Breadcrumb #149

JEN WINSTON

You text me the link in the morning while I’m still half asleep so I only think I see it. Then I wake up and definitely see it, but now I’m running late and don’t have 15 seconds to load an article. Then my commute is cold so I forget about anything else, and then I’m at work, busy paying attention to a different screen.

    Acknowledge, you text me two hours later, the lack of punctuation intended to show your impatience. A few minutes pass, and when I still don’t respond, you send one single space. It's a blank text, sitting on my iPhone like a gray balloon, all full of helium with nowhere to go. This is a bump, the least punctuation possible, the most impatient text of all. I tuck my phone in my back pocket to sneak it into the bathroom, duck into a stall, and click.

    “Fallen Construction Plywood Kills West Village Woman,” says the headline. I sigh, realizing the sound was probably audible to Janet, my boss, who is washing her hands. Yesterday you sent, “Two Taxis Collide In Front Of Williamsburg Bridge.” The day before, “Bronx Bodega Owner Slain In Gang Shootout Misfire.” The stories’ protagonists all are — or were — 28-34. It’s the same age as us, but also the same as the people I’m supposed to be selling body wash to right now. I send a blue balloon back to you, Acknowledging, and leave the bathroom without washing my hands.

     Janet shows me a cherry-colored shower gel and asks me to write taglines for it. The gel has little beads in it, so the taglines must convey the importance of exfoliating. Back at my desk, Janet gives me a cherry-colored shower gel and asks me to write taglines for it, making sure to convey the importance of exfoliating. We have to motivate people, she says. They will thank us later. I consider that I haven’t exfoliated since I ran out of apricot scrub two months ago. I haven’t gathered the strength to make a drugstore run because a drugstore run is a thankless, exhausting errand. This is why Janet and I can’t change consumer behavior — because all target markets have one thing in common: They are lazy.

     Hi, you text me that night. A text without a link is much easier to deal with. I know you know this, so I know this text means you simply want me to Acknowledge, to tell you you’re not alone here.

     Hi, I respond.

     One week later, I’m in the West Village. I think of the woman, then, obviously, of you.
In west vil rn, I text, and you reply almost immediately with another link. I click it while I’m walking, causing me to almost step into traffic, but I see the cars just in time and jump back. I sidle against a snowy mailbox, quickly forgetting how scary the moment almost was, and read “Elevator Accident In Midtown Kills Two.” You’ve given me a new neighborhood to fear, a different man-made object to avoid.

     Thank you, I text back. That helps.

     Between us, we are inexperienced with death. We have lost no parents, no siblings, not even a grandparent during our lifetimes. We dumb to it, which means we are lucky. And we know this.

     I guess I do have one story, but it’s never felt right to tell it to you. An acquaintance from my high school, someone I kissed once at a party. He was found in his college dorm, electrocuted after stumbling into a high voltage chamber. He was drunk. You need to know this story, I think, because you and I are often drunk, so it’s relatable, the way the other stories are because of 28-34. But unlike the others, I knew this person. I kissed him. And I don’t want us to use someone I kissed to imagine ourselves. Every time you act out a play, it becomes more theater than reality. It’s not fair to your characters to kill them again.

     This is the point of sending headlines to each other: I get to imagine what if it were you, you get to imagine what if it were me. But we both only imagine these situations from our own perspectives, from the vantage point of the person who stays alive. This is why I like you — because even in hypothetical situations, we stay realistic. We know that, in the back of our heads, we would be pissed that the funeral meant we couldn’t work out that day. Sending the headlines to each other is a way of giving the other person permission to think like this. This, I’m sure, is the real reason we send them.

This is the point of sending headlines to each other: I get to imagine what if it were you, you get to imagine what if it were me.

     When I imagine you in the headlines, I imagine me as a wreck. I know I would keep texting you, and wonder if my iMessages would mark as delivered. The texts wouldn’t contain headlines, of course, because the purpose of those — the imagining of you in them — would be gone. Instead, they would just say Hi. Much easier to Acknowledge, though you never would.

    I imagine my office wouldn’t even give me bereavement days, since we’re not dating, or married, or related by blood. Most people don’t even know we’re friends because we text more than we talk, and screenshots of those texts would be shitty evidence — out of context our links and blank balloons would seem almost illegible, like a code concealing something of little to know interest. Maybe this is because of the acquaintance I kissed, but whenever I imagine death, I imagine it without blood. Cold and empty, almost purple. Anything but red.

     Janet likes one of my lines: “Scrub now. Shine later.” Millions of people will read these four words on billboards and our product’s bottle, and I realize this is only kind of story that anyone wants to hear. My boss says this product is a big deal — if just one of those people age 28-34 starts exfoliating, we have them for life. Think of all the dead skin that will fall, making ceramic shower floors look like marble.

    On the way home from work, I walk past a Duane Reade. I have fifteen minutes, just enough time to pick up more apricot scrub, cotton swabs, and other things I sort of need. But then snow begins to fall and my fingers go numb, and I imagine freezing here on the street corner. I wonder who it would hurt more if I turned into ice and never saw you again. I decide I don’t want to go inside, so I stand there until I only have five minutes. Then, my whole body stinging, I walk home.

• • •

 

Breadcrumb #148

GINA MINGIONE

I am riding through Iceland in a camper van, but if I look out the window, it feels like I’m on the moon.  The terrain is lumpy and unfamiliar. My friends are sitting in the front navigating and I’m sprawled in the back on our makeshift bed, utterly useless to the cause, because I don’t know how to drive stick and I don’t know how to get anywhere. My purpose on this trip is less about functionality and more about providing a healthy dose of effervescent naiveté. The bed and carpeting of our camper resemble that of an early 90’s arcade.  At night I sleep with my face mere inches from the camper’s roof on a bunk, reminding me of the way people get shelved away in mausoleums. 

    This morning we swam in hot springs, which are like natural Jacuzzis right there in the earth. You let the heat envelop your body and watch the steam roll off the surface.  Most of this trip has been spent soaking our bodies like millennial noodles until we’re soft, chewy, and delusional. Yesterday we watched geysers explode into the air. People gather around at the base and then scurry away when the ground begins to rumble.  Collective noses scrunch as these geysers reek of farts. 

    This trip started when Dee, McBride, and Hagen called me.

    “Wanna drive through Iceland in a camper with us? These things don’t have toilets so it might involve some roadside shitting.”

    “Yes.” I said.  This is how I travel. Perpetually willing to tag along and do things to rattle my contents.

    McBride is still reeling from our most recent hot spring. It was empty except for a wooden donation box with a handwritten sign at the gate. A fog contrasted brightly against the green of everything else. We plunged our bodies into the water, boiling ourselves. I thought of my mother and the hot baths she takes, so hot her legs turn red and her eye shadow melts down her face like some kind of Mediterranean clown.  

It was empty except for a wooden donation box with a handwritten sign at the gate. A fog contrasted brightly against the green of everything else. We plunged our bodies into the water, boiling ourselves.

    I sunk myself deeper into the water so it covered my shoulders and so I could feel my muscles unfurl. My mind wandered to the giant hunks of anti freeze colored ice we saw floating in a glacier lagoon and the black sand beaches, where the sea foam bubbled stark white against the sand and the fog made the mountains look like sketches of dinosaurs that were haphazardly erased.

    I looked at Dee, who packed two pairs of leggings, a shirt, and a few pairs of underwear into a backpack for this trip. She always manages to look comfortable and clean, despite how little we’ve bathed. Hagen was wearing her glasses; thick salmon colored rims that fogged up with the steam, so when I look at her I see white squares instead of eyes, freckles and straight, white politician-kissing-a-baby-like-teeth. We’ve all taken to calling Hagen “Coach Kay,” because her outfit of choice resembles a dad who coaches his daughter’s softball team: faded blue baseball cap, a Patagonia Navajo fleece, a neon yellow vest over the fleece, and black Adidas trainer pants. 

    In the distance, we saw McBride walking towards us. We thought she was rummaging in the van for her bathing suit. Even from far away, we could tell something happened. Her body language emoted urgency. 

    “I just took a shit behind a radiator on the side of the road. Cars were zooming by and I didn’t have any toilet paper and I had to wipe with my hand.” She holds up the hand and spreads her fingers wide for emphasis. 

    “But McBride,” I said, “There is a toilet,” I said. We laughed and partly delighted in McBride’s misery because there has always been something funny about her own personal spin on distress. 

    “Are you fucking kidding me?” she asked.

    She turned around to quietly absorb the outhouse in the distance before slipping her body into the spring. 

     Now, it’s afternoon, and in the front of the van, I can hear them shouting about a glacier. McBride makes a sharp turn with the steering wheel until we’re on the side of the road. They hop out, slide the van door open, and let the light in. 

• • •

Breadcrumb #147

KYLE CANGILLA

Her chestnut eyes were leaking
An otherworldly substance
Viscous and dark, allowing only
Enough light to show its color
In the barroom they watch each other
 
All at once terrifying and familiar
The substance creeps across the table
Filling the cracks and etchings
Of lovers from a different time
Pete + Jen 1989
 
He can feel the substance climbing
Up his pale arms, over his chest
Petrifying him in amber
He has no more secrets to give
She holds her breath and his rib
 
The beautiful substance floods his eyes
Hugging softly his skylit irises
Careful not to corrupt their hue
Liquid sapphire he begins to pour across
The space between them, for she was lost

• • •

Breadcrumb #146

ZACHARY LENNON-SIMON

I apologize about the poor Wi-Fi reception down here in my Sea-Cave. I will try to boost the signal but I make no guarantees. There are some advantages of living here in the Sea-Cave. Everyone in the Sea-Cave is pro-choice and equal opportunity is a key component of our thriving community. There are hardly any distractions so you can fully focus on your art. I’m about three chapters away from completing my novel. It’s a romance story set in Arizona. I’ve never been there but I think it’s a magical place. 

    Due to the fungus and the stench emanating throughout the Sea-Cave, gentrification is unlikely. No artisanal muffin yogurt shops down here, which I’m sure you know is a great plus for the neighborhood. Oh and our crime rate has dipped significantly since we kicked Gary out. 

    I know this isn’t what you had in mind but we can make the best of it. I built a bookshelf for you out of the remnants of a rowboat. And these seashells can make for a good towel. If you’re a person who’s always wanted a waterbed well then this curse is really just your good fortune, right? Hahaha…oh I apologize. Too soon, I guess. 

    I recognize my part in all this but that sorcerer was a little over zealous, no? People commit countless acts of eco-terrorism yet I don’t see my waters being filled with beatniks cursed to live down here for 12,000 years. I guess what I’m trying to say is that what you did for my tentacle friends was very kind of you. I have been trying to convince anyone who would listen to me that when the blood moon hangs high in the sky, it is imperative that we use 17 sticks of dynamite to blow up the aquarium tanks in San Diego but you, you were the first person who actually treated me with respect. And it is because of this that I am willing to split my Sea-Cave with you. We can haggle over the rent and utilities later. 

I guess what I’m trying to say is that what you did for my tentacle friends was very kind of you.

    When you think about it, this 12,000-year curse came at a rather fortuitous time for you. You were in between jobs and Gary was finally evicted from the Sea-Cave condominium complex. And you and I click so well! You eat dried seaweed! That is literally all I consume! If I didn’t know any better, I’d say it wasn’t an ancient curse that brought us together, it was fate. 

    I’ve never told anyone this before but it can get kind of lonely down here in my Sea-Cave. I know, I know. You think I sound crazy because after all, how can such a good-looking creature like myself every feel alone. It’s just that, tentacles and enormous claws aside, I don’t have a lot in common with my friends. But when you look into my three eyes, I feel like I’m in one of those Nicholas Sparks novels.  I think we have a connection that, against all odds of nature, doesn’t feel wrong because it feels so right.

    Oh one more thing, about every other week or so my buddies and I swim to the surface and abduct a few humans for The Offering. You might like it, we sing songs and chant for Cthulhu and then feast on the flesh of our human prisoners. So I was thinking when my friends come over, we’ll just have to make sure you wear something that will differentiate you from the human meat puppets we like to devour. I would hate to nosh on a person as lovely as you. 

    I think you will learn to love it down here in my Sea-Cave. It’s a beautiful place to learn to love again. 

• • •