been hanging out all day and you havent eaten 

we ordered and you kept on saying you’d leave and you tried to take a picture through the window from the balcony of me at the computer but i ruined it but you stayed over

you called me an old soul at rudy’s bar and grill at 627 9th avenue, 10036

you said
there’s something about you
youre cute 

Did you know that you told me you “really liked me” in your sleep last night?
and when I asked you if you were asleep or not you said about 2 full sentences of pure nonsense 

in the beer aisle you said “ my pictures dont go online”

in the beer aisle you said ‘my pictures dont go online’

you sent me the three pictures in a text message

and i cut you off to kiss you we were drunk 

i changed my facebook profile photo and got twenty-four likes

we smoked weed on my terrace and i leaned on your shoulder my ears popped
i felt that too, you said, that change in pressure
say said that i did that thing with your mouth to pop your ears
you said youre kind. the harshness. you come off as. you dont come off as i said, i come off as harsh, you said, the harshness is just confidence 

coughing i went inside to get water and came back barefoot on the concrete and said my moms last wish would be my inability to smoke

i wish i was still 23
Not me
I would never have met you. 23 is gross. 

you said say facts

you said you should grow herbs
i said i wanted to my mom grew herbs
you said you grow herbs on your balcony
peppers basil tomatoes 

you said “pretending you dont know how to smoke”

on the balcony you also said i was brash and kind, but my harshness was just confidence, that i am kind
you said “when did i say that”

 we were falling asleep to pete and pete and i asked you if your reply two weeks ago to my text message was sarcastic and you said no

You also told me I was perfect in your sleep last night

i fell asleep in your shirt and you didnt notice and woke up with you and thought “medicine”

last night i woke up at the ring of the two minute reminder of your text sent at 1:32 am and i said hi i dont hate you

i dont know is it that i want to do whatever i want

im unsure if my cat is peeing in my bed when im away or asleep
and im unsure if it’s because i put a lid on her litter or took her off wet food
so she’s stop expecting it
every morning and every night 

but now whenever i pee she jumps into the tub
stares at the faucet
and runs away when i turn it on

last night on the balcony he smoked a cigarette squatting on his knees and laughed and

• • •