Breadcrumb #188

KASIA MERRILL

When I was in my early twenties, I had one great aspiration in my life: to be a widow. 

    Death was foreign to me. Love even more so. I once had a pet goldfish that died, and this was the nearest I had come to loving and losing. Of course, I didn’t really love it. I tried to. I tried watching it swim and adapting some sort of feeling to its journey through its tank. I even gave it a name, Clarence, but upon second thought renamed it “Phish” because it seemed more appropriate. In the end, it was just a fish on my dresser, a piece of art that matched my orange rug. When it died, I flushed it down the toilet and felt nothing. I kept its empty aquarium in my room as a memorial, a testimony to coming close to love.

    Of course, I had studied love. I had read books on intimacy and lack of intimacy, watched movies and documentaries, even researched the scientific evidence of love and romance. I knew all the different kinds: heterosexual, homosexual, asexual, pansexual, etc. Still, it eluded me. 

    I decided that I wanted to feel it, but not for a long period of time. Length was risky. Someone could get to really know you if they were around for long and eventually come across your flaws. I didn’t want this. Then again, I didn’t want a one-night stand either. I wanted a short-term, highly committed partnership. I wanted to share a life with someone, but a short life. 

    On a Friday evening, I joined a dating site called NeverLate4Luv and made my username aspiringwidow94. My profile was brief and direct: female, early thirties, aspiring widow. Practical, direct, unsentimental. Enjoys red wine and researching humanity’s latest diseases. Seeking: committed partner soon to be finishing up life. Message me if you are serious, committed, and on your way out.

    By Sunday, I had received over 66 messages. Some of them were quite angry with me, especially those who were already widowers themselves. They called me a sociopath and said I had no idea what I was talking about. I replied that this was perhaps true, but this also clearly pointed out that we were not a great match.

Some of them were quite angry with me, especially those who were already widowers themselves. They called me a sociopath and said I had no idea what I was talking about.

    Others asked if I wanted to meet up for casual sex, and three more asked if I was goth. No, no, and no, I replied.

     In the end, there were only two that were of any interest to me. The first was a man in his late sixties who had found out the year before that he had lung cancer. I’m not looking for sex, he wrote. Just someone to be by my side during my last few months. 

     The second message was from a man who said he was addicted to dangerous sports. Any day might be my last, he wrote. Tomorrow I’m flying to South Africa to swim with hammerhead sharks. Fancy a drink tonight before I go?

     I met with the second man first. He was ruggedly handsome with a hooked nose that had clearly been broken more than once and a mess of blonde hair. 

     “Why do what you do?” I asked him. “Why risk your life?”

     “Call me crazy,” he said. “But I just don’t feel alive unless I’m facing death.” He winked.

     The two of us slept together, and the next morning I kissed him passionately before he boarded the plane.

     “It was nice knowing you, love. Maybe we can do this again if I make it through.”

    I watched his plane depart through the window, trying to feel remorse or sadness, but I felt nothing, just as I had with the fish. I suppose it was too much to ask to love someone after only one night. 

    That evening, I met with the first man who messaged me. He had a thick head of gray hair and bony shoulders. We drank red wine and ate medium-rare steaks at a restaurant with burgundy velvet chairs. He lifted his glass in cheers, and there was an expression in his eye that was alarmingly calm for someone who knew he was on his way out. I clinked my glass against his and jokingly asked him to marry me, to which he replied with a laugh.

     “I could never marry you,” he told me, his knife slicing through the meat on his plate. “You’re much too docile.”

     “Docile?” I repeated.

     “You know what you need?” He looked me in the eye. “You need to get your heart broken.”

     “I know that,” I said. “That’s why I’m looking for someone like you.”

     “That won’t break your heart,” he said. He shook his head. “No, I most certainly won’t. Besides,” he said. He placed a forkful of steak into his mouth and began chewing it, talking to me as he looked down at his plate, his hands busy with cutting the meat. “When you are on the brink of death, it begins to come clear the things you want and the things you have no patience for.”

     He looked at me. “I would have no patience for you.”

     I went home alone that night. The following week, the man who had gone swimming with the hammerhead sharks messaged me again to let me know he had lived. He asked if I wanted to meet him before he went bungee jumping into a crocodile den. I realized I didn’t even know his name.

     I sat at the computer, staring at the screen. The words blended together. I blinked, then exited from the dating site. I pulled up the website for the local pet store and ordered two goldfish.
 
    Aspiringwidow94 still gets messages sometimes. Neither of the goldfish have deceased.

• • •

Breadcrumb #186

BETH HATCHER

Afterwards I sprayed your perfume on everything.
Everything.
The cactus that you killed. The dusty curtains that need cleaning. My bedroom. Yours.
(I'm still doing it.)
I coat the house with the pale pink stuff. Empty bottle after bottle of the cheap powdery scent. Did Dad get you a gift set or something? Because I keep finding more bottles in your closet.
Every day I spray them and every day the scent mixes with the smells of fried chicken and bubbling macaroni that some new cousin brought.
It mixes with their pity.
Dad doesn't leave bed for days now. He yells to stop spraying, but he keeps sniffing your clothes. I've seen him, neck deep in your  work blazers.
Maybe I'll give his nose a break and just douse my room. The fluffy spread. The flowered walls. All the things that you had wanted.
Death is what scents my dreams.  Florescent skeletons grinning through the night.
They make me remember — until I spray, and get to forget again.

I hate the smell of your perfume.
I hate having a dead mother more.
But this is the scent of flowers that will never die and leave me.

So I spray and spray and spray until you are everywhere.

Again.

• • •

 

 

Breadcrumb #184

SEAN BLANEY

"Shit, shit, SHIT!" Exclaims the tech at the receiver.

    The klaxons start ringing out and after a second there is a flash on the dais in the middle of the receiving bay. Now a confused young man is laying there screaming where there was until recently, nothing.

     "Who authorized this kind of transference?" I ask my tech, feeling both bewildered and impressed.

     The quantum computers are good, but they can't be that good. Even with proper calibration they shouldn't be able to differentiate between organic and non-organic materials. Even the new pseudo organic BT9s and their successor chips aren't 100% during a transfer and those are allegedly crucial for an uninterrupted stream of consciousness.

     Now I've got a subject flailing around and screaming. Poor kid may never be normal again.

     "Um..." The tech stammers. "I don't think this was authorized. I don't see any scheduled transfers on the log for today."

     The screaming intensifies.

     "Will someone please shut him up?" I yell to the guards and menials milling around outside the receiver, waiting for instructions.

     I turned from the frenetic scene unfolding and look my tech in the eye. "If we have no scheduled transfers then how did our distressed little friend end up here on my receiver?"

     The screaming now becomes a whimper as the young man behind the glass whirls around breathing heavily with a terrified look on his face. The guards approach him weapons drawn and order him to face away with his hands in the air. The man complies, wincing and whimpering with every movement. He then lets out a pained bellow as soon as the guards grab his arms to cuff him.

     I've read the theoretical abstracts from the early days of the program. I've seen the videos of test animals fused with their collars. I've heard the screams of rhesus monkeys desperately tearing at their diapers, unable to take them off. I understand what he must be going through more than most. I feel sorry for this young man, I really do. It's an unfortunate circumstance but he did arrive, unscheduled and screaming, which is going to be a problem. A problem and far too much paperwork.

I’ve seen the videos of test animals fused with their collars. I’ve heard the screams of rhesus monkeys desperately tearing at their diapers, unable to take them off.

      "Trace the source of that transfer!" I command the tech. "I need to get this reported to the DOE as soon as possible."

     I'm secretly impressed though. We successfully transferred a full live human body. The real question is to see if we also transferred his consciousness. I lean out of the observation room yelling to the guards. "Bring him to the closest containment room, I'd like to ask him a few questions."

    Now that I observe the man behind the one way mirror, I can safely assume he's in his early twenties and relatively normal, physically speaking. He's wearing jeans, a white tee with a flannel pattern long sleeved shirt over it. He looks incredible uncomfortable. I suspect it's because he found himself in a highly secured area with armed guards yelling at him. That and a transfer that wasn't... perfect.

     "What's your name?" I ask as I walk into the containment room.

    He's sitting on a metal chair with his hands cuffed behind his back. He looks up with wide teary eyes and says nothing.

    "OK, we can get to that later." I continue. "Due to various security reasons, I cannot disclose my name. I'm sure you'll understand. Let's start with something else. What's the last thing you remember?"

     "Why does my... my... my shirt hurt?" He whimpers confusedly. "It itches and burns so much."

     That's good, I think to myself. That's damn good. The young man seems to have an understanding of language, physical pain and the ability to coherently convey those feelings. We're making much better progress than is currently projected.

     I press again. "What's the last thing you remember?"

     "I... I was wandering through the Stata building after hours on a scavenger hunt, ya know? Taking photos of cool tech to make a collage for a club challenge. I..." He hesitates. "I broke in after hours and stumbled into this wicked awesome looking room.

    He paused to catch his breath and scratch his left arm against the back of the chair. The action makes him wince in pain.

     Poor guy.

     "Fuck that hurts!" He continues, talking through clenched teeth. "Stumbled probably isn't the right word, more like trespass into the coolest looking room I could find. Breaking and entering really. I remember turning on the lights, bumping my head and then actually stumbling around. I think I bumped into a whole bank of buttons or levers or something. I finally fell on a cold hard thing while an intense whirring sound built up. I remember an extremely bright flash, my stomach lurching and then that guy pointing a gun at me."

     He nodded his head at the guard in the back of the room. This causes him to curse and flinch again. Just then my tech burst into the room with an urgent look on his face.

     "Ma'am!" He says. "We traced the source of the transfer."

    "MIT?" I reply.

     "Y... yes." He stutters. "How did..."

     I cut him off. "Our little friend here gave up the goose. Inform the DOE of the transfer and its contents. It seems a congratulations is in order for the professors in Boston. That and perhaps a few project terminations."

     I turn to the young man. "We'll get someone from the medical team here as soon as possible. You're just going to have to sit tight... what was your name?"

     "Mason." He responds.

     "Mason." I continue. "Sit tight and try not to squirm. I understand that forced molecular integration between your skin and clothing is excruciatingly painful."

     I turn to the guard. "Try and make him as comfortable as possible."

    I address my tech again. "We need to lock this site down until the director is informed and the launch point is secured. It's going to be a long, long night. I'll be in my office drafting up the report if you need me."

    I wonder if Mason will miss the old "him." After all these transference events leave no clones.

     Poor kid.

    As I walk to my office I absent-mindedly scratch my right forearm under my jacket. I keep forgetting how seamless it is between my skin and the silk. I never forgot how much it hurt. Even after all these years.

• • •