Breadcrumb #98

JOSH KRIGMAN

Leaning against a cement support beam in the atrium of the new Whitney, opening weekend, facing the door, as hundreds of tourists wrapped in puffy winter coats stream past and toward the registers behind me, parting and coming together like river water around a rock, and checking my watch, then my phone, and adding three minutes to the 12 she’s already late because through the large front windows I can clearly see three minutes up the street and she isn’t on it.

    Sitting on my hands in the theatre lobby, looking up whenever someone enters and hoping it’s her, and overhearing an old man near the door talk on his phone.

    “He was,” he says, “the smartest person I ever knew who wasn’t a reincarnated being.” 

    On Atlantic, waiting in front of her building, where she’s told me there’s no need to come up because she’s on her way down, and having stood there for seven minutes when a Hasidic man approaches and asks if I’m Jewish.

    “No, sorry,” I say, and realize it’s the first time I’ve ever lied about my religion, and that I’ve done it to a Jew, a Jew who immediately doesn’t care, and who’s off to ask another before he can register my surprise.

     At a table for two in a restaurant she heard has good ramen, near the end of my third glass of water, the server already less attentive to refills, and my back to the door to curb how often I look, how often I think every approaching form is hers, and instead facing the two women three tables over, the movement of their lips enough to fill in the words I can’t hear clearly.

    “That’s why our date night is always Thai,” she says. “Skylar can’t even step into a Thai restaurant. The air, he can’t breathe the air. He’s that allergic.”

     Aimlessly pacing a Chelsea gallery while she goes to the bathroom one last time before we leave, and eavesdropping on a young couple, his right arm laid long across her shoulders, and his left conducting an orchestra as he shares his thoughts on the show. 

    “I’m not,” he says, “trying to present myself as someone who knows, but the whole thing feels a little like throwing water into the ocean.”

    Watching a basketball game in the West Village, halfway through a slice, trying to stay aware of any vibrations in my pocket that’ll let me know she’s arrived to see the matinee at IFC across the street, and listening to an old man on my side of the fence make observations about no one in particular.

    “Most of them only got nickels and dimes,” he says. “But this guy here is the whole dollar.”

     Curled over half a beer in the Crown Heights bar where I’m supposed to meet her, my phone recently dead, the drinks from a birthday dinner still sitting inside me, and using everything I have not to pick at the paper boat of fries my neighbor left behind when the bartender, his button-down shirt unbuttoned to the belt, brings out a dog dish, fills it with Guinness, and slides it to the end of the bar where a man dressed like a dockworker lifts up his pug to join him for a drink.

...using everything I have not to pick at the paper boat of fries my neighbor left behind...

    In Washington Square, near the fountain, sporadically getting messages that say the trains are screwy and she’s on her way, and watching a man appease his superstitious girlfriend by walking across the park to knock on a wood bench when, finally, after what seems like longer than normal but is really just the same, she arrives, speed-walking across the square. She’s flustered, breathless, apologetic.

    “I’m so, so sorry,” she says. “Were you waiting long? God, and you don’t even have a book.”

• • •

Breadcrumb #96

D.C. WILTSHIRE

. I know Vancouver. I know how
to have a passport
qua marriage license; I know
the islets from the sky,
descending in sharp gray
to a land of indigenous masks
and rock-filled beach. I know
the stretched scope of UBC
at the tip of English Bay, the totem face
that gapes at thick midday clouds,
pregnant with 10-minute showers. 
I know the marshland and the evergreens,
the nightlights of distant ski slopes,
the backbone ridge of near mountain peaks
where Nature views aloft with serene and
pleasant, magnanimous gaze, allowing us
a brief dip in pacific wading pools. 
I have no prose for her,
none that wouldn’t disappoint.

• • •

Breadcrumb #95

RYAN EVANS

up the cracked steps yet again
to the house I know so well
so well I know to knock before walking in

and wipe my shoes then take them off
cross the little living room with pictures
turned away from the room on the mantle 

pictures reversed retched into my mind
that same old woven cane chair with one
leg a quarter inch short in the middle of the room

so when I sit in it and pick up that book I’ve read
a thousand times on sleepless nights with
the living room clock keeping time 

the chair tips back and to the left
just slightly
so it is impossible to settle in

reading the same words pried from my mind
set on the page for me to read
again and again

staring into the eyes of the pictures
or at the words
looking through me

again I’ve walked into a room of my own making
sat in the familiar furniture unsteady

• • •

Breadcrumb #94

BRITTANY DIGIACOMO

The entire city must be well fed
fast asleep on foot with eyes open
or listening to a drum beat from mars,
or living in an imaginary town where
“I” is in too frequent of use,
or maybe their silk is so fine
they think it turned them invisible —
even from behind the wheel.

The thing is
at times, I forget who I am

and that’s because you make me want to
whack my shoulder into yours while passing,
or dive through an open door that closes in your face,
or smash my car into the rear of yours because
you cut me off and I had to swerve into the other lane.

Really, though, I’d like to
crack courtesy over your head with a sledgehammer.

The thing is,
I don’t want the insensitivity of your ill- manner ways
to gnaw my skin into blisters that like your vulgarity  
will ultimately become infectious.

It doesn’t take much
to train a beast:
skill and discipline,
reward and punishment,
at times multiple trainers.

Yet,
even the most feral animal can be taught to utilize sense
and social knack to exist among the human race.

• • •