Breadcrumb #323

MARY MELLON

1      

Alice is wearing a soft silver beanie interlaced with threads like twinkling stars. She has the round, open face of a flower and long eyelashes. She had a rum and diet when she first arrived at the party, but now she is sitting on the sofa alone. Pink bangs obscure her expression as she glares down at her notebook.

    Untie me
    Bruises bloom
    Across white skin
    And as blood glistens
    I know you for what you are
    An animosity I will never escape from

    “What are you writing?”

    Alice looks up to see a boy with golden eyes watching her. He is tall and large-boned, but stands slightly stooped over. When their eyes meet his crinkle like twin suns.

    “A poem.” 

    “Are you a writer?”

    Alice watches him closely. The look in his eyes appears sincere. “I want to be.”

    “Me too. Do you mind if I take the seat beside you?”

    Alice shrugs. The boy plops into the seat next to her. “My name is Gabe. What’s yours?"          

     Gabe was haunted. Need threatened to swallow him. He claimed Alice could save him but Alice objected. She was familiar with symptom swapping. She said it was best to look inward.

    Gabe had flowers delivered to her doorstep every morning for weeks. There were orchids, tulips, roses. There were lilies, gladioli, and chrysanthemums. The flowers were always white. Gabe spoke about his family, dreams, and what she meant to him. Alice was rootless. His devotion touched her.  

    “So you’re essentially a good girl,” Gabe concluded, when discussing their pasts.

    “No.”

    Alice hated her reflection. She wrapped men around her finger. Her friendships were dependent on the possibility of sex. Her friendships were based on male egos. She did not believe anyone could care for her. She did not believe anyone could see her. Her friends disappeared with Gabe in the picture. But that was alright. She began to lean on him. He was her father, son, and brother. She was his mother, daughter, and sister.

She did not believe anyone could care for her. She did not believe anyone could see her.

    He was different once he claimed her affection. She fell from the pedestal and broke into pieces. He cut his hands on the shards. He was surprised women bleed.  

                                                                        2

    Alice tries to mingle when she arrives at the party. But uncertainties weigh on her. She loves Gabe. She left Gabe. She makes an excuse to her friends and slips outside. There is a table and chairs on the deck. Alice takes another sip of her beer and opens to a fresh page of her notebook. 

    Tuesday

    If someone offered you smack right now, you would have done what he had, but with the awareness of an adult, and while he always assumed you were “essentially a good girl” there is a darkness in you that might even surpass the darkness in him.

    Smile and keep smiling. Inside you register emotion in kaleidoscopic detail. But once you cross the line—you did not land on your feet, you did a face plant—it is much easier to give in and give up than to get past this.

    You must lose yourself in others because you are already aware that you do not exist. Eleanor brushes up against you. Disappear into the crowd, two women, with singular life stories, lost in a sea of people who are simultaneously together and alone. For a while, you can project yourself outwards, and escape.

    I am the girl to avoid, Alice thinks, as Greg approaches. Greg is the friend of a friend. He has the elastic gaze of a true New Yorker. His bulk obscures the rest of the room as he muscles closer.

    “What are you doing all on your own?”

    Her notebook hops across the table when she shrugs. “I don’t play well with others.”

    Greg stands out from the mosaic of people over his shoulder. But Alice notices when a man with bald head like a peeled potato edges closer. Greg turns to the man. “Tony. Get us two more beers.”

    “I already have a beer.” 

      “Have another one.”

      “Okay. But I could go for something more exciting than beer.”

      “Like what?”

      “Like coke.”

      Greg passes her what looks like a cigarette. Alice reaches for her lighter and the cigarette droops to the floor. 

    “What are you doing? Don’t waste it you dope. There’s coke in there.”

      “There is?! I’ve never done coke in a cigarette before!”

    “I can tell you’re very excited about doing coke. Your cheeks keep curving upwards in this big smile.”

    Tony reappears with the beers. For a moment Alice can feel the weight of a beer in each hand.

    “I have more coke at home if you want to come to my place.” Greg leans closer to shelter Alice from view.

    “Can we do more here?”

    “I might be able to get you some. Let’s do some shots first.”

    Alice glances down at the pink cylinder in her purse. She slips her bag over her shoulder. Inside Greg pours them both two shots of Patron at the kitchen table. They clink glasses and she tosses hers back in quick succession.

    “You look like such a nice girl. But you’re hard as nails, aren’t you?”

    “I’m a bad person,” Alice says agreeably.

    Her head pounds. She looks away for a moment. They are in a bathroom. Greg tips a line of white powder across his pinky and tells her to snort. Suddenly her mood is brighter. Wonder and contentment hit her in waves. 

    “This is great!!!”

    Greg leans forward as if to kiss her. Alice steps back and traces the shape of his eyebrow just to tease him.

    She walks away.

                                                                                                                                    Friday

      Love is an open wound that will not stop bleeding. It darkens corners, and street signs, and when the man smiles at her, she knows she should walk away, which is why she walks closer. He has beady eyes, with too much hardness in them, but she feels strangely confident now, because it is only when you expect better from people that they can hurt you.

    Alice grasps hands with the man. When she pulls away there is a small packet in her closed fist. Alice slips inside the closest shop and opens the door to the bathroom. She inhales deeply. Thought and emotion meld, with an overarching clarity. There is nothing more peaceful.

    An evening comes when Alice passes Gabe on the street again. He likes seeing her red-eyed, downcast, and alone. Her drinks her tears for nourishment. They give body to his soul.

    Alice is in the company of another man, a handsome stranger. He can see the light in the other man’s eyes when he kisses her. Although her expression is sad, a dull electricity shines in her baby blues, as if transmitting the message that it is time to move on.

                                                                        3

    In upstate New York Gabe sat in her bedroom. His heart was creaking open. A flower—pedals crumpled—crushed in his large hands.

    Alice opens the door to her apartment when she returns home from the party and turns on the light. The is a liter of Bacardi and a half empty coke zero on the kitchen table. She tucks her keys in her pocket as she locks the door, pulls out a chair, and sits.  

    Her skin is beginning to itch. Not the deep, writhing itch of poison ivy, but as if someone is tickling her. Her head is whirlwind of pixilated throbbing. She can feel a light sweat, like a sheen of poison rising from her skin. Alice retrieves the cloth sunglass case nestled beneath her left breast. Inside is a purple pill case. When she turns it over several pieces of cut up, day-glow colored straws fall into her open hand. Alice unwraps a fresh square of paper and forms a line.

    From inside the bedroom she hears a sound. The headboard denting the wall as someone stands abruptly. There are footsteps. Alice freezes. The pink cylinder in her purse might protect her from an intruder but not one with a gun. Alice grabs the pepper spray and stands, simultaneously unlocking the door behind her.

    Her bedroom door opens. “Alice. My Alice.” He is drunk and probably high.

    “You need to leave.” 

    “You left me.”

    “I didn’t leave you. I gave you a choice.” Her right hand shakes but she focuses on the feel of plastic under her fingertips.

    Gabe takes several heaving steps towards her. He moves as if to hug her, pulling her in against the warmth of his body. For a moment she can almost believe he is the source of comfort and protection she imagined him to be. She pushes against his chest. His hands wrap around her throat. She is seeing stars.

• • •

Breadcrumb #322

MANUELA CAIN

Luci took me under her wing.
Sat right next to me on the bus that Tuesday when brother was home with the flu.
She says things like “You’re a baby” and “Don’t be stupid.”

Luci has those shiny hair clips mama won’t buy me.
Luci don’t carry a plastic square lunchbox like mine.

“That’s Booger Boy. Don't talk to him.”
I know Booger Boy. I see him every morning. His parents are old like grandparents.
Didn’t matter what nobody said to that boy, his finger’ed be up his nose and then out on the green vinyl in front of him like it was all he knew how to do.

I nodded like I didn't know.
I wanted to learn everything.
I wanted to learn everything the way Luci told it.

Luci told me, “Watch out for white people they’re not like us.”
I peeked across the aisle. Saw Cat’s blonde hairs clinging to the static of the vinyl, shiny and long.
Luci says, “Don’t hold hands with boys unless their hair is brushed and their shoes is new.”

Luci calls me estúpido, says I’m lucky she sat next to me.
I believe it.

Her nails are lavender and her baby hairs are pressed smooth to her forehead.
I wonder if I could hold her hand. If she’d say that’s stupid or breaks some rule.

Luci says she saw me down the block.
Says there’s something wrong with girls who run around with boys.
Says I should know better.

By the end of the week, brother’s back. He says to stay away from Luci.
I act like I don’t care.

I watch her through the crack between the seat and the window.
I wonder if she’s looking for me.

I think maybe she’s tellin’ some new girl about Booger Boy.
Saying to stay away from me too.

• • •

Breadcrumb #321

CLAUDINE NASH

The toothless
pterosaur
you used
to feed
keeps crying
for your
cold corn
and sardine
soup.
I spent
the morning
in the side
garden
grinding
insects,
dicing
scallions
and bits of
fresh fish,
yet still
he spits
my sorry
excuse of
a stew into
the dunes.
I fear time
is finding
him growing
thin and
ornery.
It's not
my intent
to make
another
suffer
hunger,
but I must
admit I
love the way
his wings
make wind
when he
takes off
bothered
and empty-
bellied.
Tomorrow
I will tuck
your recipe
book back
under my
mattress and
bring him
a basket
of bread
soaked in
salt water
instead.
I thought
you both
knew
I'm not
much of
a cook.

• • •

Breadcrumb #319

AVANI PATEL

Are you sure it is safe?
I am sure,
You whispered,
If I am sure of anything, it is this, now

My feet were cold but the sand was warm
The waves waved, beckoned, tickled my toes so I laughed

Just jump
So I did

And we swam
Through uncertain waters and merciless waves we swam
Drowning and tumbling and calling it swimming.

We stopped.

Looked forward, back

Shore looked different now

Changing each time we waded these waters

The waves grew tired, kissing,

Gently, pulling away when needed.

I looked at you – covered in casualties of sea

Can you see?
I could not

Are you there?
You were not

So I saw

And swam back

To my sure.

• • •