Breadcrumb #174

ZACHARY LENNON-SIMON

Sophomore year in college, I was taking a sociology class to learn how to make friends. I was learning how to pick up on certain social cues such as if people are staring at you, it’s probably because they disapprove of you wearing a bathrobe to Sociology class. One day our teacher assigned us to go out and talk to someone about a topic we wouldn’t normally discuss with them. I had just gotten out of a long relationship and had recently wanted to try and flirt with girls again but didn’t quite know how. My therapist seemed like he was getting a little bored talking about flirting, so I decided to ask advice from the group of people who I talked to more than him: take-out restaurants.

    My first call was picked up by a woman around or a little older than me. “Campus wings, can I take your order?” 

    “Yes hi, first I’d like the chicken fingers and the dipping sauce as well as the large order of spicy chicken wings. But also I was wondering if I could get some advice about this girl I’m interested in.”

    And that’s when I told her about Jessica. Jessica who lived down the hall from my dorm room and walked and talked like she knew all her lines and we were all seven pages behind. Jessica with the long brown hair and a California suntan. I had managed to have 3 conversations with her in the laundry room and had since been convinced that we were perfect for each other. 

    But there were a few things I wasn’t sure about so I asked the Campus Wings lady, “Are you allowed to ask someone else out, 3 months after your last breakup? Also how can I be certain she’ll say yes? What if she has a boyfriend who is taller than me?”

    There was a bit of silence where I imagined the Campus Wings lady was determining whether to take me seriously or not.

    “Well maybe you should try and go to a party that she’s at and see how she behaves,” she suggested, “If she seems open to talking to people then she might not have a boyfriend and you could talk to her.”

    “So Campus Wings is suggesting I follow Jessica—“

    “Woah, woah woah!,” she interjected, “Campus Wings is no way legally allowed to tell you to stalk anybody. I’m just saying that maybe that’s a good plan.”

    I thanked her for the advice, asked her how long the food would take and then hung up.

    The next place I called was a pizzeria that I think was called Michael’s. The guy picked up on the second ring and I immediately went into my schpeel, “Hi I’d like a large pie, one half pepperoni one half peppers and an order of garlic knots with the dipping sauce but also I was wondering what you thought I should do about this girl who lives down the hall from me. We’ve talked a few times and had some casual flirting over laundry and the Afghanistan war and I’d like to see more of her but how should I go about this?”

    There was a very long silence and then the man at Michael’s Pizza said, “Que?”

Hi I’d like a large pie, one half pepperoni one half peppers and an order of garlic knots with the dipping sauce but also I was wondering what you thought I should do about this girl who lives down the hall from me.

    I elaborated, “Well we’re at college so are you allowed to go out on dates or is it strictly a ‘hook up until you decide you’re in a committed relationship’ type scene. Because I would feel more comfortable with the date scenario but I don’t know if that’s acceptable. What are your thoughts?”

    The man at Michael’s Pizza put the phone down. There was static for a few seconds and then one of the cast members of The Sopranos picked up the phone, “Yeah dis is Micahel’s Pizza, whaddya want?”

    I carefully explained my predicament, while also making sure that I got the dipping sauce with the garlic knots, and then asked him what he thought was acceptable in a college atmosphere for how I should approach Jessica.

    Without missing a beat, the man said “Look buddy, we sell pizza’s here, awright? We don’t have any gurls or guys for you, if that’s what you’re into.” As if the act of calling a pizzeria and asking for advice clearly meant I was a homosexual.

    “How could you tell he was gay?” someone would later ask him.

    “Well he was calling up restaurants and asking for relationship advice, know what I mean? That’s what they do.”

    I apologized for wasting his time, asked how long the pizza would take and hung up.

    So far, I was getting a lot of good material for class but none whatsoever in terms of advice on what I should do about Jessica. Dejectedly, I started flipping through the menu folder when I found the rarest thing you can possibly hope to find in White Plains: a Jewish deli. Eagerly, I dialed the number and after about five rings an extremely weary voice picked up and said, “Hullo Abe’s Deli.”

    Not only had I found the only Jewish deli in White Plains but I probably also found the only one on the east coast still run by a Jew! Excitedly I started to explain, “Hi I’d like pastrami on rye with gruyere, mustard, tomato, and salami but also I’d like your advice about this girl Jessica who lives down the hall from me. I just got out of this fairly long relationship but I’ve become very infatuated with Jessica and I don’t know how to approach her or even if I should, I mean how long should a person respectfully mourn the girl you were with before trying to flirt with another one?”

    The man, who probably could only have been named Saul Abelmann, sighed wearily. As if he had been dealing with this problem his whole life. “My friend,” he said slowly and deliberately, “you can ask me about salami or mustard. The rest is up to you.”

    “Wow!” I exclaimed, “that’s incredible! So you’re saying this is something I have to work through and figure out myself.”

    “This is what I’m saying,” said Saul.

    “Thank you. So how long will it take?”

    “Forever. Rest of your life.”

    “No I meant the sandwich.”

    “That also. We don’t deliver” and then he hung up.

• • •

Breadcrumb #173

JOSH RUBINO


So...I'm basically full of bugs.

    It's not as bad as you'd think, really. They tend to keep to themselves, only really showing up due to the occasional hiccup or desire to appear in a cloud-like swarm. It started when I looked at what I thought was a coupon code in my email. I was SUPPOSED to get $50 for Amazon, but instead the coupon code turned out to be some sorta old language and the next thing I know the words had crawled into my head, turned into bugs, and hollowed me from the inside out!

     I won't lie, there's a bit of an adjustment period. The bugs basically just left my eyes, teeth, tongue, and the front part of my brain. Everything else was fair game as far as they were concerned. It's a bit flattering to know that not only did I get picked to be their new home (by a QUEEN no less!), but that I was also incredibly delicious. Still, there were a few days where they had to figure out how to move my legs, manipulate my jaw, harmonize their buzzing into something simulating a human voice. My bones are all gone so they're all just crawling around, busily holding me together and moving about. You'd think there'd be a buzzing but there isn't, only a steady hum - like a white noise machine.

-Ack...help..too!-

So...I’m basically full of bugs

     Excuse me. Anyway there's just a hum, can't imagine how I'd sleep without it. Not that I've really slept since the bugs moved in. Don't really feel the need, just tend to walk around town keeping myself active and picking up snacks. I need snacks, snacks are a requirement now, rather than an indulgence. Snacks are a requirement now. Snacks are a requirement NOW. Ya see if I don't eat then the bugs will get irritated and leave me, and if you think that being a living hive is a change in lifestyle then imagine when you're a discarded skin suit sitting on a floor.

-Ahhhhh...run...choooo!-

     Whoo! Sorry about that, must be dusty in here. That's something I noticed, since the bugs I don't really eat that many big meals just a lot of smaller ones throughout the day. I noticed recently that I eat a lot of sugar which, to be fair, might always have been the case. I also noticed I've been eating a lot more people and I'm, like, 90% sure that's new.

-Ahhhh...run while you can...choooo!-

     Dang I am really sorry! Must be having a reaction to something. But yeah, aside from that and constantly feeling Eldritch words burned into my brain, I've never felt better! I mean, I say "I" but I'm not entirely sure what "I" is exactly. Like, have you ever had a thought but you're not sure YOU had it? I'm reasonably certain that's where the Queen is, there's a lot of..um...flow isn't the right word more traffic? Yeah, traffic works. It's a new feeling not being part of a community so much as BEING a community but honestly, it feels great. Everything feels great, partially because the bugs seem to really be working my brain's pleasure center but I'd also like to think it's just me loving life. I mean, the only thing I really crave is to breed.

-Ahhh....save yourself...choooo!-

     Ugh, no not like that, get your mind out of the gutter. I mean the good old fashioned way: sending words into people's brains to bury themselves in their soft tissue! I started sending out coupon codes myself, but last week I ran out of names in my contact list...but of a roadblock there. It's also hard to just say the words to people, they're mostly consonants and they sound weird. A lotta folks run away when they think some crazy person's shouting at them. The important thing though is to reach out! Let people know that joining the hive is a really rich, rewarding life choice with nothing to lose and a million little friends to gain! So if you're feeling lonely and are looking for a positive, life fulfilling change won't you consider joining our mailing list?

• • •

Breadcrumb #172

KIRSTEN SUNDBERG LUNSTRUM

It is sometimes a pool and sometimes a vacancy. Other times it is as thick and tangible as the wall of a room he has stepped into and now cannot leave.

    He is forgetting what it was to see, forgetting the visual world. This panics him. He remembers colors, the shapes of things. The song of a bird in a tree is a kind of invisibility; but because he can no longer see the feather, he questions the sound too. Is he losing his mind as well as his eyes? 

    The visual world is no more or less real than his own dreams now. If asked to name the color of his wife’s garden roses, his car, the leaves of the oak outside his front door in October, he could say from memory red, blue, orange, but he could not be certain that in doing so he was not making himself a liar.

    He cannot remember if his wife’s eyelashes are pale or dark. She once had freckles, but perhaps they have paled with age. He wishes he could ask, but what an offense! How do you say to your wife, What do you look like? Are you fading? It occurs to him that woman he pictures in his mind when he kisses her might look nothing like the woman he is holding in his arms, and this is both exciting and horrible. What would he tell her if she knew? Where his imagination diverges from reality there is inevitable betrayal. 

It occurs to him that woman he pictures in his mind when he kisses her might look nothing like the woman he is holding in his arms, and this is both exciting and horrible.

    Some days he believes he is the perpetrator of this betrayal, and other days he is the victim.

    Some days he would rather lose his sight entirely and be free to imagine everything.

    On the other hand, he worries that because what he cannot see may not exist, the concrete and certain world will only continue to get smaller and smaller every day. And soon he will be a man in a box. He thinks about the caterpillars he used to catch and trap in shoeboxes when he was a boy, the way they rose up on their back legs and stood when he lifted the box lid, their bodies bristling among the grass clippings he’d stuffed inside as feed. They strained out of the shadows, reaching toward the light.

    He doesn’t know what it will mean when he can no longer see even the shadows.

• • •

Breadcrumb #171

CAROLINE REDDY

Bahar was standing, bare and fresh, dripping penny sized drops on the cold metal scale. When she dared to open her eyes, the number that she had been waiting for finally appeared. She smiled, pinched herself and wiggled her toes; to make sure she wasn’t dreaming.

    The fog was lifting and beneath the streaks her shape had finally shifted-revealing a true Bahar. For the first time her reflection seemed to mirror her name. Bahar meant spring in Farsi and she had been reborn, emerging from the hungry gorging flesh that had expanded about her-an eternal boa constrictor had squeezed and-sucked out her femininity replacing it with fury instead.

The fog was lifting and beneath the streaks her shape had finally shifted-revealing a true Bahar. For the first time her reflection seemed to mirror her name.

    She was both a stranger and someone that she had known for a long, long time.

    The new woman rubbed her belly. The bulges were gone but the scars remained when she examined her wrists...it didn’t matter because Bahar had been given a second chance: a new life, a new body and her first date in over two years. 

    In her bedroom the small dress--freshly dry-cleaned--hung by her large mirror. It was a simple gown: black, elegant and classy. She put on her bra, panties and slipped on the dress, along with two huge silver bangles, and matching earrings and black high-heel shoes. She sprayed rose perfume and undulated to let the essence settle on her skin like a subtle breeze.  

    This is what it meant to be swan-like: graceful and free: she thought, walking three blocks down to the intersection of Avenue A and thirteenth street. 

    She paused outside of Levin, the small Turkish restaurant, fluffed out her hair like she had seen on television shows and peaked inside. A couple who sat by the window were regal in their attire and gestures. 

    They were finishing up their coffee and left a handsome tip next to the plate of the half-eaten baklava. The woman got up. She wore a slinky red dress and high-heels. Her blonde hair had been cut into a signature bob, just like an actress Bahar had recently read about. The man wore a blue suit without wrinkles. He put his arms around her and she could read his lips.

    Shall we my dear? 

    Then the couple smiled at Bahar and held the door open for her. The hostess acknowledged her as well and handed Bahar a turquoise menu.

    “Right this way Ms. Javan. Beautiful dress…”

    “Thank you,” Bahar said and sat at her table. 

     People in the outside world never made eye contact with her and over the years she had been content in her cocoon-working from home as a social media manager and hiding away from the public eye-slowly watching the world unfold through the internet.   

    It was all behind her because she had buried the old Bahar.  

    She felt it in her bones. 

    Bahar ordered rose and within a few minutes after her drink had arrived, her date, a man named Rahim, kissed her on the cheeks and sat across from her. She knew that look from watching all of the classic films of Marilyn Monroe and Ingrid Bergman. 

    The tall broad-shouldered man who wore a blue suit, just like the man she had seen earlier, fancied her and was entranced by her. Rahim’s black hair was combed in a tidy fashion, he had a slight stubble and his eyes were hazel. His pupils had dilated under the light.

    “You look absolutely radiant in person. The pictures don’t do you justice,” Rahim said and raised his eyebrows. 

    Bahar blushed.

    “Merci….thank you. I am not good with compliments,”  Bahar said honestly and rubbed her wrists.

    “Those are beautiful bangles,” Rahim leaned forward and smiled. He took her hands in his. She pulled them away fast.

    Too fast.

    “Mazermikham azizam...I’m...so sorry. I didn’t mean to startle you.” 

    “No...it’s okay. I’m just nervous.”

    “Don’t be. Let’s eat…”

    She ordered baby octopus in olive oil and red lentil soup. Rahim decided on the lamb shish kebab, feta cheese, olives and extra pita bread to share. 

    “I was born in Boston and moved to Manhattan for work-a better firm and a better offer. I’m getting used to New York but I still don’t know a soul. Were you born here?” Rahim asked.

    “Yes, I was born here,” she lied and nodded, taking her cues like the elegant woman in the red heels. 

    “I hope it’s okay that we are speaking English. My Farsi is limited…”

    “Yes...mine too,” Bahar took a small bite of the octopus and smiled with her eyes. She was a different person-so the new story seemed to fit. She too, like Rahim, was born in America. 

    “My parents,” Rahim said. “Good people….but they are lost between countries. They miss Tehran. I tell them to just accept their life in Boston...after all it’s been thirty years….but I guess they are still shell-shocked and scarred by the past. I hope you don’t mind me telling you all this…”

    Rahim took a few sips of the wine and looked into her eyes. 

    “No. It’s fine.”

    Rahim sighed. His fingers tapped the wine glass. 

    “Are you sure I am not babbling?” he asked.

    “It’s okay...the city can get lonesome and if you don’t have family here it can get very lonesome.”

    Rahim had drank a little too much, so, he drank a little bit more, relaxed and let go. 

    “My grandfather died recently but my parents couldn't go back to visit. In the end my grandfather died alone. We all feel so much guilt and my parents will never forgive themselves. They still miss their garden...so they finally adopted a collie and named her Juje.” 

    “I’m so sorry...does your dog know its name means little chick?”

    They both laughed. Bahar left half of her meal and when the check came, Rahim picked it up.

    “Shall we Azizam,” he winked at her.

    She knew that look.

_____

     It took two cups of black cardamom tea, chai, with ghand-a sugar cube to make Rahim feel at home in her small apartment. 

    They chatted a bit more about their favorite authors. Bahar, giggled as she admitted she loved Nicholas Sparks. 

    “I gotta couple of Tom Clancy books myself...it’s my guilty pleasure,” he leaned in and whispered. Then they began to kiss. She felt the tingles and smoothed his arms over her small waist. Slowly, they undressed each other, moved into the bedroom, and Bahar led his hands between her thighs. And, when he slipped inside her-she let go. 

    Afterwards, she rested on his chest and awaited the morning sun. 

    Rahim smiled.

     “I am not looking for a one time thing. I’ve had my fun in college...and now I just need something more. Someone I can talk to and share my secrets with...I feel like I can tell you anything and haven’t felt like that in a while. I hope that doesn’t scare you,”  he said.

    “No,” Bahar turned on the light on the bed-stand. Rahim took her hands in his and softly pressed them against his cheeks. He tilted his head and examined her wrists.

    “Bahar-jan...” he slowly dropped her hands and his face began to morph into a million questions. 

  Bahar realized that she had forgotten about the silver bangles. 

     Rahim stood up and put on his clothes.

    “I...I..I can explain...” Bahar whispered.

    Rahim sighed and closed his eyes.

    She was bare in front of him. 

    He let his fingers trace over her wrists gingerly.

    “My grandfather...he had these marks when my uncles found him. Arshan felt that he was a burden on us...I guess I just wanted to forget about my past. Just for tonight.”

    “Me too. I just wanted to be free from my demons,” she said as she looked at her wrists. 

    “Then tell me why...I need to understand to bury my past.”

    Bahar hugged Rahim.

    They were strangers but neither of them could let go.

• • •