Breadcrumb #553

GEORGE FRAGOPOULOS

One version of this story begins, 

The sea is a taut sheet of blue parchment under a cloudless sky, as though the spring had erased any trace of tempests from the landscape’s memory and her own. It was midday, bright, and unusually warm for the end of April, or so they had been told by the hotel’s staff as they headed out to find something to eat. Our brows are crowned with sweat, she thought. It was a few weeks into their escape from the slate-gray sky of London, and the sun shone as if for first time in existence, its intensity reminding her of why an earlier iteration of this culture insisted on the existence of a divinity to explain the source of that light; perhaps there are things only a metaphysics can make sense of. Here, in the Ionian, summer had arrived early, and her consciousness swayed in the day’s heat. Our brows are crowned with sweat, she repeated to herself, and her memory brought her back, if briefly, to sights now unfamiliar: city streets aglow with the aftermath of rain; a dusting of dusk descending on roofs and terraces; the sting of winter air; smoke from a chimney coiling towards the cloudy sky. But now, somewhere out there, between the etched line of the horizon and the taverna on the promontory on which they sat, her mind, when not fully engrossed in the task of deboning the fish on her plate, scudded on that blue sheet, like the tip of a pen etching a language on a blank surface. The sea’s surface, in turn, made an impression on her waking mind. Queer, she thought, that word impression, as if she were hearing it for the first time. She mulled the word over for another second or two, what was once familiar now turned strange, and it felt like a sharp thorn of difference in her all too familiar constellation of words, the constant Greek spoken around her day and night for weeks now making her aware, like never before, of how her own thoughts were also tourists in this country. 

Queer, she thought, that word impression, as if she were hearing it for the first time.

She knew the Greek word for thorn, άκανθα, and its blistering sound echoed with portent, its foreignness burrowing into her ear. But we are all tourists, visitors, our perpetual state of being one of visitation in this world to which we don’t truly belong; until we are no longer here and we are elsewhere, not truly gone, but displaced and other to who and what we normally are. Beneath the table, cats ran the gantlet of their calves and ankles, occasionally crying for scraps, for water, for anything, even for the random moment of human affection, just something to satiate their creaturely needs. Are we, she thought, all that different from these unfortunate quadrupeds? Are they not, in certain ways, much better off than us, should we not envy them? Do they not have an easier, less-burdened relationship with the universe? She pinched a wedge of white fish-flesh from the branzino and tossed it to the floor towards the gaping mouth of a meowing calico. It flinched at first, being suspicious of the incoming projectile, before pouncing on the white flesh in order to get to it before one of her companions did. Her mind, if only for a brief second, snared the image of that cat’s mouth and she thought of the Greek Omega, the Ω, now both the last letter of this ancient alphabet and the mouth of this unfortunate animal. The landscape, she was aware, began to replicate her cursory knowledge of the language, and the fact moved her. Every single thing, she reminded herself, was a hieroglyph, a gnomon, a fragment of the hidden but still present world behind what is glimpsed. This immaterial continent was not simply a shadow to what could be seen, but rather its hidden substance, its soul, perhaps. She would bear witness to it again, she was certain. It was not simply ghosts she believed in, but, rather, in the idea that nothing ever really leaves us, that everything, besides evidence to the contrary, somehow manages to go on, to manage an existence beyond what our limited senses can glimpse. Meanwhile, the Ω took another bite of white fish flesh. She simply knew it was all real because she had experienced it directly. The voices she heard and the images she saw were no fictions, even if we are, she thought, visionless tourists in the kingdom of the senses, groping in the darkness of our waking hours to glimpse something real. Even her fingers, speckled with thyme and glowing with olive oil, seemed strange to her, like the legs of some crab-like creature. 

Bryher often told her that her bones and sinews were tuned to frequencies few could listen to and this seemingly inconsequential April day seemed evidence of that fact, replete as it was with signals that something was arriving from just beyond her vision’s horizons. It was early afternoon and the sea moved as if being pulled by the light’s strings. She looked at Bryher’s face and noticed that, while young, it had already changed in the little amount of time they had been together. They were both already changed by this pilgrimage. Their faces, slightly burned from the sun and salted from previous days of swimming, were details that remained subordinated to the demands of the landscape. The entire picture took on a grammar of abstraction, as if each and every sight was simply a layer painted on top of another layer, the canvas itself impossible to see, buried as it was beneath color after color, image after image, sight after sight. All she saw was beholden to the power of metaphor. She even imagined her lover, at that moment, as a kind of heliotrope, bending her languid stem of a neck towards the light. They were seated in the cradle of the canopy's shade, shielded from the worst of the midday sun, the heat remaining stubbornly pervasive, impossible to escape. It tattooed itself on the nerves, making one both jittery and languorous in almost equal measure. The summer, if they were still there to see it, would bring about an insufferable heat. She had read and heard stories of the Greek landscape, tales of a kind of solar metaphysics that gives the entire countryside a whitewashed glow, with everything taking on the sheen of bone; but this was not what she had found during her stay. In fact, it seemed to be the very opposite: as if the light made it all that much more difficult to see everything for what it was. The sun, that halo of fire in the sky, was a terrible aporia that took more than it gave. The supposed clarity of the Mediterranean light was a ruse, an elaborate theatre of dream-like obfuscation, but one acted out during waking hours, and they both its actors and audience. She was more than aware of the irony of it all: that the stillness of the summer day betrayed the apocalypse behind her eyes, the chiaroscuro of her soul that few were aware of. She could never forget that the world could, if given but the slightest push, collapse into the barbarism of trenches, gun fire, and poisoned air. Lifting the veils that covered the most mundane moments of her life, she always found fires, earthquakes, and tidal waves laying siege to it all. This was not pessimism but simple awareness of how Manichean the universe could be. Poetry’s purpose, she thought, as was the purpose of all art, was to gather enough of the wreckage in order to stem the impossible tide. Bryher, also working aggressively on the corpse of a fish, another branzino, was not in the category of the uninitiated, of the unaware. If anything she was too aware, too intimate with the cacophony she was constantly trying to silence, to suppress. One thing that had brought them together so instantaneously was this deep rolling pain of hers that she could finally share. A suffering that was dull but constant, and that she often equated with the abyssal current of a quake—unseen, quiet, but calamitous, a real threat. 

Bryher’s voice lifted her from her heat-induced torpor: Shall we go for a swim soon? Beneath that thin sheet of parchment, leviathans make their home. I’ll join you later, she heard herself say, and watched as her companion slowly wandered from their table and into the water, only twenty or so yards from where they sat. She remembered her Wordsworth, his fear and love of nature in equal measure, something that she truly felt as well and which she often tried to replicate in her own poetry. Bryher was now cutting across the water’s surface, distancing herself from the shore, transforming with every moment and every movement into an abstraction. She was just now far out enough that she looked completely unlike herself. What remained was a dark figure bobbing up and down to the ocean’s whims. Above Bryher’s metamorphosing figure lay the horizon, that austere charcoal line that made possible the continuous dialectic between sky and sea. The horizon was, she imagined, the gesture of an artist, of a human, if godlike, intelligence, evidence, perhaps, of the first act of creation: the simple mark that divided heaven and earth.

• • •

Breadcrumb #552

SARA KNUDSON

My mother kept crystals charged by moonlight on the roof. Clear quartz, amethysts, moonstones. Negative and positive energy. She collected them, rotated them in wicker baskets woven underwater, wishes held in her breath as she threaded softened fibers together. This is how you impregnate things with powers and wishes. And I’ve heard all the new-agey bullshit about the transformative effects of having a hobby— this was different.

She talked about energy like we were all batteries, fully charged or rusting, leaking battery acid. It had nothing to do with our days, with the thoughts on our minds, with the events in our lives. We were positive or negatively charged, leaking goodness or evil into the world, and we could fix the bad vibrations by hanging rocks around our necks and smearing oils of distant flowers and herbs on our skin. More often I broke out in a rash and numbed my brain with Benadryl.

By the end of high school I was a boiling pot with the lid on. I steamed with negative energy, and no amount of pretty rocks or crystals could have buried the frustration in me. I wanted to scream at my mother’s avoidance, her nonsensical alignment of answers plucked from stars and planets, charted by her birth hour. I wanted to eat the moon and the stars and the planets instead of her organic vegan biscuits slathered with chunks of waxy honeycomb. I found stingers in it twice.

By the end of high school I was a boiling pot with the lid on.

It seemed to worsen with age. Soon the earth was flat, a disc floating on the backs of turtles or perhaps elephants. I’m not sure. She saw evidence for it everywhere: in the horizon, in maps, in  spilled tea leaves. I asked her how her horoscope could work without the spherical flight of heavenly bodies, but she replied that these, in fact, were real, and cyclical, but not the Earth, not us, at the center of all.

We had so little choice but to turn and spin around her, so certain was she, so adept at spinning perception. Reality rotated around her, and we were merely satellites, aligned or misaligned. This is how you infect the world with powers and wishes. You spin them until you unravel.

Her last obsession was breatharianism.

• • •

Breadcrumb #551

FRANCINE WITTE

I had this really bad idea. I decided to do it anyway. But first, I would broadcast it on social media. 

Soon, it took over my news feed. People were commenting and liking in a way they never had. “Do it,” they were saying. “You’re amazing,” they were saying. 

My husband walked in just then. I was posting or tweeting or something. “Why don’t you stick to real life,” he muttered. “We don’t talk anymore or go to the movies.” 

“Because movies are real life.” I said, my eyes never leaving the screen. Maybe snide remarks are also a bad idea. But not really one to go viral. 

I continued with my social media. My likes were up in the thousands. This was like scoring a reservation at one of those restaurants you see on the Food Network. 

Maybe snide remarks are also a bad idea.

“You see?” I said to my husband who had left the room by now. “I’m popular to someone.”

Later that night, lying next to my husband who was sleeping now in our California king, I was trying to ignore the other woman smell that was rising from behind his ear. 

I turned back to my comments. “You are so awesome.” They were saying. 

I looked back to see a purple hickey blooming on my husband’s neck. I thought to shake him awake to discuss it. I wondered if that was a good idea.

• • •

Breadcrumb #550

EILEEN RAMOS

When you hold someone’s hand...

How do you know when to let go?

And is it okay to open your eyes once you kiss, or do we have to close them like on TV?

Intimacy is a foreign concept to me. I never allowed myself to get close out of fear it’ll hurt somehow. Not physically, but emotionally:

What if when they caress my face, I feel nothing at all?

A tender gesture that can’t move me. I’d be as rock still as my stoic mother. She never cuddled or even sing Happy Birthday to me. A firm handshake and a $20 dollar bill is all I’d receive. 

Not even a greeting card.

But she raised and guided me in her own way. I can’t fault her for trying her best. Still, I guess it marked me somehow because I have no idea what love looks like. Outside of a full fridge, airport pickups, and nightly rosary prayers for our family’s well-being. 

Still, I guess it marked me somehow because I have no idea what love looks like.

What does love look like when physical touch is involved? How will I know if I’m doing it correctly? If they moan, that’s a good thing, right?

I never kissed anyone before and I’m already in my 20s. 

Am I such an ugly girl?

Sometimes I wish I had the bravery to just order a female escort. She’d be taller than me, gentle, and have a sweet smile. We wouldn’t have sex, no, I’d be too scared to try that. 

But we’d go on dates, like walks in Central Park or browsing a used bookstore. She’d read me Rumi’s love poetry and we’ll see if I blush from her delivery. We’d spoon feed each other our favorite little custards and pastries. Ube cake from me and tiramisu from her. We’d gradually work on hugging, holding hands, and consoling backs. It’ll be a safe way to try out intimacy, To finally experience proximity. 

Close enough to inhale her strawberry breath. To observe the freckles that dance across the bridge of her nose and her cheeks. To see the true tinted color of her eyes and my own reflection in her pupils. 

I get a little anxious thinking about it. 

But maybe that’s me growing. Maybe I should ring up the escort service today and set up an appointment. I’ve even browsed through different sites to figure out what kind of woman I’d choose. Someone who doesn’t even remotely look like my mother. 

I just want to say that I tried. I don’t want my deathbed regret decades or months from now to be how I never caressed another’s hand. I may not feel a spark with her, the escort, but I’ve already given up on finding a deep connection with another.

But who knows? Maybe I give up too easily. Anyone could be waiting for me on the other side of the door, just hoping I’d try for them.

...Now I’m even more nervous.

• • •

Breadcrumb #549

MELANIE KACHADOORIAN

An episode of King of the Hill flashes before me—the one where LuAnne gets Hank a “swim with the dolphins pass” as a gift and while he swims with them, one of them mistakes his smell for another dolphin. He gets pinned against the side of the tank as the dolphin tries to mate with him. I hadn’t thought about that show until the trainers tell us that dolphins don’t like sunscreen, so we aren’t to wear any. I had rubbed sunscreen on before we arrived at Vallarta Adventures. Suddenly, my feelings of excitement turn into fear. I have no fear that the dolphins will want to make sweet bottle-nose love to me, but I do worry that maybe they won’t like me in general. What if I inadvertently do something to piss off one of them? What if, even without sunscreen, it doesn’t like my smell and attacks me? What if I get the dolphin that suddenly realizes it hates humans, and takes its years’ worth of pent-up hostility out on me? I do not tell Bryan I’m thinking any of this. I’m the one who said no matter what else happened on our honeymoon, we were swimming with dolphins. 

***

I never wanted to get married. I never minded spending copious amounts of time by myself and never felt like my self-worth was dependent upon a man loving me. But, mostly, commitment scared me. My father left us, the first time I said “I love you” to a man and meant it, he cheated on me, and my ex-brother-in-law abused and cheated on my sister. If man told me loved me, then I was done. I almost never said it back. Most of the time, I could see it coming, so I would get up and go to the bathroom, or my allergies would flair up and a coughing fit would ensue. If I couldn’t dodge it, then I usually stammered and said, “That’s so nice. Thank you.” But, then I was done. No matter how hard I tried to tell myself that I still wanted that relationship, I felt bored, or irritated, or both. The longest I ever lasted in a relationship after having heard “I love you” was one miserable month.

And, then I met Bryan. 

We dated for six months before he told me he loved me at my twenty-fifth birthday party. I didn’t see it coming. He wrote it in my card. I read it, looked up and mouthed, “I love you, too.” He smiled. I got diarrhea. 

    He asked me to marry him one year later. 

***

I wipe my skin red making sure that the sunscreen is off, and look around to see if anyone else appears nervous. No one does. For good measure, I take off my visor and my sunglasses and put them in a locker. When Bryan asks why I did that, I tell him it’s because I don’t want to miss anything and really want to see the dolphins. 

“No it’s not,” he says. “I saw the look on your face when they said the thing about sunscreen.” He reaches into the locker and pulls out my sunglasses. 

“What if they forgot to tell us the dolphins don’t like this stuff either?”

“The trainers are wearing sunglasses. It’s okay.”

The tank isn’t really a tank, but a pen within the harbor. There are six people to a trainer (meaning six people to a dolphin also), and there are 5 groups of us. Each group will be in the pen at the same time, so ultimately I have five dolphins that could decide to swim over and kill me at any moment. As we sit in our groups on the wooden deck, our trainers explain the rules: no splashing the top of the water with our hands, and no swimming away from the wall unless it’s your turn. 

Each group will be in the pen at the same time, so ultimately I have five dolphins that could decide to swim over and kill me at any moment.

I like rules. Rules are a contract between ruler and rulee: If you don’t splash the top of the water, then we’ll let you swim with dolphins. If you do splash the water, then you have to get out. Rules mean that someone, besides me, has realized that something bad could happen, and is trying to prevent it. 

***

Registering for wedding gifts was not as fun as I had hoped it would be. We walked out of the store twice without scanning anything because the pressure paralyzed me. Sales people followed us around telling us what we had to have: dish towels, a new microwave, a toaster, pots, pans, pillows, crystal, china. China.

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of china patterns. Our bridal consultant forced china on us: “Make sure you pick a pattern that you will love forever. You’ll use it for all the holidays. Here, let’s set it up on a table so you can see how it will look with the crystal you picked.” I couldn’t. Every time I thought I liked one, I changed my mind the second Bryan said he liked it too. I thought I wanted a traditional pattern with blue painted fruit baskets around the edges of the plates, like my grandmother’s. Then, I wanted a contemporary pattern with platinum swirls on the edges. I searched online for patterns not in the store. I went back and forth for weeks. I asked my mom what china should be. There had to be a china rule. She said it was up to me, but I didn’t know, and the idea that I had to know I would love it forever was too much to bear. 

    People constantly asked how I knew Bryan was the one. How did I know? How could I? I didn’t know how to be wife. Regardless, the invitations had been sent, deposits put down for the church, reception hall, flowers, photographer. People started sending gifts. My aunt sent money with a card that said she had wanted to buy us a place setting of china, but didn’t see it on the registry. How could I get married if I couldn’t even pick a forever china pattern?

    It was in the midst of my weeks-long panic attack that the pastor at our church emailed me the script of our vows, and told me that we could change them however we wanted. I read them. Vows. Rules. I printed them. I took them into the kitchen and read them to Bryan. 

“Sounds good to me,” he said.

“Really? You want me to obey you?” I asked.

“Right, like that would ever happen,” he said rolling his eyes. 

I stared at him and pictured Patrick Bergin’s character in Sleeping with the Enemy right before he back-hands Julia Robert’s character for not organizing their kitchen pantry the way he wants. Until they get married, he is funny, understanding, handsome, perfect. But, then he beats her into submission. I didn’t think Bryan would ever beat me, but I did think that he might change. What if he expected me to obey him?  

“Uh-uh, look at you,” he said. “Don’t get stuck on that one word. We can change it, right? So take that word out if you want.” 

He handed me a pencil, I crossed out the words “and obey,” and then we tweaked the rest: We would be not man and wife, but husband and wife. Neither of us knew for sure how we wanted those labels to define us, so we agreed to help each other figure it out over time. We realized that the traditional vows were too vague, naïve and some of them outdated. They had the right idea, but they were too romanticized. It seemed irresponsible to enter into the commitment of marriage without having further discussions about phrases like “forsaking all others.” Both of us agreed that cheating would not be tolerated, but we also recognized the need to be realistic: If cheating did occur then we promised to be honest with one another about it and to, at least, respect the non-cheating spouse enough to use protection because, as Bryan said, “nobody wants herpes.” We didn’t know that we would love one another forever. We couldn’t. All we could know was what we knew at that moment. 

Right in front of me there was a contract. 

Two months later, I stood in the dressing room of the church, waiting with my bridesmaids to walk down the aisle. The church coordinator came in and told the girls to line up. They walked out single file, each one hugging me as she passed. I turned and looked at myself alone in the full-length mirror. Was I ready? I looked down at my “something old” – my grandmother’s wedding ring that I wore on my right hand. I walked out of the dressing room and waited for sanctuary’s double doors to open.

***

Bryan grabs my hand and gives it a gentle “it’s okay” squeeze. I give him a weak smile. The trainers tell us to jump in with our legs straight and arms crossed over our chests, like divers. They demonstrate.  I looked over to see how far away the ladder is that the trainers use to climb back out of the pen. Our group is the closest group to it. I’m not sure how I feel about the trainers not staying in the water with us. Bryan lets go of my hand and takes a step toward the edge of the dock. He turns around and says, “If you get nervous, just get out. It’s not like you’re gonna be stuck in here.” 

I’m not worried that I’ll never be able to get out. Even if a dolphin, or God forbid, dolphins maul me, I feel certain that at some point I’ll be dragged out. But until then, it would hurt in ways I can and cannot imagine. And, there is no telling how long it would take to recover from something like that. Watching starts to look much more appealing than doing, but then my mother’s voice comes to me. My whole life she’s tried to get me out of my own head—to not allow opportunities to pass me by because of my anxiety. Whenever I’m afraid to do anything she says, “The time is going to go by whether you do this or you don’t. You can either have done something by the end of that time, or you can have not.” 

Bryan crosses his arms over his chest and disappears off the dock into the water, with the dolphins. I step forward and look down. These ninety minutes will go by whether or not I do this. And I jump.

• • •. • • •