Breadcrumb #378

ANDREW MARINACCIO

“Did you pray on it?”

    “Yes. Lord, did I ever. I felt myself sorted south of sin, truth be told.”

    This was Lenora’s first deliberate attempt to shock someone in her adult life. It didn’t really
work. Her admission was cryptic and weightless. Besides, they knew each other too well.

    “Does this mean I have to start worrying about you too, Ms. Lenora?” Pastor Solino asked,
leaning into his question.

    An old-timer’s approach, meant to curb impending rebellion. She was a good one. She would
listen. She diverted.

    “You said salvation fills our sails with wind. Like, every other Sunday during your Family Mass homily. I thought I knew what that meant, and now I’m not really so sure. Nor do I care to
know.” She began to doubt her point, speaking so far from her self. “I’m anxious, father.”

    This did the trick, keeping them puzzled and dreadfully focused on the aftermath of her words.
The tension of disarmament swelled in the pastor’s office. What was said next could lack the
default geniality of conversation, and may very well be honest.

    “How you helm your vessel will determine your voyage — look within.”

    No dice. Just traditional bodies conventionally placed in a mahogany room.

    A wooden Virgin Mary was affixed to the wall behind Pastor Solino’s desk. Her eyes were
closed in mourning, but her mouth slightly curled into a smile. Lenora sat opposite the priest
across his desk and mulled over the preponderance of awkward religious art deemed socially
acceptable by the faithful. One would think they’d know the tonality of their sacred ones well
enough from the source material, but she chalked the misfires up to talent scarcity and reading
comprehension issues. Lenora liked how this Mary’s mischievous smirk worked against her
infamous heartbreak, almost as if the original embodied the figure to delicately warp its features,
revising its humanity. Perhaps she was watching their conversation through her effigy’s eyelids.
Lenora’s sights then caught her pastor’s. She immediately felt judged and fidgeted with the lapis
beads around her wrist.

    Solino was balding, the combed-over strands across his scalp ghostly and tenuous, but well-groomed nonetheless. His tall, accusatory nose that hooked over the pulpit on Sundays and whose shadow, as she thought in that moment, surely dwarfed her infant body during her baptism — there must be pictures to prove it — seemed to have grown larger and blunted with
age. He grew kinder, too, which she found exceptional in her parish.

    “Your vessel and its course, as I know you know from your days as a girl at St. Athanasius, are
not of this world alone,” he said. “Where the ship goes, the soul goes. The soul speaks its needs
to the body, and what it needs is direction towards its eternal reward. Your accordance to this
truth will determine the quality of your course. Ask yourself: how much wind am I catching if I
live this way?”

    The prospect of an eternal reward brought Lenora anxiety, like something you would arrange a
policy over. The phrase was a reminder of a type of death that left little choice in living, which pressed her further. Lenora thought such agency was extinct anyway, even beyond her faith. How could it be operable in a world that insidiously cried for her attention, compelling her energy in frivolous, expensive directions. Maybe she would think differently if she could afford to.

The phrase was a reminder of a type of death that left little choice in living, which pressed her further.

    Pauses, once returned from, change perspective on what was left behind. Latent patterns become clear; the tolerated becomes strange and ill-fitting. Life was fine until Lenora watched television last night for the first time in a year. Despite living online instead, profiled and peddled to by the internet’s phantom powers, it was in the old, oblivious screen that she saw her hunger mirrored. And everyone was hungry for her. Each commercial was a cortege, one flashing requests for her pores, another her thighs and ankles, all eulogizing what she could have been with more time and care. The world begged to make a project of her. Projects offer plans, which you needn’t consider but only follow. Saying no to plans had consequences and she had reached that botched adjustment phase of young adulthood where help denied was incalculable opportunity lost.

    And this was to say nothing of her self-assessment. She had a liberal education. She read Baudrillard while a crucifix hung from her neck. She knew she’s been, in some unseen but nervously felt way, bought and sold ad nauseam since the day she was born. She just couldn’t understand why that struck her so raw and nervously now, why she felt so handled and heavied by the world. She saw a mirror and hunger changed her face, the sinister variables of a screen that morphed its icons of desire as it did the shape of the empty spaces inside her. She’d shudder to think what it would feel like once the chemistry stabilized, shaping its image and her into a perfect fit.

    “There’s no need for confession,” said Pastor Solino. “Penance isn’t helpful here, and I won’t
ask you what you want because that’s of little interest to God.” He gave a weathered smile. “But
I will ask you what you believe you need.” He lowered his voice here, stretching sincerity over
every hushed syllable. The parochial lullaby of priestly admonishment.

    Lenora thought there was something spiritual, perhaps ascetic to the way she behaved in the
world. Those that followed plastic plans, she realized, and failed, won at least a sliver of
experience only they knew in living. Could she ask for that alternative?

    “It’s just that I feel as though I’ve learned all I can from altar service, from lecturing, from
eucharistic ministry. Even from summer missions. I feel as though others have not traveled their
course as well as I have and yet here I am —”

    “It is not your place to judge, Lenora--” said the pastor.

    “Is there some benefit they’re allowed, and I’m not?,” she interrupted. “At least give me a habit
so I can make sense of myself. ”

    Solino cocked an eyebrow toward his combover. “You’re good, Ms. Lenora, but I’m not sure if
you’re cut for the nunnery.”

    “Why is that?”

    “You talk too much.”

    “Nuns wear habits, not bridles, father.”

    She was mortified and covered her face, beginning to giggle. At least she got a decent bon mot in that wasn’t preceded by a sequence of stuttering half-thoughts. After her joke, angels descended from behind wooden Mary’s frozen cloak and kissed Lenora’s forehead, and chuckled in relief. She felt in turn, and didn’t care to stop speaking now. “God conspires not to bridle us,” she concluded, smiling and soul-drunk. Solino was tired, but agreed. He’d make a call to the
convent.

• • •

Breadcrumb #377

CHRISTINE QUATTRO

My parents remind me that it’s much better to be alone and happy, than paired off and miserable. It’s not that I think of leaving my partner often, if at all.  It’s that I already know leaving is a remedy for pain.

    Maybe, because I have been the third person in my parents’ marriage, I won’t ever have to leave mine at all. I’ll be so spent from leaving my parents—or watching them choose one another over me—that I’ll be too tired to leave the couch in the house I share with a man who has never done anything to warrant my leaving. Maybe, by the time we are old and graying around the edges, I won’t feel like I have to leave anything at all.

    What’s in the running, for me, is safety. Who will I be when I don’t have to leave anymore? Packing my car in the middle of the night, leaving California for the unknown of another state. That chaotic slipstream of cool air that weightlessly carries my car across six lane highways and through intersections and into neighborhoods I might inhabit if I was staying in my hometown. There is the look on my best friend’s face when she opens her front door, sees my manic eyes and my anxious dog and my baggage. She knows I am leaving and that I cannot return. She sees our future. The rest of our lives, transformed into a million cross country fragments. The next decade contorted.  The two of us driving to meet at picnic tables in front of cold water lakes under big skies, hugging goodbye and not wanting to let go. There is how she always made me feel like I was home, though I otherwise felt lost.

    The day we became friends was Parent’s Day. We were eleven.  My mother said she wasn’t bringing me a lunch from somewhere just to sit in a cafeteria with other parents she didn’t care to know. So I packed my lunch and was the most obvious outcast in what would be a sea of McDonald’s bags. My friend, the best I’ve ever had, asked what my parents were bringing. Upon finding out I would be alone, she called her father. “What kind of McFlurry do you want? You’re eating with us.”  A million thank-you’s, still feels insufficient.

    The point of all this is to say, there was a moment I recognized it was a problem.  I taught myself how to not feel it. There is a point where the rains in California show up right after a fire, and water beats down on black charred earth until it’s a mudslide. A school counselor would let me come to her office when I felt overwhelmed. I didn’t often cry. Instead I simply told her, what was happening to my life. If I did cry, it was always at the end when all of it had been laid out at her feet, thinking that nice Mrs. Freeto with her kind face would tell me how to get out from under it all.

    This only lasted for a moment, but I was thankful for that chance to empty out.

    Mrs. Freeto told me my bucket was overflowing and I could only carry so much in it.  We both knew there was nothing she could do and nothing I was capable of either. Since I couldn’t escape, and it would likely follow me for the rest of my life, she would just write a memo to tell all my teachers there were problems at home, please be aware. As if they needed to be reminded.

    My parents couldn’t simply divorce like the other parents, they had to engage in an all-out dog fight for dominance that bled into everything I did. Even in their incompatibility they were hopelessly deadlocked.  I had to live in this limbo with them. There was the weight of each of their own over-flowing buckets that sat on opposite ends of a yoke around my neck.  Every time I left Mrs. Freeto’s office, we both knew I would be back in another two weeks, to relay the next chapter in the saga of my parents who could not parent. These parents who took for granted I could understand this didn’t negate the idea of their love. My hyperbolic mother and my hiding father. When the door to Mrs. Freeto’s office closed on the way out, I would wrap up all of my feelings, put them in a little box, and shelve that box in the back of my mind.

    They keep telling us Californians that fire season is important.  Without destruction of the old, new life cannot grow. It is a natural, oftentimes unnaturally triggered, cleansing of trees and brush. Without all that foliage being ushered into its afterlife, there might not be a chance for those young trees to be spread, planted, and grow. What those droplets and the charred earth they fall upon create is the slipping of mountainsides. These silent giants simply cannot hold themselves up anymore. It is out of their control. Mountains are hard to move but once they are in motion they are unstoppable. The day I started to cry, I could not stop myself.  I cried at dogs on the street, my partner’s eyelashes moving in sleep, a man speaking about his daughter.

    I did not start out this way.

Without all that foliage being ushered into its afterlife, there might not be a chance for those young trees to be spread, planted, and grow.

    I was closed off and funny. I had jokes. I was angry, and I was safe in that anger. It protected me like a shield, a glorious invisible cloak of rage that I would put on in the mornings and never take off. It propelled me through my days. Now I cried at HGTV home-makeovers. Those shows where everything is pretend. I sat with my eyes filling for an infinite amount of television hours, as people found the homes they’d always been searching for. I gorged myself on their joy. They just wanted to make their children happy.

    They say that one day the overachiever will look around from the highest mountaintop, and spy another peak more desirable across the range.  I woke up one day in a life full of great things I built for myself and saw what I had yet to conquer. It offended me to admit it how it might not be normal for parents to forsake their child as many times as mine had. How it was not okay that a father left his child to care for the woman he himself could not handle.

    Where do they push all the remnants from a mudslide? They spend hours sifting through them, recovering bodies, pieces of metal, blown out frames of cars. Then, there’s things they cannot recover: all that has been pulverized on the way down the mountainside. They push into a pile the inanimate mush that once was someone’s home. And they haul it away.  

• • •

Breadcrumb #376

KIM DIETZ

I missed you last night
I’ve missed you every night since

We arranged the flowers on the bedside table
Lit candles that smelled of peonies and poppy
We held the funeral buried in bed
Draped ourselves in the laughing shadows
With bottom shelf whiskey tucked in beside us
Washing it all away with the starless night

I’ve missed you every night since you’ve lost
The voice in the cavern of your throat that lulled us to sleep
Like a trapped ghost in the depths of your belly
Since my sheets were last glazed with tobacco and cinnamon and honey
Tasting the breakfast you’ve made me on your lips
You resound on my palate

Like a last meal
One I was asked to choose
A bed-sheet fit as a tablecloth
A blood-orange leaking--
Sweet with thick blushed skin
Peel shedding like a borrowed mask
And I can’t seem to contain it in one place
It keeps dripping and running and weeping down my wrist
Fighting to be held so close

And I’ve missed you every night since.

• • •

Breadcrumb #375

CLAUDINE NASH

Wherever you are in your
small corner, there is a
train rolling through you
carrying all the beings who

have ever loved the dull
colors of something or
someone to life. And

though the walls of your
room may be worn and
thick with neglect, if

you stretch this moment

so thin

that the enemy in your head
can’t whisper,

you may feel the cars
of this train speed through
all the empty stations you
have ever known,

so much so

that when you glance
at the strangers who pass
through this dim and
icy morning,

the deepest tints and
hues within you
start to vibrate,

you detect

the secret sound
the world makes
when it speaks all
its languages at once.

• • •

Breadcrumb #374

ARIELLE TIPA

and everything is so beautiful everything is organized by color and clarity and price and
sickness

tantric chocolate. herringbone flags. an ankh-shaped paperweight. hemlock shampoo. an
automaton. jinxes. this hedgehog can do your taxes. marie antoinette's snuffbox. jolly
chimps. don't watch vic morrow's death scene. phantasmagoria. crystal pepsi. the
metaphysics of a bird. a free download.

tell me good baba is there a spell for this i have one shekel one lira one rupee and
bottlecaps and my hair is oh so soft oh please

i am silkworm tender and ziegfeld glowing and stew-worthy everything is making me so
so soft

i am darling electric and tulip fever and floating and gone and everything is so beautiful i
want to cry.

• • •