Soft as Glass

“I was born when she kissed me. I died when she left me. I lived a few weeks while she loved me.”  — Humphrey Bogart as Dixon Steele

There was this line he was working on in his head. He’d been chewing on it for a while, trying to get it right: “I want to be with you. It’s as simple, and as complicated, as that.” That was the line. It wasn’t anything special, but he thought it was pretty good, would get across what he wanted to say. He just had to wait for the chance to use it—or to send it. But waiting made him restless and he checked his phone even though he knew it didn’t ring or beep, and wondered what she would be up to, a grimace curling across his now darkened face. He whispered a noiseless incantation, “she loves me.” It was an effort in self-assurance, hard fought but lost. Because what he really thought was that something had changed, and more than think it he could feel it, feel it all the way down in his bones like he felt the pressure change when it was about to rain. He’d get his chance to say the line, that was sure—because if he didn’t get the chance he’d just say it anyway. What he wasn’t sure about, was if, at this point, she’d even want to hear it. 

He sat down at his eggs but couldn’t eat, stomach wrestling a big, black, burning anxiety. Looking down at the scrambled mass before him, yellow liquid leaking from it, he could hardly even recall making it. Because he was thinking: if it was nine here then it was five in the evening there, and she would have woken up and made her Nespresso with cookies eight whole hours ago, eight whole hours that were now as hidden and mysterious to him as the bottom of the ocean or the dark side of the moon. Perhaps in a couple more hours she would have pizza with goat cheese and honey—her favorite; that’s what he was seeing in his eggs, French goat cheese. But it didn’t make him any hungier—it was, instead, making his stomach flutter like a hummingbird.

It made him think about that time they had ordered pizzas and when they were delivered, Fleur put them in the oven to warm them up, then came into her room into bed with him to wait together for the pies to get hot. They laid in the large bed in the small bedroom and watched ‘Nathan for You’ under a massive wrinkled Jacques Brel poster which stared across the room to a smaller poster of Johnny Depp in ‘Cry-Baby’ and a matching one of Sophia Coppola’s ‘Marie Antionette’. Next to the black marble mantle which held among its many scattered jewelry boxes and makeup items and hairbrushes and spiked necklaces the little pink bowl he brought back for her from Morocco. They laid in the bed, and it wasn’t long before they started kissing and touching and started heating up, so to speak. Getting really hot. “What about the pizza? How long’s it been?” he said, panting. 

She rubbed his cock over his pants, straddling him, said “if you had to choose between me and your pizza, which would you choose?” and lifted his hands to her breasts. 

“I’d choose you over the best pizza in the world,” he whispered, pulled her body down to him. Fuck it.

But when he was fumbling to take her pants off a few moments later she broke free, her eyes wide, “ah, NO, the pizza.” And ran from the room. Then he heard her exclaim some noise charged with a sense of panic. He leapt up, tucked up his boner (in case her room mate was around), ran after her. 

She was in the kitchen, which was full of smoke, a scorched black pizza box on the counter in front of her. “What happened??” 

“We were sooo close, like SO close to starting a fire. This was glowing red when I came in.” She pointed to the ashen lid of the pizza box. “What if we had decided to fuck? We would for sure have died if we had fucked.”

“Eh, it would have been worth it,” he said. And he started laughing so hard he grabbed out for her, had tears in his eyes. “Why did you put pizzas in the oven inside their boxes?? Is that how you always do it?”

She twinkled meekly, “well yes but usually it’s just with one pizza and I don’t have somebody trying to fuck with me and make me forget.” Two pizza boxes in a little toaster oven smashed right up against the heating element. 

Back in bed, she said “I can’t stop thinking about if we had been fucking earlier. We would be dead. Oh my god, I feel SO dumb.”

“It would have been beautiful. I can’t imagine a cooler way to die. Wouldn’t it have been a great dramatic movie scene? Like we’re fucking, you can see neon lights through your balcony window, so everything would be like indigo and shadow, Miami Vice night kinda look, and that song from ‘Drive’, you know….?”

“Ahh, Kavinsky?” 

“Yes thank you….that Kavinsky song from ‘Drive’ is playing and when the robot voice comes in the fire breaks through your bedroom door, but we dont stop fucking or even notice the room is on fire because it’s the greatest sex in the world.”

She was giggling “ouiiii, this is perfect. I would have to be on the top, right? 

“Yes, exactly, with your head tilted back and your hair all falling down behind you.”

“And we don’t even care that we’re burning because the sex is soooo good.”

“Exactly.”

“This is SO funny. And so dumb.”

They laughed, heads pressed together, until tears mingled on their cheeks.

They had been minutes away from burning. Now there were times he felt so bad that he’d think it almost would have been better if they really had. If they had just burned up in a sexually dramatic—literal blaze of glory—rather than have to live apart like this. So dramatic! That was his big problem lately: this drama in his head. He couldn’t stop thinking about her and something in the atmosphere had changed and they weren’t talking as much and thinking about her was not making him feel warm and fuzzy anymore but all different kinds of bad. It was making him act a little bit pathetic. 

So here’s what he does when he tries not to act pathetic: he turns on the tv, turns back the pages of the book his eyes read while he was thinking of her, and—he can’t help himself—checks his phone again. As if he could actually send what he thought and felt through the airwaves all the way across the world to Paris and talk to her. As if he could stare at her picture long enough to make her feel his gaze and think of him. ‘How can I be with her?’ came the question over and over in his mind, came the mantra which rang out in the tortured nest of his imagination morning, afternoon, and night. It didn’t matter anyway, though, no matter how much he thought about it: because she was there. And he was here. Nothing, now, could change that. 

Had it really been three months since he’d left? It was strange how time had gone so slowly before, only to move so fast now; so that a month in Paris was a lifetime and three months back home was only a breath of air. Still, it was all ineradicably there, right there, on the front of his mind. He didn’t even have to close his eyes to see the exact moment she had appeared on the periphery of his beer-drunk, as he waited in line to fill his cup, outdoor concert blaring in the background. “You’re American? And you came here just for this festival?” She had overheard him talking with a girl (who turned out to be her cousin) who was trying to put a plastic diamond sticker on his cheek. He had been interested in and occupied by the cousin with her hands all over his face saying “you need to hold still,” when he looked over at this new voice. It came from a beautiful girl! With long wavy brown hair you could already see wrapped around your fingers. And deep, bright brown eyes. She wore a motorcycle jacket on top of an oversized red turtleneck, wide, worn black Levi’s, and classic Doc Marten boots. 

He stared at her for a long time with a look on his face like he was trying to pop his ears. Really he was trying to think of anything but “wow she’s cute” or “wow I love her style.” Eventually he said, “yeah, pretty much. I don’t know, it seemed like super cool music and a cool festival!” 

She might have been the prettiest girl he’d ever seen in his life, is what he was thinking about, and he struggled to concentrate . 

“Where in the U.S. are you from ?”

“Seattle,” he said. 

“This is crazy! You come so far for just this tiny festival. Most French people don’t even know of it. How did you hear of this in the U.S.? I just want to understand,” she said. 

“I’m sorta friends with a guy in one of the bands so I kinda made that an excuse for a trip.” He said.

“So cool! Which band?”

“Acid Tongue.”

“Oh I don’t know this band,” she said. “Are you only visiting France or will you go to other countries as well?

“Yeah, Paris for a few days before and after this and then I’m going to Lisbon. After that I don’t know where I’ll go but I have a few months to travel.”

“Ahh this is so cool I want to do this SO much!” she said. She was gushing. He blushed. “Sooo, what did you do in Paris before you came here?”

“Oh, you know, just the tourist stuff. I went to the Pantheon and the Eiffel Tower, and had to see Jim Morrison's tomb in the Pére Lachaise obviously. Lizard King lives!” he said, and knew it was a bad joke. “It’s right next to the place where I got a tattoo.”

She was nodding along and then brightened. “Ahh oui you get a tattoo! Where is it? Can I see?”

He told her it was on his thigh and that he’d have to take his pants off to show her, she blushed again. But he pulled up a picture on his phone instead. And as he held it out before her his arm came slightly around her and her body moved slightly against his. “I think this is really nice.” she said, beaming up at him from under his shoulder. “A really good tattoo.” 

“Thanks,” he said, unable to suppress a juvenile smile, like a shy little kid getting his birthday sung to him. “It’s my first one. I’ve been pretty excited and nervous about it.” Suddenly he remembered himself, and stuck out his hand in awkward ceremony, “my name’s Raf by the way.”

She looked at him, laughed at him, and then offered her hand too. She had small hands with long fingers and a medium-length white nail job. “I’m Fleur,” she said. “Nice to meet you.”

He suggested that they go back over towards the music, since cousin Jeanne with the plastic diamond stickers had already left. 

She waited while he bought another beer and they went over to the outdoor stage. The festival was hosted at an old viny farm with old buildings with old red tiled roofs in the countryside of Normandy and they walked in the mud over what could have been the bones and battlefields of both their ancestors alongside the festival’s namesake brick and plaster barn. 

“So is this your first time at Rock in the Barn?” he said. 

“No, no, I was here last year as well. I think this is so fun here.”

“It’s super cool. I love this old farm way out here in the middle of nowhere. It’s really beautiful. I’ve never seen anything like it before,” he said. “What did you think of the shows last night?”

“Ahh I missed them. I was so sad. I work last night so I came with my friends from Paris this morning,” she said. “Was it good?”

“Ohh noo, what a bummer! It was super good!” He said. “All the bands were way, way cooler than I expected. It was almost overwhelming,” he laughed. “You have to check out Lebanon Hanover, they were so weird and crazy, kind of a little bit like The Cure.” And then he paused thinking of what to say next. “That sucks you had to work last night. What do you do?” He hated himself for asking what might be the most boring question in the world, and one which he had found to be particularly unpopular among Europeans.

“Ah mhmm, I work in the music industry,” she said. “For a—I don’t know if my english is good—a record label.”

He swooned. “Whoa! What a neat job!” 

“Neat?” she said. “I don’t know this word.”

“Oh it’s like a dorky”—she raised her eyebrows—, “or funny, way of saying cool.”

“Cute. And you, what do you do?” 

“Right now I’m a fisherman,” he said. “I work on fishing boats in Alaska most of the time.”

“Ah wow, okay!” she said. “So crazy, I would love to learn about this. How long are you on the ocean? Do you go out far away?” 

“Uh yeah, we go pretty far out, and all over Alaska. It’s called longlining because we tie lines—I mean ropes—with hooks on them together to make a really long rope that lays on the bottom of the ocean.” He held out his hands in ‘okay’ signs, pulling taught between them an imaginary string. 

“Wow, and you sleep on the boat?”

“Yep, we’re usually out there at least a week?”

“A week!”

“Sometimes two.”

“This sounds so crazy. I’ve never met a fisherman before.”

“So, I’m your first?” he said. 

She smiled big and bright, exposing the tiny star-shaped golden tooth jewel which was plastered to her upper left incisor.

He noticed it immediately. “I like your tooth gem.”

“Ah thanks,” she said. “You should get one! I think this would look really cool on you! No really, it would fit your style a lot I think.”

“Maaaybe, my old roommate had a heart-shaped one,” he said. He liked hers better but he didn’t say that. 

“Oh! A heart! Perhaps he is—how do you say— a bit of a slut?”

“Yes!” he said, smiling. “He is.”

She shook her head at the thought of the boy-player with a heart-shaped tooth gem. She laughed, and then thought for a moment. “What I want the most—like so much—is a greel.”

“A what?” 

“Greel? A greel?”

He shook his head. 

She showed her teeth and pointed at her mouth “greel! Like a greel for your teeth, you know, like rappers wear. Is my english bad?”

“Ohhhh,” I said, “a grill. My bad. No, no, I’m just dumb.” He wished he could record her speaking a few sentences so that he could study the way she talked later.

“I think it would be SO cool looking. Not one of the big greels that goes over all your teeth, no. Just a little one for one tooth.” She posed and pointed at one of her canines.

He was mesmerized. But he snapped out of it in a sudden realization and exclaimed, bumbling, “your english is really really good, you’re way better than most of the other people I’ve met here.”

“Really? Are you making fun of me?” She looked almost offended. 

“No, no! Not at all. You’re actually very fluent and you have a good vocabulary! Super good!” he appealed. 

 “Wow, ok! So nice. Thank you! No really, this means a lot to me because I worked so hard on my english. It was very important to me when I was growing up that I would be really fluent one day, because I knew that you just have to be good at english. You know? It’s really important. So, I always took my english very seriously, even as a little girl. Like I always studied the most for english classes and really tried so hard to do well in them. Moreover, I came to America to study in Massachusetts during high school.” 

“Oh no way, that’s awesome. With a host family? Where in Massachusetts? One of my friends I came here with is from Mass,” he said. 

“Ah, no way! Yes, I was with a host family—in Stoughton, do you know if it? The family was nice but it was kind of strange. They had a son who was a few years younger than me and became really, I mean really—what is the word in english, oh yes—obsessive with me. Like totally in love. He followed me around everywhere I went. On the way to school and when I was…ahhh so weird…..when I was in between classes. Even in the afternoons when I would go with my friends. It was SO awful.”

“Oh go-o-0-d, that’s sounds fuckin’ terrible. You must have been miserable! I’m so sorry you had to deal with that.” He reached out and cupped her arm, didn’t know the right words. “Nope, I don’t, I haven’t heard of Stoughton, but I can ask my friend. He grew up in a super fancy yacht club kind of town somewhere in Mass. I’ll ask him about it.”

Suddenly, she looked over her shoulder as a haphazard procession of concert-goers migrated away from the outdoor stage and into the barn. He looked too and suddenly noticed that the crowd was no longer around them and that the band had left the stage, taking the chance to continue talking aimlessly with them. Now, the ongoingness of their conversation became impossible to ignore. Unease crept into the open space around them. “I think the next show is about to start,” she said. “Perhaps we should go over there?”

Holy shit. He’d fully expected her to say she had to go find her cousin so she could disappear from him forever.

 “Yeah, sure, let’s go check it out,” he said. Casual. No pressure. 

So they walked the fifty meters or so (which Fleur had estimated the distance to be) over to the barn. As they stepped into the large doorless entrance they could see that the barn was already pretty full of people, the band already aggressively engaged in their set, ancient straw and raw timber in the roof reverberating with the clang of guitar and the eruption of drums. Conversation impossible. He looked to her and her to him, then back to the stage, church-going in their reverence, and like a pair of marionettes moved forward together into the crowd towards the stage. The two of them moved and nodded their heads side-by-side to the drum and guitar for a minute or so. He pretended to pay attention to the music. But to no avail. He couldn’t help himself— didn’t care about the band at all—he looked down at her, but as he turned to look he caught her mouth swinging into his, her arms reaching out for his shoulders. Lightworks. Kaleidoscope. Soft, full lips. Finally he had a fistful of that beautiful thick brown hair in one hand tilting her head back, the other on her lower back pulling her close against his body. The music faded away into the background until all that was left were her lips against his, her faded perfume mingling with stale beer and the scent of sweat, and hands, and heat. 

The rest of the night was no longer about music, and became an indistinct fugue of kissing Fleur. They went from one stage to the next, to stand and sway before the collision of drum-machine—as the night transitioned to more of a Euro-techno sound—or sat off to the side, anonymous in the crowd, alone in their embrace. An older man heard them speaking in english back inside the barn and was curious as to what was going on. She explained the situation to him in french. He looked at them for a long while and seemed very drunk and his dirty black crewneck looked soaked with beer. Then said to Raf in a thick accent,  “you are an American,” he paused, “here,” he pointed at the barn floor, “and you met a french girl?” He raised his eyebrows, lifting along with them the small orange beanie atop his hairless dome. 

“Uh yeah, I guess so,” Raf said. 

The older man grinned and nodded approvingly, making Raf and Fleur uncomfortable.

Soon they forgot about it and kept on dancing. 

When the music was over they sat in the muddy grass among the tents with the straggling few who remained awake to drink and smoke whatever was left to consume, and to take with it the last good energy in the fading night. She spoke in french to another guy who sat beside her. And Raf suffered in his attempts to understand what little french he had learned after so many years of study—middle school, high school, college. Eventually he abandoned his manners which instructed him to wait patiently for them to finish speaking and touched her arm, “you want to go walk around a bit?” he asked. 

“Ah oui, yes let’s go.” She bounced right up. 

They walked around a tall tent and instantly embraced in feverish kissing. “I want you so much,” she whispered in his ear. 

“Where can we go to be alone?” he asked. He was sharing a tent, and the others were already sleeping in it. 

“Ah, I know, this is just the problem,” she said. She paused for a while, then said, “do you have a condom?”

His legs nearly buckled, and for the first time in his life, he genuinely prayed: ‘dear lord,’ he thought, ‘please let this happen. Please don’t let me fuck this up.’

“Ohhhh fuck” he said, thinking hard. “No, I don’t buuut….”

“Ah it’s ok, we can still have sex if we find somewhere we can go, if you want to. Just no penetration. You can fuck me if you come see me when we’re back in Paris.”

He didn’t push it, only looked around desperately. And there, bright under the lights in the distance down the field, saw it: “we could go in one of the showers in the trailer over there,” he said, “that might be the only option.” 

“Yewwww,” she groaned, “but they are so dirty. No, I don’t think so. I don’t think this is a good idea. But Jeanne is at the private afterparty with the bands, perhaps our tent is empty but I don’t know. We can go see I suppose. But I don’t know where our friend is. If he’s inside I think I will have to just go to sleep.”

“Ok, let’s try.” Again he solemnly appealed to whatever power it was that governed him, ‘dear lord, or whatever the fuck you’re called, please let that tent be empty and I swear I will change my vicious ways.’

Her tent was much farther than he would have expected. She explained that because of her various ‘industry connections’ she was allowed to camp among the band members in a separate area. It took maybe ten minutes for them to walk there through a small path in tall grasses, in silent, boiling, hopeful, expectancy. 

They finally arrived at the tent, saw it illuminated before them like a Guadalupe by the light from an adjacent farm structure which seemed to burn all night long. They were utterly alone except for the captive shadows imprisoned there past their time by that little light. “Ok, wait here just one second,” she said. And approached, cat-like and surreptitious, opening the tent door zipper with extreme care, inch by agonizing inch. He waited and watched and prayed some more. After what seemed like eternal minutes, she stuck her head inside and turned back to him with a big, excited grin, “it’s empty. Ok, let me just text Jeanne. But I think you can come in for a bit.”

He looked up into the cloudy night sky and nodded a silent ‘thank you,’ proceeded with her quietly towards the tent, quaking with anticipation. His legs felt weak and his stomach felt like he’d swallowed bees. She reached for the zipper to open the door the rest of the way and stopped, turned back to look at him. “No penetration, though, remember,” she said. 

His body sagged slightly but he said, “that’s ok. I don’t care.” 

“Ok good.” She disappeared inside. He almost fell over in his urgent struggle to kick off his mud-encrusted shoes. And then dove into the tent and started rolling around with her. 

First, he took off her leather jacket. Said, “I love your jacket, you look so cool in it. Like a girl James Dean.” Kissed her deeply. 

She had her hands rubbing all over his pants and stomach, panting. She said, “thanks, it belonged to my grandfather, my sweater as well.” So the sweater came off too. 

“That’s cute….and hot for some reason.” He said, feeling again like a typical dumb American. 

It didn’t take long before they were fully naked and kissing each other all over, their whole bodies twisted up together in a big knot. Legs with arms, arms with legs, on top of clothes and pads, and bags containing makeup and toiletries. He put his head between her legs and his arms around her thighs and reached his hands up to her breasts. Like a dog at a well. Until she pulled him up, rolled them both over, and knelt, kissing him down past his waist to put his cock in her mouth. But there was a problem: there was hardly anywhere to get water at the festival and both their mouths were so critically dry that it was inhibiting them from any serious engagement in these, their non penetrative options. Ended up they were in a missionary-type, not-so-dry hump position. “Arrête,” she said when he rubbed his cock gently between her legs, ever-so-slightly against her clitoris. “What are you doing?” she breathed.

“Don’t worry,” he whispered, “I promise I won’t, I’m just teasing. You can trust me. I promise I won’t.” He went on, hoping beyond a hope that she would lose control of her desire and allow it to happen. They both began to pant and moan slightly. 

“Arrête. Arrête. It’s too much,” she said after a minute or so. 

“Ok.” He stopped.

Then they lay there in the tent, nakedly entwined, him on top of her. And blurted out random thoughts: “If you could only eat peanuts for two years or bananas for three, which would you choose?” he said.

“Uh neither, I would die. That’s disgusting.” She was laughing. “Can I eat things with bananas in them or just bananas?” 

“It has to be just bananas or just peanuts,” he said. 

“Ok, yeah, this is dumb,” she laughed. 

“Weeelllll….if you could wiggle your toes and go anywhere in the world right now where would you go?” 

“Hmmm, ok, this is a better question. But so hard! I never had a chance yet to travel the way you do. Attends! Attends. Ok. I would looove to go to South America, all over, and also to North Africa, perhaps Thailand or Vietnam as well. But I think I will go to South America first. Right now, I think maybe Peru. Jeanne, you know, my cousin, she is leaving to go traveling for a year just a couple months from now. I’m so sad she’s leaving, but I’m also so happy for her. I think I will try to travel for a long time too, perhaps in the end of next year.” He moan-grunted his approval, laid his head down on her bare chest. She ran her fingers through his greasy hair. “Where is your favorite place you’ve been, it seems like you travel so much.”

“Hmmm,” he thought about it. “Right here!”

She delicately scratched his back along the length of his spine with one long fingernail. He shivered. “No really, your favorite.”

“Really! This is it.” He looked into her eyes. They twinkled up at him with a radiance that made him melt into a big puddle. Smooched her. Put his hand on her big soft cheek. 

 After a while she said, “I think I must sleep soon.”

He had no idea how long they’d been in the tent. “Yeah, me too, but I don’t want to leave you.”

“Mhmm, me either.” She squeezed him tight where she held him under his arms.

But it was time to go. They both knew it. And moved slowly apart. Sitting up slightly, he noticed the tent door wasn’t completely closed, and the tiny gap at the top allowed a spotlight beam from the all-night-light outside into the tent. It fell perfectly across her stomach and over her slightly protruding ribcage onto her left breast, up her little neck to the ridgeline of her jaw, and ended on her face. She was stunning. It made him feel dizzy, gave him this funny sensation way down in his belly like whatever moving parts were in there had gotten confused and worked themselves into a knot. He thought that she really was probably the most beautiful girl he’d ever seen. And, seeing her like this, naked in the half-light, wondered what he could have possibly done to deserve getting to spend any time at all with a girl like Fleur. 

He held her chin and kissed her one last time, said “okay, good night. See you in Paris. Sleep well.” Pulled on his muddy shoes. And with one final look at her, stood out the door and zipped it closed. Walked away and couldn’t help turning back to look at the tent sitting there brightly one last time, right where he’d left it with her falling asleep inside, already wishing he was still there with her. The walk back to his tent felt like a dream. It all did by the morning. 

And it still does now. Like a dream he can’t wake up from, but can’t fall all the way back into either. Because try though he might, and close as he may get with his intractable imagination, he still can’t get himself back into that time with her. And even though he can hear her voice, and feel her touch, he’s still only sitting there alone on his couch, waiting for a text—missing her from halfway across the world.

Missing her wasn’t going to bring him any closer, but he couldn’t help it. A black cloud followed him everywhere he went, raining the name Fleur into his head. It was making him lose his mind—and his appetite. He gave up on eating breakfast, pulled on his jacket and put on his boots, turned off the tv, went outside to start his truck so that it had time to warm up, and shook his head when he saw that he may not have enough fuel to make it the whole half mile to work and back. It sputtered, rattled, stopped. He started it up again. “Stupid old piece of shit.” Kicked it. A woodpecker and a chickadee made their asynchronous music in a tree nearby—bass and hi-hat. He looked up at the chickadee as the white-gray exhaust billowing from the truck enveloped and swirled around the trunk of the tree. “I wonder if you have a girl somewhere faraway too,” he said to it. “If you do, how come you just keep singing your song in that tree? Why don’t you go after her?” The chickadee went on chirping without rhythm, muffled by the noise of the truck. “Guess you don’t have a choice,” he said. “Me either,” and turned back to the door. The bird quit singing, and he looked at it from the doorway for a long while. And he wondered why it was that a bird shouldn’t be free, and him any less. 

Walked inside and let the dogs back in, made a lunch—a sandwich with leftover falafels, a cheap version of those kebab sandwiches he’d bought that day for the two of them to eat on Fleur’s lunch break in a little park near Montmartre. Those sandwiches were good, and he had been so hungry and lovestruck and enamored and stoned, that he’d left his phone sitting on a park bench when they walked away. Only to realize and find it missing from the spot a few minutes later. How Fleur had called the phone and convinced the two nice teenage boys to bring it back to them. And begged him and tried to make him promise to put a password on it afterwards—he refused, preferred the simplicity and the ease of access: “You’re SO lucky!” she said. I can’t believe it. What if they had been bad people and wouldn’t bring it back, and with no password. I think you are crazy for not having one. They could have stolen all your information. Raf, really, you are so lucky.” she shook her head, and actually was a bit angry with him, even though she still couldn’t keep herself from smiling. “You’re so lucky.” He was. Her eyes shined something incandescent up into his, the kind of thing that bad luck and mistakes bounce right off. A few minutes later they were kissing in an alley a block away from her work and she was late and her coworker walked past and said hello and left them there giggling. It was a great lunch and had made him feel so good that she wanted to see him on her break. 

Today he would only have a sad little falafel on rye and he would eat it alone. 

He cleaned up, grabbed his tool bag, walked out the door. Then drove the long two minutes to work, to the house he was helping to construct, the whole time waiting impatiently for the song he wanted to hear to load on Spotify—it didn’t. Pulled into the muddy driveway in a silent cab and parked off to the side next to the other big truck. “Mornin John’,” he said as he climbed out. 

“Mornin’. How you doing, Raf?” John, the builder, said. 

“Oh, you know—what’s that one? Oh yeah”—he made his voice raspy and assumed a hoaky accent—“just hangin’ in there like a hair in a biscuit.” . 

“Ha, nice,” John said. “You have a good evenin’?

“I did. Hung out with a couple of my buddies and we watched this Korean thriller. John, the Koreans have been putting out some crazy shit, as far as horror is concerned they’re on a completely different level from what they’re doing in Hollywood. They really have mastered the tortured love story—and know how to exploit it in evil ways. I mean, this…this, this had was the most shocking and appalling movie twists I’ve ever seen in my life. And the cinematography was fuckin’ insane,”— he began to ramble—“great acting, super unique story, horrific violence, a sense of humor. Incredible. You gotta watch Oldboy, John.” He paused. “You have a good night?”

John nodded along, “you know, I can’t say I’ve ever seen a Korean thriller movie. But I’ll take your word for it.” He stopped to think. “What did I do last night? Right, Leslie made some kind of—oh, I don’t know what you would call it—borscht maybe, it had a bit of everything in it. But I have to say it did not suck. I think I had three bowls. And then we watched this movie….uh it was called Eternals. I thought it was fine, entertaining enough. Leslie got all offended, though,” he made air quotes, “‘as an artist,’ and said it was terrible and formulaic and the acting sucked and the story was shit. I tried to tell her that these movies are not art, they're just entertainment, all you have to do is watch the cool effects and not think about it. And, let me tell you, she was not very happy about that comment.” 

“Oof,” Raf said, “mansplaining?”

“Yep,” pop, “and being an idiotic male.

“Ah, man. You blew it!” 

“I know it, Raf. I know I did.” He crinkled his eyebrows, looked up, shook his head slowly. “Things don’t exactly get any easier, man. I’m telling you, if you think married life is just all fun and games, you’re in for one. I mean we can be sitting there right fucking next to each other—like two feet away—but sometimes it feels like we couldn’t be further apart, like there’s nothing that can cross the space between us.” He stopped himself from saying any more. “Woah, that got weird. What the hell am I talking about, you don’t wanna hear me complain about my old guy married life. You’re just young and single, living it up. Speaking of which, I gotta run and get some flowers before the store closes later today. Shit! 

Okay man, today just got even busier for your buddy John. Get to play contractor today. I gotta run in a second here and go talk to the sheetrocker at Sasha’s. And then go deal with those fuckin’ yokel siders down there at Mike’s place. And then,” paused for effect, “go back to Sasha’s to tell the plumber we gotta take that tub you and me grinded down to get into it’s spot last week and put a new one in because that’s what she wants now. Oh yeah.” He raised his arms in the air and dropped them heavily. “Fuckin’ goat show today.”

“Christ,” Raf shook his head, spit on the ground. 

“You want a tub?”

“No, thanks,” he chuckled. “That is fucked though.”

“Mhmmm, mhmm, I’m already resisting the urge to open the bottle of sake I got in my truck.”

Raf just laughed. 

“But! If I could get you started laying out that plywood to protect the gypcrete, that’d be great. Try to keep as many whole sheets as you can. I left my makita saw over there for you, you fuckin’ left-handed weirdo. And I brought up that set of sawhorses from my house this morning, you can use those. Don’t tape it down yet, I want us to do that part together so I can make sure you didn’t get all funky with it first.”

“Alright, man, sounds good,” Raf said. 

“You got everything you need?” 

“Yeah, John, I’m all good.”

“You wanna get stoned real quick before I take off here?”

Raf laughed and shook his head, “I’ll pass on that one. You’re an animal setting me loose on the saws and then trying to get me all stoned first thing in the morning. I know you get the expensive stuff too.”

“You may be right, you may be right.” John said, and produced a small wooden pipe from the pocket of his Carhartt vest, took a long, old school, hold-it-in hit off it. 

He coughed quietly through his nose upon exhaling, then folded violently, his hands to knees, his head turtled, the veins in his neck bulging, and coughed two or three times with his whole body, making sounds which more closely resembled something between a sneeze and a retch than an actual cough. 

“Holy shit,” John said as he straightened, and shook himself, stretching his back around. “Alright, I’m out like a trout. Don’t cut your fingers off.” He turned and hopped up into his lifted F-350, drove off very slowly.

Watching him pull out of view, Raf stood there in the muddy driveway and let the loneliness sink in, a cold wind whistling through his ear ring. There was a chickadee in the tall cedar in the driveway, and he wondered if it might be the same one from his house. And if it was why it could be here and not somewhere else. He reached for his phone and stopped, instead grabbed the skilsaw and tried to focus on his work. Then he set it down—useless, he’d only picked it up because it was the first thing he saw—and started taking measurements for the first cuts. He put on his knee pads, grabbed his tape, jotted down a few notes. Then hauled the plywood in through the door with care, one sheet at a time, started measuring and making marks. 

But the distraction didn’t even begin to take hold. His mind was still fixed on her despite his sincerest efforts. What happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object? Nothing. So he kept on thinking about how with Fleur it wasn’t quite love at first sight, even though it was close; it was either love at third night or love after fifth sex. 

Or was it fifth penetration? Back in Paris, two nights after the festival, they met for some drinks in a punk bar with big candles and a taxidermied goat's head on the wall. He wasn’t sure if it was going well until she went to the bathroom and then a minute or so later he finished his drink and went too. But found her waiting in the little space where people smoked (the same where they would smoke and fall to kissing and where he would lure her into the larger of the two bathrooms to fuck a few months later) between the bar and the two bathrooms. She wore a pearl necklace, a black tank top, worn blue Levi’s and her Doc Marten boots. Irresistible. He kissed her hard and pressed her up against a wall and then he knew that it was going well. 

When they left the bar, they walked up to the top of Paris’ only hill and sat up at the Sacre Coeur with the worst and sweetest bottle of wine there ever was and looked down on the city without any awkwardness between them. Then they Ubered back to her place. And almost immediately had sex; as soon as they were naked she grabbed him close and slid his cock inside her, no question of a condom. It was incredible, he didnt know if he’d ever had sex be so good before, where he felt so comfortable, and their bodies fit so well, and it felt so fucking good. They stayed up late fucking and smoking pot and listening to music on her tiny little third story bedroom balcony. 

“Is it my turn to choose,” he said. 

“Yes, okay,” she said, and passed her phone to him. 

She’d made fun of him for his last selection of Neil Young “See the Sky About to Rain.” So he put on ‘Moonlight’ by XXXtentacion. “Do you like him?”

“Mhmm it is tough with him. Yes but also no.”

“Because he was such a fucked up dude?”

“Well yes, and because he did not treat women well.”

“Yeah, you’re right. Sounded like he was kind of a monster. But his music is really good, ins’t it?”

“So good. That’s what makes it hard.”

“But don’t you ever think,”—he’d thought about it a lot and rested firmly on a belief in the stark division between art and artist—“that no matter how bad a person was, if they made good art, that could be the one good thing they did, you know. Now there’s more good art out there, and I think people should be able to appreciate it without having to read the artists’ Wikipedia page. Good art is just good art. So it doesn’t really matter how awful a person they were, because the art is still good. Don’t you think?”

“Mhmm no, not really,” she said. “Because there are some, like people who have raped women, or beaten them, or something like that, I look at their painting or I listen to their music, and all I can see or hear is that horrible thing they did. It makes the art bad, for me. It ruins it. Because I can’t see it for what it is anymore.”

He looked at her with no words presenting themselves to be spoken. He felt like a moron; struck totally dumb. He’d made his whole separation between art and artist rant a hundred times over the past years, to co-workers and classmates and even to professors, and felt like he was big-braining when he did. But with just two simple sentences, stoned in the middle of the night, Fleur made him see that he had been wrong the whole time. There were things, some things, that should not—or could not—be ignored. “I don’t know how I never thought of it that way,” he said. 

They were both beginning to fall asleep. He looked at her laying in the bed next to him, trying to soak in every detail he could, trying to remember every word she had spoken to him and every particle of her close-eyed face. Eventually, “do you want me to turn off the light?”

“Mhmmm,” she squeaked, without opening her eyes. Then propped herself up and grabbed her phone, “do you want us to wake up with time for coffee and perhaps chill a bit? Or do you want to get more sleep?” she asked as he got under the covers and wrapped an arm over her waist. “Mmm coffee and chilling,” he said. “Okay, good,” she set the alarm, nuzzled her warm ass against him. 

In the morning when the alarm went off, he shook her gently, whispered in her ear, “Fleur, Fleeeeuuur, it’s your alarm. Time to wake up.” She rolled back toward him, burrowed into his chest. They fucked again and then drank coffee with cookies. Three times. She had to go to work, so they dressed and went to the métro. And rode together for six or seven stops, thighs close tight, her head propped on his shoulder just below the purple love bite she’d left on his neck. Until she reached her stop, kissed him and departed, left him with nothing but her lingering smell on his shoulder and her old copy of L’Étranger which she had given to him as a keepsake—along with the hickey. 

The rest of that day, for Raf, was a blur of exhaustion. But by evening he had recovered, gone to a show at a bar that had free live music every night—and overpriced beer. And Ubered back to her apartment to see her when she said that she was too tired to go out but still wanted to see him. When he got there she suggested they walk down to the little island in the Seine near her place—Swan Island. They brought beers and walked down, sat on a bench on the quiet path overlooking the river. 

“What’s your shirt?” she said, leaning against him, her fingers tracing the album cover design on his chest.

“Oh, it’s just an album I like.”

“I don’t know it. Can you show me?”

“Yeah, okay,” he said. 

The album cover was The Late Great Townes Van Zandt, a favorite of his for many years. He turned on ‘Fraulein,’ felt it fitting for the moment—at least in subject matter:


“Fraulein, Fraulein, walk down by the river

Tonight when those stars start to shine

By those same stars above you, well I swear that I love you

For you are my pretty Fraulein.”

 

 “Do you like it?” he said. “I don’t think most people in Europe like country music.” 

She laughed and said emphatically, “oh no, no, no. We don’t listen to country at all.” Then she sobered and looked at him with that burning look again, “but I like this.” She turned away, looked at the river, and her smile became a grin, “even though it’s SO American. Like so much.”

On the way back he made them stop a minute in the middle of the Pont de Grenelle under the métro rails, because he wanted to look at the lights on the Eiffel Tower, and almost disrupted a newlywed, and obviously American, couple who had hired a violinist—poor bastard—to play ‘La Vie en Rose,” over and over again.

And then, they walked the few blocks to her apartment and repeated the night prior. Smoked pot on her cute little balcony which was just big enough for the two of them to sit down with their knees touching. Fucked two more times. After the second time—or fifth total penetration—he rolled them another spliff and they went out to the balcony, smoked it and then sat there quietly, playing with each other's hands. He scooched forward, his knees moving past hers, his arms wrapping around her bent legs, rested his head on her knees. She put her arms around him and leaned down and kissed him on the top of his head. They held each other, held tight against time there like that for a long time. They hardly knew each other. They were hardly more than strangers. But sometimes touch and feel and smell all seem right. It was just so comfortable. It felt so good. He released her reluctantly, said softly, “I think I have to go soon, my flight is leaving in a couple hours.”

She sniffed, “ok.”

“Ahh, but I don’t want to go.”

“I don’t want you to go either,” she whispered.  

“I’ll come back to Paris to see you before I go home, I promise.”

“Ok,” she said. He didn’t know if she believed him but he really meant it. He would come back to Paris just to see her. He promised himself as much as he promised her. 

After a while, and well into the middle of the night, he finally called an Uber and got his shoes and pants and everything put back on. The air felt heavy and glum. For a moment they both sat at the corner of her bed and stared at his phone and watched the Uber making its slow progress towards them on the map. “This is dumb. We’re wasting our last minutes,” she put her arms around him and kissed him. 

It was that leaving her, even after just three nights together, not knowing when he would see her next, was so hard that made him know it was love. They dragged it out, the leaving, hugged and kissed and stared at each other through the open doorway to her apartment. She blew him a kiss and shut the door and left him standing alone on the hallway stairs on the other side feeling empty all the way through. 

Love at third night: he thought that sounded better than love after fifth fuck. He looked at his phone again. Still no response. “I want to be with you. It’s as simple, and as complicated, as that.” He wanted to say it. Instead typed the message:


‘Hope you’re having a good day my dear ! 

Miss you.’


It was only a slight variation from the text he had sent her the day before. ‘I sound like a pathetic little weiner!’ he thought, despairing, ‘it’s like a note a mom would leave on her kids’ school lunch.’ He was only fishing for affectionate platitudes. He knew that she didn’t need to tell him she loves him and misses him every day. And he didn’t need to tell her. Because what they had was genuine bona fide true love. True love. That doesn’t happen for too many people in life. He knew what he had to do was just buck up and go on with it every day until he could find a way to be with her again—that was all he could do. ‘I’m only making her think that I’m a weirdo by acting this way.’ He nodded to himself slowly and solemnly—like “this is the way.” And then, without hesitating, looked at his phone again. And was dismayed that she was active on Instagram and still wasn’t responding. Felt it in the pit of his stomach. 

But why! Texting wouldn’t make them any less across the world from each other. He felt insane, wanted to slap himself in the face; did, in fact, slap himself, but not hard enough. He thought of pouring a bucket of water over his head but—of course— the house didn’t have water yet. He cursed the plumbers. Brought his hands to his face, then clenched them into tight fists right out in front of it and lifted his head to the sky. “Snap out of it man!” he yelled. 

 Still, everything reminded him of precious memories with her. Water—sharing glasses scattered next to her bed—, coffee—getting made fun of at a cafe for ordering café creme when she got espresso—, pink—her favorite color—, mud—their shoes at Rock in the Barn—, everything could be brought into connection with her. Sure, it would have been much easier to just focus on the things he could reach out and touch—that skilsaw, or that plywood, for example—but he couldn’t help himself. She was always on his mind. Even though it wasn’t really her anymore. It was the Fleur he had formed in his mind, the Fleur who was not composed of soft skin and slender bones and brown, multitude-containing eyes, but of a name with a heart next to it which appeared on his phone accompanied by a special beap, a particular component in the dull routine of his new dreary life. The real Fleur, the one he actually loved, didn’t want a boyfriend or lover or soul mate, or whatever they were to each other. She had fallen in love by accident. How could he forget how she told him that? How she was recently out of a really long relationship and then had jumped quickly into a bad one, and now had a crucially busy year of work and school, and didn’t need any American boy coming in and gumming up the works. Even though he had done it. And now he’d forgotten about all of that in his suicide mission to get her to text him more affectionately.

He had forgotten. And he had made plans, radical plans, in his head—plans he shouldn’t have made—about how he would move to Paris and what their life would be like there. And continued to try to goad her into saying she missed him. Because if she had said that she wanted to see him as soon as possible, and that they had to work something out to be together—which is what he felt so desperately—he would have been on the next plane to Paris. Nothing could make him give up on Fleur. 

Even though that wasn’t entirely true. Because he had sort of given in to the hopelessness of their circumstances when he got back from Paris, just like she was doing these past few weeks. “Oh Paris was amazing, I love it; such a beautiful city. It was probably the best month of my whole life.” Blah blah blah. “But, I’m not sure I could ever live there. It’s just so far from nature and so big and so busy,” is what he’d told people who’d asked him how were his travels. And he’d really believed those words he’d spoken for about a month and a half. Maybe two months. Yet he continued talking to her and wishing that he was with her all the time. He thought that way, that it would just be impossible for them to have any future together, at least in the back of his mind, in fact, until she’d become distant via text a few weeks before and then said suddenly that she wasn’t planning on visiting him anymore and that she didn’t want to talk as much as they had been, that it “just wasn’t who she was.” Since she said she didn’t see how they could possibly have any future together. Since she had stopped calling him “my dear” and “my darling” and “mon coeur” or saying she missed him and “bisous” every night before bed. In that absence he’d realized the importance of what he had with Fleur. Felt his very being withdrawing with her. It wasn’t impossible for them to be together, he realized; it was impossible for him to go on without her. This was different from any love he’d ever had before. And he knew that he had to move to Paris, that he couldn’t leave what they had started unfinished. 

Until recently, that’s what he would have done, though—leave it unfinished—what he was already doing. He kept texting her, and thinking about her, knowing in the back of his mind and in his heart that being together would require sacrifices neither of them were willing to make. Would be impossible. And as much as he joked about how one day he would marry her, that he could never let his French love go, that they were meant to be together somehow, he never really let himself believe it: rationalizing perhaps as a measure of self-protection. Until now. 

Because now the curtain was falling, he could feel it. Now he was dreaming as a means to survive. He saw that nothing could possibly be more horrible than to fall in love and have to run away. It was like winning the lottery and losing the ticket. No, it was even worse. It was being happy and then choosing to be sad. Now he felt it could have been the greatest mistake of his whole life to leave Paris that day—that it was a decision he would grow old regretting and about which he would always wonder the great big “what if”. He was terrified that he would have to ask himself forever what would have happened if he’d only stayed in Paris; what would have happened if he hadn’t left Fleur. He just couldn’t throw it all away. The fear of losing her had, like a near death experience, adjusted and clarified the things that were really important to him. And work, and money, and even friends were no longer it. It was love. It was Fleur. 

 Though money, he had to remember, had been the reason he left. 

Or it had been why he thought he had to leave, even though now he thought he’d only said it because of the way that crazy fever made his blood all hot. That double-edged sword of a fever. When Fleur got it first, she’d been sick for a weekend. But not so sick that they hadn’t had a good time together. He took care of her, made her coffee and tea during the day and pasta for dinner. They spent the entire weekend in bed, with her in and out of sleep close beside him while he watched movies on her laptop. She made little snorting snoring sounds that were almost inaudible, and at times he didn’t even watch the movie at all just so he could watch her sleeping. He still kept the videos of her asleep on his shoulder on his phone—though they didn’t make him smile the same way when he watched them now, now there was a sadness in it. But it had been a great weekend, a beautiful three days. 

The only time they left the house was when Fleur made a doctor's appointment in the morning, and he decided to go to a boulangerie to get them things for breakfast while she was with the doctor. They were gone for an hour. She returned with sinus medicine, and he returned with bags of quiches and pain chocolats and escargots, and made them eggs and a big Parisian brunch plate they ate while they watched a Wes Anderson marathon and smoked on the couch. He stood up to put the cutting board away and she said, “I’m so comfy and high and full I think you’re the only thing in the world that could make me get up. Like if you just stay right there and don’t touch me I would have to get up so I can touch you.” He stood in front of her legs where they dangled off the couch and held his arms out like a cartoon pronged magnet and she reached to him. He leaned to pick her up. “Nooo!” she said, “you have to let me!” She groaned and concentrated and little by little lifted herself up into his arms. They did absolutely nothing for three days. It was one of the best weekends of his life. One of the happiest times of his life.

One of those nights he told her he loved her. He was nervous and unsure about saying it after so little time. But he just couldn’t help it; it had been trying to jump off the tip of his tongue for days. Holding her in bed, with her face in his hands, he looked at her, and it just came out: “I think I’m falling in love with you. No, I am…I mean, I do….I love you. How do you say it?.... Je t’aime, right?

She nodded.
“Je t’aime.”

“Moi aussi.” She said it reluctantly, like she had to think about it. Like she was trying to figure out if she could believe what he was saying. It wasn’t that she didn’t feel or believe the words she spoke, it was that she was trying to convince herself that she didn’t. The way her eyes became bright incendiary rubies when he said those giant little words made him sure she meant it and just didn't know how to make herself say it. Was trying to protect herself. Because she didn’t want a boyfriend, and he would inevitably leave, because it didn’t make any sense for the two of them to fall in love. 

But they did, in spite of everything. In spite of themselves and the world and everyone in it and the whole idea of love at all. 

That was only maybe a few days before he got sick. When he’d started to get sick, he’d of course ignored it and continued walking around all across Paris in the wind and the rain and the wet all day while she was at work until he’d become really very sick. So sick that she let him stay in her apartment when she went to work, made him stay in her apartment. At one point, after he emerged from a fevered sleep, he smoked some pot, felt like death was dragging him down to a place even worse than hell where it wasn’t hot but very very cold, and he crawled back from her living room couch into her bed, wearing socks and pants and sweater and jacket, and awoke hours later to an Ipad screen playing a Game of Thrones episode he didn’t give a shit about and a series of panicked messages from Fleur—who thought he might have died or something. She was right to worry. When he checked his temperature it read 40.8 degrees celsius. He thought it seemed like a big number, and fell back asleep.

A night or two later, as he struggled to spend time with her in his delirium, and suffocated trying to kiss her through a hopelessly stuffy nose, she said, “what will you do this weekend? I want you to be warm and rest. But I have to go visit my mother this weekend in Rouen, I forgot to tell you.” It was Tuesday. 

“You do? Oh I was really hoping we could have one more weekend together before I get my ticket home.”

“Me as well. But I made this plan weeks ago, and I didn’t know you would still be here then. And I cannot do anything about it now.”

Money was running short, and days were wet and cold with nowhere to go. A weekend without her would be torturous. And he was so sick. And so tired. And hadn’t been home in so long.

“Its okay, I understand. Maybe I’ll just get a ticket before this weekend then.”

He didn’t think about it, he was high, and feverish, and delirious. It was Tuesday. He bought a ticket right then and there on his phone for Thursday morning. And then let it sink in that the next day would be his last day in Paris, his last day with Fleur. He had this empty feeling way down in the center of his belly, like there was a great big block of ice that had settled there to melt slowly. The next day he walked around getting last gifts for people back home. All day that block of ice stayed where it’d settled. And his body didn’t know what to do with it. He was either sweating with guilt and rage, or he was shivering and feeling like his guts were getting all frostbitten with sadness. He got gifts for people, gifts that didn’t matter, gifts he didn’t need to give. He was so busy getting gifts to bring home that he didn’t even think to get something for Fleur. 

When he was done, he went back to her place, and bought some more pot so she wouldn’t have to buy more for a while after he left. Then he walked down under the Pont de Bir Hakeim and watched the sun low over the big white horizon of Paris rock all around him. And he cried to himself that it had to be this way. And punched the wall that ran along the Seine beside him. Looked at the Eiffel Tower through his slowly falling tears. He knew that leaving now was the absolute wrong thing to do, was the worst thing to do, but he didn’t know what options he had to choose from. It was nearly Christmas and he had to get home to see his family. Still, everything about it felt horrible. 

They met outside her apartment when she came home from work just after the sun had set. And had drinks at the restaurant down the street, L’Abreuvoir, with her roommate, Felix, as a sort of final adieu—last waltz. 

The rest of their night was just like any other from the past month. Except that a bitterness had snuck into him and hidden somewhere. The bitterness tried to make him annoyed with Fleur, and find all these different reasons why she bugged him. It was all just noise and distortion though. Like he was looking through those old blue and red 3-D glasses, everything looked angry and out of proportion. It was a coping mechanism that was transparent to him as those colored lenses had been, even as it was happening. He hated it nevertheless. He was grumpy and his last night with her was tainted and it was his own fault.

They had sex one last time, but part way through she stopped, pulled away from him. She was crying. “I don’t know if I can finish,” she said, “I’m just too sad.”

“I know,” he said, “me too.” And rolled on his side and held her there. And soon slipped back inside her. They came together, at least, he thought they did. And then turned on some movie or show, it didn’t matter what it was. He fell asleep right away, with her spooning him from behind. Until he awoke, soaked in sweat, in a panic in the middle of the night, the wind rushing out of him and the cold pain killing all the organs in his belly. He turned to her incoherently, grabbing out for her in desperation, “Fleur, Fleur, come here,” he said. And pulled at her. He’d woken to the awareness he wasn’t holding her and wouldn’t have the chance again. She half awoke and moved into his arms. When the alarm went off in the morning her face was wet against his. They did what they always did every morning: sat in bed and drank coffee and ate cookies and kissed and cuddled together. Except that every other morning was good, and this was the worst morning of his life. 

She didn’t make any particular noises or any kind of emotional scene. But when they held tight to each other and pulled close, and put their cheeks together or kissed, he felt the cold and slightly sticky wetness on her cheeks and around her eyes. And it hurt him. Terribly. Pressing her tear-soaked face against his brought though him an indescribable pain, like that block of ice was getting bigger and bigger and going farther and farther down and sending shards that stabbed out. He hadn’t even known that he was deep enough to hurt that far down. It just felt so wrong to leave, so completely wrong, but he knew he had to go. Or he thought he did. Now he wasn’t so sure. 

“Je t’aime, je t’aime. I love you,” she said, as they embraced outside her bedroom door, his packed backpack on the floor beside them. “You actually said it,” he said. And while he was excited that she loved him enough that she no longer had any reservations about saying it, he felt even worse. Once again they hugged a long and sad farewell in the open doorway of her lovely little apartment, and held on as tight as they could. They tried again to hold so tight that time couldn’t move them. But it did and they had to let go. He did first, peeled her off of him to say that final wretched goodbye. And as the door was closing with her standing there in her blue flannel pajama pants and oversized Michael Jackson t-shirt and he tried to be strong and turn and just go, he felt something rip out of him, a visceral tearing of flesh and bone. He walked down the stairs with his chest torn open and his blood all spilling out. 

He got in the Uber and cried and stared out the window in empty silence the whole way to the airport. All he could think about was how he would do anything just to go back there and stay with Fleur in that apartment. Now he had to think why he didn’t have the driver turn around. 

Or do anything else. In the last months he had relived this moment of leaving over and over. His chest was still open and each time he thought of it his exposed heart pulsed and squirted blood everywhere. Because he didn’t know why he should be here and not there. He should have come home for Christmas and gone right back to Paris, right back to Fleur. That’s what he should have done. And not this texting for months on end, talking about hypothetical visits but never planning anything seriously, talking about a future in a different world in another time. 

He typed the words, “I want to be with you. It’s as simple, and as complicated as that,” but he didn’t send them. What would be the point? She hadn’t answered his texts in days anyway. And he wasn’t sure she ever would. Not since he’d told her about how he wanted to move to Paris so they could be together, and argued for it, sending long text after long text, and frustrated her, until he could tell she was pretty mad at him, and wouldn’t say much beyond “I understand how you feel.”  Not that he could blame her, for he knew he was acting like a lunatic. And he was so bad at texting and never said the right thing, so he couldn’t even tell her what he wanted to say. He wanted to tell her that what they had was—well, beautiful. That if he lost her he didn’t think he would find anything like it again. But he didn’t say that. Like a badger fighting on his back, he was just lashing around in frantic death-rattles. He was desperate; he would do anything. But, he knew, in the end, that anything was not enough, and nothing would be too much to bear. It had been over the moment he left Paris. He either had to move, which she didn’t want him to do, or move on—had to face the music.

He heard a truck pulling in the drive and looked up from where he sat on the edge of the raised concrete carport, his arms crossed over his knees with his head cradled there on top of them. John hopped out the truck and said “what the hell, man. You’re just sitting there?”

He lifted his head up from his arms and looked at John, tears on his face. A chickadee lay dead in the mud before him. “I don’t know what to do, John,” he said. “What do I do?”

Lost at Sea

The sun was just beginning to low over Mount Edgecombe, illuminating the camel humped horizon. It was weird looking. The clouds didn’t look like cotton balls. They didn’t look like clouds at all. More like bleached out peacock feathers disintegrating into the sunset. I looked out at them over the rails from the main deck and wondered how I could feel so at home in this place that was also so far away and foreign from any home or comfort I’d ever known before. I did feel at home, didn’t I?

Last week, when we were out at sea fishing black cod, we had an accident on the boat. 

We were five or six days into what turned out to be a ten day trip and something besides the seas had been building up for a day or two. Premonitions. The seas were big and the work was hard and everybody was on edge, and making mistakes. It was just there, in the air or in the subtle energies that you felt but never articulated. Looking back it seems easy to align a narrative to it, to go back into what I was seeing, Albatross flying in mysterious, prophetic arcs over the building waves, and take auguries. 

But I’m getting ahead of myself. 

It was still the middle of the day when it really felt like it might be coming to a head. I was at the roller, the side of the boat where the line is hauled over the rail by the hydraulic winch (or gurdy) about five feet behind me and I wasn’t fully paying attention. All the gear, the line between the anchors that catches the fish, was up, and now I was only hauling the buoy line, which connected the anchor at the bottom to the buoys and flag on the surface. It was about half a mile long.

So I was waiting. Waiting for the fat lady to sing. Waiting for the mouse to grow wings. Waiting for the trap to spring. Waiting for the waiting to end. 

And I was probably thinking about girls. 

There was that one night the year before in Homer when we’d planned on leaving first thing in the morning the next day. Naturally, we went over to the bar for one last hurrah. 

You never quite knew what you were going to get at The Salty Dog. It was either full of tourists looking to see what the real Alaskan fishermen were like or it was full of locals who for the most part really were Alaskan fishermen. As one of them myself I felt somewhere between an exhibit in a zoo and a boy in his dad’s work clothes being in there. But it was usually a good time and I liked the place. 

We recognized a few guys when we walked in, and we knew the bartender, Jolene. She smiled at us as she reached for the bottle of Pendleton behind her and said “let me guess.”

“Bless you nurse,” I grinned, “and two IPAs.” She poured doubles like an angel. 

“Here you go, boys. Keep it open?”

I passed her my card, nodding profusely. “Thanks, honey,” she winked. 

Then we sat down next to the guys. They were off a Seattle boat we knew called The Golden Chalice. “What’s up Clint, how you doing?” 

We started bullshitting, mostly talking about our catches, how the season was going, how much more we had to catch. Talking shop. Continuing our mutual sedation. I was bored immediately 

But, but, there were some girls sitting at the bench behind Clint and his guys. Anybody could tell that they must have been from one of the neighboring Russian villages like Soldotna or Seldovia by the matching homemade dresses and hats the three of them wore, if not by their thick accents. And they were kind of cute. 

One of them, who I had determined to be the cutest of the three, made eye contact with me a few times and I was wholly focused on figuring out what her deal was. Having spent the past two months fishing in the Aleutian Islands, it felt like a lifetime since I’d seen a girl. They say that a beautiful woman is hiding behind every tree out there. But there aren’t any trees that far West. In any case, I was dying for it.

To my complete surprise the girl I liked got up and plopped down across from me right and beside Clint. Really I could not believe this. There was absolutely no way I would have gone and talked to them on my own accord, regardless of my animal desperation. 

She said her name was Yvonna. Y-von-na. I liked that name. I tried to get something going with her, but before I knew it Clint had snuck his southern charm into the mix and boxed me out. I told myself I didn’t care too much and gave up entirely, looking down at my beer and beginning to think about something else. I tried to ignore them. 

They were talking about arm wrestling or something. And then commercial fishing. Then more arm wrestling. I assumed it was another classic case of somebody trying to assert their own toughness in the presence of fishermen and decided not to return my attention to the present just yet. I couldn’t stand for that shit. 

But then she pointed at me and said that she wanted to wrestle me

All the guys were laughing now and I reddened. I had become the butt of some joke I didn’t quite understand.

“She wants to arm wrestle you Sam you little pussy…. you’re the only one of us she thinks she can beat!” They all cackled and clapped and coughed and I scowled. 

“No not arm wrestle for him. Wrestle in bedroom.”

Now they all shut the fuck up and opened their eyes wider. Now I was the one smiling. 

“Oh do you now?” I said. 

“She is slut,” one of her friends interjected from behind. 

“You are whore. Do not listen to her, she is crazy whore,” the other corroborated. 

Now I was interested in what was going on. “So you wanna wrestle me, huh? You don’t look like too much to me.”

“You will be surprise.”

We kept on flirting like that a bit longer until Jolene started to get agitated, reminding us that the bar was closing in five minutes. “Let me get one more round real quick,” I implored. “Nope, get out.”

So it was finished, and I was sad. The Russian girls recovered their wayward friend and sauntered through the rickety bar door without us. We sucked the last drops out of our glasses dejectedly and followed suit. As we walked out the front door, we saw them getting into a fancy new lifted Dodge double cab, black. 

I couldn’t explain then or now exactly why I acted so uncharacteristically, but as soon as I saw the tail lights flick on I grabbed Clint and my captain, Ryder, and said “come on.” I was drunk and horny and feeling brazen I guess. 

I walked over, opened the door behind the passenger seat and hopped right into the truck. My girl was sitting in the back with her friends up forward. They couldn’t stop laughing and asking us what the hell we were doing. I didn’t know. “Ok, ok, now you all get out of truck,” the one who was driving said. 

I just kept asking over and over again, “where we going now?”

It didn’t take long to persuade them to get a few more drinks up in town at the other bar, Character’s. 

I guess the girl in the passenger seat decided she liked Clint, because she swapped her seat with Ryder and crammed into the back next to him, forcing my girl over until she was halfway sitting on my lap. She leaned back against me harder than she had to and looked up the bridge of my nose in coquettish apology. She smelled like beer and body odor and old wood. I put my hands around her belly and she put hers on my upper left thigh. Soft! It felt like I was being electrocuted, tingling shots bouncing all across my body. Meteor shower sensations. This is unbelievable, I thought. 

Within a minute or two of driving we were kissing passionately and her friends were making disgusted groans and laughing at us. Little shrieks of pervish delight colored with disapproval. They were drunk too. 

I surfaced for air for a moment after I don’t know how long to see Clint like a big bear rolling around with the Russian girl who’d sat on his lap just beside me. For a fraction of an instant, we shared a look that might as well have been a fist bump. The night was turning out to be much more than any of us had expected. 

We went to Character’s and bought the girls and ourselves several more drinks until that bar too had reached last call. I had fallen into a stupor of beer and lust and don’t remember much at this stage of the night. I know that when they kicked us out we decided to go back down the spit to the harbor, not knowing quite where else to go. 

But first we had to drive about twenty minutes outside town to this massive estate with a separate garage bigger than most houses and a stable next to it. I couldn’t understand how anybody in the Kenai peninsula could manage to have horses out in the open like that with all the bears around. And we were unable to determine who the house belonged to. All the girls would tell us was that they were staying there and we had to be quiet because their kids were inside sleeping. 

None of us, not even the girls as they tried to explain, really gave one shit about any of it. We just wanted to get laid.

They ran inside and came back with a very strange but sufficient assortment of beers and seltzers and ciders. It felt like we were in high school. “Let me see that bag,” I said, my fingers opening and closing towards myself. I selected a can of pilsner and let out sigh of relief when I tasted it. 

We went back to the boat. 

Thinking that I might be able to get this girl down into my bunk, I was advocating as well as I could that we go back to our boat, The Republic. But the Chalice was closer, and Clint won out on that one. 

We ended up sitting at the galley table there for the rest of the night drinking beers and eating the scrambled eggs with hot dogs and rye toast that Clint made up for us. Talking, laughing, kissing, howling, dreaming. 

When the sun started to poke its head over the glaciers and the snowcaps across Kachemak Bay like the angry spotlights of so many nameless accusers, the girls said they had to leave so they could still make it to church on time. I thought that was pretty funny given the night we’d had and the extremely high likelihood that the three of them were already married. But we acquiesced on the condition that they drop us off on the other side of the harbor by the Republic. 

Clint shook our hands and wished us luck with a sad smile like a wounded soldier being left behind as we stepped off The Golden Chalice and headed back for the truck. 

In my mind, there was still no question that I was getting laid. This girl had been all over me. All night she’d hardly said much more than “god damn” and then grabbed my ass or my cock. I felt like a supermodel. And I was ready. Church could wait. 

But when we got to the boat ramp and Ryder and I began to get out of the truck and they didn’t move, it began to sink in. It was all a ruse. We were never getting laid in the first place. We were just a blue collar kiss-and-fondle joyride for a few orthodox housewives on vacation. Fuck. 

“Bye, bye, fisher boys,” the three of them smiled and blew us kisses while we stood there in the dirt watching them go.

As the truck drove away down the dusty road into the sunrise like a row of triumphant cowboys a great melancholy descended upon me and a hangover immediately began taking hold. Forlorn and lone-hearted, we walked down the dock in silence. 

This was a great fall from glory. I couldn’t believe my misfortune, and I wished that those Russian bitches had only kept to themselves so that I could have just had a couple drinks and gone to bed at a normal time like a normal person. And I felt guilty, but I didn’t know why or what for.

To feel so alone. So alone. And empty. To see yourself become a shell and helplessly, motionlessly, watch as your dreams and your passions and all that was left of the softness in your heart slide down that hard and lifeless exterior. That’s what you have to do to be tough, right? We all have bluebirds to kill. 

I was remembering that feeling of loneliness and anger and rejection which had taken such a strong hold of me as I crept into my bunk that morning while I was hauling up the last of that buoy line and we were tossed up and down by a large wave striking the boat broadside and the line flew over the horns of the roller that keep it in place and, released from tension like a rubber band, it smacked me on the left hand, then the ribcage, and then sent me flying four feet back against the hatch screaming, “SHUT IT OFF.” 

When I got up, I yelled at the kid by the hauler for not paying attention and shutting it off sooner. “You can’t be fuckin’ daydreaming over there!” I’d been hound-dogging him for the past couple days. He was trying hard to learn everything, but he wasn’t very smart. I knew he was earnest and really did want to do a good job, a good kid, but I didn’t know how to correct him without making him feel like an idiot. Perhaps it would have helped if I hadn’t called him retarded every time he fucked something up. I just couldn’t help watching everything he did and waiting for him to make the mistake I knew was coming. And he felt that watchful eye, let the unease tremble through him. I saw him falter at everything he tried to do, and waited for my moment to pounce. 

It was only making him fuck up more. I knew that and I still couldn’t stop.

Anyway, I managed to get the line back into the roller grunting and then remained silent as I held my hand and watched carefully while the rest of it came in. My ribs felt a bit fresh where the line had struck them, but nothing compared to the pain I felt in my three longer fingers where they’d taken the initial snap right on the nails. 

I could hardly feel anything there, only numbness accented by bright intense pain, and I struggled to hold back tears. I couldn’t remember feeling such a terrible agony and I was desperately worried how I would continue on with three broken fingers in the middle of a longline fishing trip.

But, by the time we got the bags and flag on board and I ran back to the galley and took off my rain gear and gloves, the pain began to fade into nothing and I was left with that sensation of absence in its stead. That feeling like hunger when you know you aren’t really hungry, that the food might fill the inexpressible void that has suddenly presented itself. 

I smoked a cigarette and wondered if that was all that I had been anticipating. There was still that feeling in the air.  

We kept on working that day and I didn’t think much about my fingers for several hours. We started hauling the next string of gear. This time Ryder was at the roller and I was heading fish on the other side of the checker boards (two-by-eights that fit together like lincoln logs to make planter type bins for the fish to go into. One for the fish with heads, one for the fish without.) Blood fell in sticky trickles down onto the deck at my feet. 

I yelled at the kid standing by the gurdy again to do something, anything, other than just stand there. Which must have been too much because suddenly, juggling two tasks in his clumsy fingers, he jerked his arm up in a horrible contortion, then yelped “help….me!” I stopped and looked up for a moment unsure of what was happening until, as though somebody were slowly turning up the volume from nothing, Ryder was screaming at me to come help. 

The kid’s hand was caught up between the line and the gurdy. I threw down my knife and ran over and began yanking at the line to pull it out of the shiv (the space in between the two large steel wheels where the line fits) and off of his hand. 

You have to understand, this was very very bad. Imagine two round and rotating pieces of steel with the line fitting between them reeling up an enormous tonnage against all the tremendous forces of the moving ocean. Thousands of pounds of pressure are on that line. And his hand was between it and the two pieces of steel with that inch wide gap between them. All that weight coming down on his fingers. The effect was that of a blunt guillotine. I couldn’t believe his hand was even attached to his body. 

So we pulled as hard as we could, which was pretty hard for two stronger than average guys in the midst of a very powerful adrenaline rush, but to no avail. All we had to do was pull the line out of the wheel. But it was stuck so tight. The kid just kept screaming, “AHHHHH, AHH, MY HAND, HELP ME!!!”

Suddenly, his hand slipped out of his glove and came loose from the gurdy, his three longer fingers on his left hand all bloody and mangled at the tips, exactly as I’d expected mine to be a few hours before when I took my glove off. He cradled it like a child held a sleeping doll.

I looked at my own hand. 

Then I chased him back to the galley to see if he was ok. I helped him out of his rain gear and inside the house so he could get his hand under the galley sink. He was gargling and caterwauling inarticulately the whole time. He was in so much pain. It sounded like a wounded coyote. I felt like a coward for the dramatic thoughts I’d entertained about my own hand just hours before. 

I got him some medical supplies like rubbing alcohol and neosporin and bandaids and pepto bismol and cough drops and alka seltzers and put a paper towel on his bleeding fingers, where his skin had ripped back on all three from the first knuckle to the finger nail, exposing globules of fat or I didn’t know what. Then, panicking, I ran back out on deck away from him. 

“Is he ok?” Ryder asked me. 

“Nope. I don’t think so. His fingers look pretty messed up. All pinched in the middle like they had a huge rubber band around them all day. What do we do?” I didn’t mention the way he was crying out in pain. I’d never seen anybody in so much pain before. 

“Fuck. I guess we just have to haul the rest of this up.”

That took about thirty minutes or an hour then Ryder went to go check on him. I started to get things put away and dress some of the couple three hundred fish we now had on board and had thus far ignored. Then I went to ask what was up. 

“Is he ok?” I asked Ryder through the wheelhouse door. I could hear the kid wailing from the galley behind him even louder than before. It was awful. 

“No, we gotta go into town now. Just finish up with all the shit on deck and come back and help, I can’t figure out what any of this medicine is.”

I did that and ran back only to determine that we had antibiotics, aspirin, tylenol, advil, silver sulfide, and a wound cleaning kit. All the morphine had been switched out with allergy pills and a bunch of other useless shit. Decades of drug addicts on board had exhausted the good stuff. We had nothing. We were eight hours from the nearest town that didn’t even have a hospital or doctors, only a clinic and nurses. “We’re fucked,” I said.

But we weren’t at all. He was fucked. His fingers would swell immensely. They would wither and die like fruit on a vine. He would be flown away to the native hospital up in Anchorage, where the doctors there couldn’t help him either. And his torn and ruined fingers, blue and unfeeling and cold, would be cut away and disposed of without ceremony. He would attempt to go on, with one hand impotent, and eventually use the other only to hold his bottle, until he wasn’t able even to do that any longer. He would drift away into the twilight of his life without hardly ever having seen the day. 

And I was there, I was there to see you, into you, and you were scared of me and watching me back, and I saw the fear come into your eyes, and knew where the fault was laid, and wished I hadn’t seen or said and that I could just go away. 

Before I Forget

On an unusually fine and sunny summer afternoon for Sitka, Alaska I decided to go into the bar due to what I determined to be a lack of a better option. A whole hour early. Eagles made their dolphin sounds unseen in the trees and a light breeze wrapped me up like a blanket and the mountains shone so gloriously I squinted through my sunglasses as I walked through the open door of the Pioneer Bar. 

It was dim. Ahhh! And quiet–save for the lower tones of Ray Wylie Hubbard on the juke. Black and white photographs of old fishing boats adorned every inch of the walls. I sat at the bar two or three seats down from a group of guys and asked the old bartender for a lager. 

“Thanks, Rita,” I mumbled when she put the beer down in front of me. 

“Yeeeuuuuur wulcome.” That’s how she always said it. Like a creaky wooden door and a croaking frog. 

I recognized those guys down the bar. Local middle aged tenuously employed fishermen who lived like single high schoolers and beat up their girlfriends when nobody at the bars had the heart to fight them. 

What were they talking about? 

Two of them were shaking their heads and looking away and giggling. 

“I’m tellin’ ya, that’s where they start. Always. They got underwater footage. I seen it. When they start eatin’ dead bodies and shit. Cause’ fish’ll do that, ya know.” John was looking around with dark eyes like a devil-turned pastor. 

“Yer bullshittin us John.”

“Underwater footage,” he nodded with severity. “They go for the butthole.”

It’s almost like he thinks he’s Quint from Jaws, I thought.

“Now what in the hell are you guys talkin’ about?” Rita and I, it seemed, were somehow joined telepathically. I was starting to think she might be in my head.  

John remained hunched over the bar as he looked up at her squarely and said with that grave, sermonic look still on his face, “that’s what happens when fish eat ya, they always start with the butthole.” 

Rita was not shocked and peered over her glasses and into his eyes for a long while. She appeared stoic but inquisitive. “Well, that settles it, I think yer cut off, John.” The gray had almost completely overtaken the red in her frizzy ponytail, but it swung brilliantly over her shoulder as she turned and strutted down to the other end of the bar like an ancient cowgirl. No matter how hard she’d been knocked around, she was beautiful right then and there and I could have kissed her.

“Awww…Rita…come on…Rita…I didn’t even do anything…” 

She turned back from down the bar and pointed at him and with her own tone of religious solemnity growled, “John, I don’t wanna hear it.”

The somberness that then descended upon those guys allowed me a minute of silence to reflect. First of all, what was Rita doing in my head? I looked at her suspiciously. Can you hear me, Rita? No. I’m just being paranoid and weird. But I thought I had come to the bar to do something important. I’m a whole hour early for my date and I thought I came here to clear the weed out of my head with some beer and think about some things. Oh yes, that’s right. You dummy. Can’t even keep a straight line of thought anymore. It was that movie. 

Before Sunrise. Been thinking about it since the other night. Such a simple love story. The whole plot exists in the span of maybe twelve hours. All it is is two people meeting on a train and walking together all night around Vienna and talking to each other and falling in love. When I first watched it I thought it couldn’t have been more perfect. It was difficult to determine why the connection between the characters, Jessie and Celine, felt so real. But it did. Either from the starry eyed idealism in Linklater’s conversation writing or from the genuine flirtation that comes through in Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy’s performances. It is so overwhelmingly romantic. And of course I’m a sucker for a good love story. But there was another reason I liked it so much. 

When I first saw the movie, it hadn’t occurred to me at all. But the other night when I watched it again, during that scene at the end in the train station when they’re hugging goodbye and all out of breath with grief, I remembered. How could I have ever forgotten? I had had such a similar moment in Spain. 

What was her name? I think it was Malgo. That’s it. Malgo. At the train station in Cadiz, me leaving her behind to return home and her continuing on her travels. 

We even made the same kind of promise that Jessie and Celine make in the movie. “Let’s meet back here a year from now and we can travel together.” It was my idea. 

“Really? Are you sure you want to see me again?

“Yeah of course,” I kissed her. “I’ll go home and save up money and next year we’ll meet back here in Cadiz and we’ll go all around Spain.” I wanted to see her again.

“Ok.” It was almost a whisper, then she took a deep breath as though she wereabout to duck her head underwater. “Ok! Next year for carnival!” She kissed me hard. She pressed against me. She liked me. She wanted to see me again. We would meet back there next year. 

But of course we didn’t. And I don’t think I ever really meant to. Not even at that moment. That’s what got me thinking when I watched Before Sunrise again the other night. I remembered how when I separated myself from her and got on that train, I sat down and opened a book and sighed with relief. Alone at last!

In the movie they get on their trains and are shown staring out their windows with dreamy delusional expressions as though they’re both reliving every minute they had shared together. But when I sat down I didn’t think about Malgo at all. Other than that it was really nice to finally get away from her. God, I sound like an asshole. I did like her. I did. Really. She was sweet and smart and cute. And she liked me. She liked me. She liked me for no other reason than thats who I was. But we had been together for almost two full days and frankly it had become exhausting. I needed air, man! That’s what I told myself. But look at yourself you heartless dickhead. You needed some air from that sullen attitude is what you really needed. That girl was great. Don’t you remember? I know you saw her. The way she looked at you with those sparkling big grey eyes outside the old Roman auditorium and played with the little curls in your hair. And what did you do? What did you do? You sat there frozen, annoyed, you hoped that if you ignored her long enough she might stop touching your hair. You were trying to talk with that fellow from Belfast about Korean dramas and her displays of affection were embarrassing you. Isn’t that right?

It was right. But I can’t remember why I had felt that way. The way I had acted it may as well have been some old lady who was playing with my hair. Leave me alone, I’m talking to my friends! That’s what I had wanted to tell her. Like she was my mother. And I was a child. I wish I could go back to that moment and shake some sense into myself. And ask myself why. Why are you acting this way? You are not a child, that is not some strange old lady: you are a young man, and that is a beautiful big breasted Polish girl. She loves you. Can’t you see that? 

Grey eyes with little bits of fallen stars in them and tiny pointillist freckles and short strawberry blonde hair. Little upturned nose. Dandelion dress. That’s what I remember about her now.

I was drunk when I met Malgo the two nights prior. She came up to our table on the rooftop of the hostel with snacks and a bottle of wine. She may as well have danced or floated up to us. This fairy queen with wine and strawberries. We had known we would need more wine soon, but we hadn’t known we needed the strawberries. For that we worshiped her immediately. And we laid on the roof in the bright yellow Spanish sun together like satyrs. Moroccan hash and delicious two euro wines and those wonderful strawberries. 

She was next to me from the moment she arrived smoking her cigarettes with the kind of dainty innocence that the anti-tobacco campaign long ago drained out of the U.S. There was no sense of rebellion in it for her. No outcast eyes or dirtbag pride. She smoked cigarettes the way girls from America who don’t smoke might eat a piece of cotton candy. Pure childish delight. I really liked that. Girls who smoked were hot, obviously. But the girls I knew who smoked were pretty rough around the edges. They could be bad tempered and at times combative. Unpredictable. They were Angelina Jolie in Girl, Interrupted and she was Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s. 

We got on right away. Though I don’t quite remember why. Actually, I can’t remember a single thing we talked about that first night now except for showing her where I lived on a big map hanging on the wall. I don’t know if she showed me where her place was. But I don’t think she did.

Anyway, we stayed up late talking about whatever it was we talked about until everybody except some guy from New York who was probably twenty years older than us had gone to bed. He was interested in watching a movie too, he had replied when she suggested that we watch something. He had been very nice to me, but I recall glaring at him with a horrible, primitive malice. 

“Is it okay if we watch La La Land? I was in Canary Islands with no wifi when it came out and I have been really wanting to see.” The way she asked was so cute and imploring. I had no choice but to concede. And I didn’t really care much right then about watching a movie anyway. 

I must have said something like “sure, I LOVE musicals,” because I remember a kind of enthusiasm in the air when we were pulling it up. 

The older guy from New York figured out soon enough what was going on and he put himself to bed. I was thankful for that. Even more so that Malgo and I didn’t even make it to the first singing scene before we started kissing. Then we didn’t watch any more of the movie. We used it as background noise and let things move along naturally there on the couch in the hostel until we realized that neither of us had a condom and it was too late to buy them anywhere. At which point she brought me into the bathroom just beside the couch and took off her clothes and took mine off me and lowered herself to her knees and began to perform what would be the greatest blowjob of my life. It sure felt like I loved her then, with a fistful of her hair in my hand and her tits against my knees and those charcoal eyes looking up into mine as she daintily and innocently swallowed the full length of my penis. 

What a beautiful, perfect night. We ended it by kissing silent goodnights and getting into our own beds in the same ten-bed-mixed-dorm room. It must have been one of the best nights of sleep I’d ever had.

I don’t remember the exact point at which she began to bug me. I just remember that she did. We would amble the streets and laze on the beach and drink calimocho in the bars with our new friends from the hostel. We were inseparable from that first night on until I got on my train two nights later. I felt massively inhibited. It was like I couldn’t be myself, and I was supposed to be myself wasn’t I? Wasn’t that the whole reason I was traveling alone? Suddenly I didn’t have the option to get up and leave whenever I wanted to. And do my own thing. My own thing. No more emergency eject button. Even if I didn’t need it, losing that option felt horribly restrictive. It was causing me massive anxiety the entire time. I was riddled with fear. Fear. And anger. You only have two days left in Spain. You were going to go to that little village a couple hours away. Why are you with this Polish girl anyway you dumb alkie? You pathetic disgusting drunk. Go ahead, raise your ragged flag. Beat your chest and bear it to the wind and howl that this is who you are and must be. You don’t even remember half the things you talked about with her. Do you remember any of it? What kind of music she likes? Like the songs she can't help but sing along with or doesn’t know when she’s humming them. What about what she likes to do when she’s all alone? Or what drives her crazy? What drives her crazy. She was driving me crazy. She kept touching me. Gross! And she was more interested in saving the world from climate change than in seeing it. SO self-righteous. Who the hell’s too good to take a damn airplane. You allowed her to corner you because you were drunk and vulnerable, that’s why this happened. You fell on your own sword again, old boy. You’re stuck with her. Now you’ll never make it to the magical white city in the hills. 

I didn’t make it. Because Malgo refused even to get on the bus. “What is it to dedicate your life to something you know from the start you can never have?” Thus began my merciless interrogation into her most sacred personal ideology. “How can you limit your own experience to try to save something the rest of the world has already condemned?” She just couldn't take a bus to the white city, she said, it didn’t matter how serene it was or how exceptional the culture and the food were supposed to be. She had taken a philosophical stance against fossil fuel transportation. It never occurred to me to ask her how she had managed the trip from Poland to Spain without the luxury of oil. “It’s already fucked though. It’s over. Dead. Or at least dying. The world doesn’t care. It doesn’t matter if you do. They’re bigger than you. They eat you. And drink your milkshake. If you really cared about the world wouldn’t you want to see as much of it as possible before everything either dies off or gets paved over or bought up by the Californians?”

She hadn’t wanted to answer. She said I wouldn’t understand where she was coming from even if she did. It didn’t seem at the time like she was mad or annoyed or anything. Just real quiet. 

All in all, I think I kept it together mostly. And I think I was an asshole in my head more than anything else. Because we still had a good time together for the most part; two amazing nights of debaucherous drinking and desecrating hostel bathrooms; two hungover mornings on the beach in the sun; two afternoons full of beer and tapas and Spanish guitars. And the final romantic goodbye in the train station. Seems perfect, right?

But the fact of the matter is that I didn’t want to be with her. I had to fake it. That’s the important thing. 

In Before Sunrise they walk together through their cobblestone streets, sit on their balconies and in their parks, with their own cloyingly naive conversations, and their own grand and beautiful “so long.” Just like Malgo and I had done. But they meant it. They were genuine and earnest and looked right at each other and didn’t want to be anywhere else. They were outside time. In the farther reaches out there somewhere where only the two of them can say how long its been, or how to get back. Where the laws of physics and Albert Einstein never had any authority in the first place and love and death and music and the stars mix alchemically into something we don’t know or understand. We can only observe that it does exist, and recognize that something happens to us there. 

They were outside time, and I was in it. Now and certainly when I had been with Malgo. Ah Malgo? How can I ever tell you that I’m sorry now, when we’re worlds and years apart? I hope you didn’t think I was horrible. It sure didn’t seem like you did then. At least I don’t remember it that way. And that could be my problem. I used to think that as time went on I’d forget things and that what remained would be clear and permanent and when I got old I’d have this one straight track I could look down and see all the places I went and the things I did and the people I met along the way. I wouldn’t forget the parts that really mattered. But it doesn’t work like that, Malgo, does it? I bet you always knew and just kept it a secret. I wish you’d told me. That details fade in and out and grow in proportion and shift in contour. In my mind now you were perfect. You loved me. I didn’t deserve you. But maybe I did. Maybe you hated me then the way I hated you and you skipped off away from the train station to buy more wine and strawberries and give your glorious mouth to somebody else and you never thought about me ever again. 

It terrifies me to think about it. That I might have forgotten the most important details. Or altered them irreparably. And what if you did too? If we both forget the way it actually was when we were together, where does the truth go? If it’s lost, are we liars? I wonder sometimes if somewhere deep in my brain, somewhere I don’t have any conscious access, there might be a kind of reservoir, or maybe just a cardboard box–like a lost and found–, where all the important truths that have ever been erased or modified by the defects of my memory remain in their unaltered original state. I wish I could know what that place would look like. 

But do you think I’d still be me if I did? Maybe the only reason I am who I am is because of those little memory imperfections. I think everything I know and everything I think I am is probably based on them. If I saw the way all my memories had really happened would it destroy me? Would I realize that all I’d ever known and ever been was a lie? Or would I just be slightly off? Insubstantially. That would be a relief. To find that I’d been pretty close most of the time. That would be good enough for me. 

Anyway, Malgo, this is the sort of thing remembering you makes me think about, and I think it calls for another drink. You wouldn’t want me to be all melancholy and pensive like this on my date would you? You know how much fun that is. So I’d better pep up a little before I act all Woody Allen type sulky in front of another nice pretty girl who for some reason agreed to meet me for a drink.  

This is supposed to be the beginning of something great, right here, this date I’m supposed to have. That’s the kind of attitude I should be bringing to the table at least. You have to be Bogart, don’t ever forget that. If there isn’t a smile on your face when you sacrifice yourself, it isn’t much of a sacrifice now is it? It becomes something else. It becomes another misguided mistake. It has to be the beginning of something great.

He was a Friend of Mine

this story is dedicated to the memory of James “Jimmer” Sheehan who may have found this amusing, but probably would have explained in great detail how to do it better

I hit my knuckles on the top of the sturdy wood as I stepped onto the overgrown lawn. It was still straight and level. The man built a good fence. 

There was a rusty paint can lying there in the dirt by the house’s foundation and I kicked it towards the “for sale” sign across the lawn. It may as well have been one of the cans we’d used when we painted the place.

I walked across the street to the bar, The Elbow Room. As I walked across, I followed with my eyes the light coming down onto the street through the bay windows of the upstairs apartment. I wondered who lived up there these days and if they’d figured out a better furniture arrangement for that awkward main room. 

There was a big paper sign hanging cheaply over the entrance of the bar, bold and yellow and completely without taste. The messy sharpie scrawled across it read: “KEG CLEARANCE! $3 pints—$3 wells—$9 growler fills—KITCHEN CLOSED” 

I walked into the bar and stopped a few seconds to look around. The density of the strange and old items decorating the many shelved walls had escaped my memory. 

“You see these old gas lights I got in here,” Jim had told me once, “that big brass steering wheel, that ship’s clock there? There was a boat went down somewhere outside a bay we were anchored up in, oh, somewhere out in the Aleutians, might have just been Dutch. I can’t remember. Anyway, this old trawler was about half submerged just outside in another little bay and the half that wasn’t under had all this cool shit on it my skipper thought we might salvage. So I spent a whole week over there on the wreck grinding off everything I thought I could use or keep. I was engineer, see. Coast guard showed up eventually and told us we had to put it all back and almost arrested us anyway but those lights and that clock and that wheel I managed to get by ‘em.

…..That glass ball up top there behind the bar, I won that in a bet at this big flea market in central Mass I worked at when I was a teenager. That’s how I learned about Alaska in the first place......This big plank up on the wall, that’s bubinga wood. Ba-bing-ga. I found that in a shipping container I bought in one of those auctions. Straight from Africa”.......Built the bar myself. Maple. Took fifteen of us to carry the thing in here.”

I think every one of the countless old Jack London books and world war two ration cans and weird photos on the walls had probably come out of stories too. But I didn’t know a tenth of them. With a big group of regulars we might be able to come close. Still, I wondered how many of those stories would be lost or forgotten now. In more ways than one, those variously peculiar and generally old objects contained the man’s whole life. 

Soon it would all be junk.

I went over to our table in the corner by the fireplace and sat down. “Hey Betty. Hey Sam,” I said. 

Betty didn’t say anything, just stood up and hugged me. 

She was a big soft woman, nearly as wide as she was short, and it was a good hug. With her messy black hair, black calf-length spandex pants, and Pantera t-shirt she kind of looked like a big, rosy-cheeked, em0 blueberry. 

Sam didn’t say anything either when we both sat down. Instead, he nodded my way and slid me the beer he had waiting for me. We all have our own ways of expressing affection. 

“I was gonna ask, if you guys are both drinking, who’s tending bar?”

“Jimmer’s wife,” Matt said without looking up. “She didn’t want to have to pay anybody for only a couple shifts.”

“Yeah, I guess so. She’s practically giving it away though. Probably be busy.”

It was a little jarring, he looked so much older and sadder and thinner than he’d used to look. His long nose hooked ominously over dark sullen eyes, his torn flannel hanging limply over a gaunt frame and holes in the toes of his boots. The man looked tired. And old. Like there was something dragging him down faster than the rest of us. “Yeah….” he said. “I’d imagine she just wants to close up as soon as possible and get on with things.”

Betty was picking at something stuck to the table with her fingers “Can we talk about something else?” she said. She was giving me this kind of starry-eyed look. “We haven’t seen you in, what’s it been, two years? Or has it been longer?”

“Four years,” I said. 

“God, that was fast. It doesn’t seem like so long ago since you were back there slinging pies and playing all that crazy music,” she said. “You must be thirty now.”

“Thirty-one.” I said. She shook her head and kept her eyes on me. 

We were all quiet for a long while trying to think of what to say next. What else was there to talk about? We could look back or we could look forward, there was precious little between. 

I said, “do you guys remember any of the nicknames Jimmer would call you? I was thinking about it the other day. I got ‘sunshine,’’pumpkin,’’curleyqueue,’’bugaboo,’’snookums,’’billyboy,’ and I couldn’t think of anything else.” 

They shifted around and looked at their drinks. 

Eventually Sam said,“I don’t think he ever called us names like that.”

“Oh,” I said. He didn’t?” When they didn’t say anything, I got up and went for the bar. “Three Basil’s please, Leslie,” I said. She gave me a strange look pulling down the bottle from the shelf and I remembered that the two of us had never met before. I smiled back at her awkwardly.

“Start a tab?” she said. 

“Yeah, thanks,” I said. 

I took the whiskeys back over to the table in the corner and set them down with an air of ceremony. “Here we are.”” 

“What the hell’s that for?” Sam said. 

“For filling me in. I want to know everything. You know, not just the stuff in the local news reports. We’ll have a whisky and then you guys can please tell me what happened. I feel like I have to know everything,” I said.

Betty leaned in and looked at me with a big grin. Even though it was writ large across her face there was only sadness in her eyes. She said, “do you remember the time the pizza oven broke and Sam and Jimmer were grilling people burgers on the back porch and they were having such a ‘good time’ that they set the whole thing on fire? And when the fire department showed up they were still grilling but in a new spot right next to the burned up porch like they might as well just give it another go?” She tilted her head back and shrieked like a joyous hyena. Betty had a famous laugh. 

Sam smiled. “He thought if we had some burgers for them too they might let it slide.” 

“You mean setting the bar on fire?” 

“Betty.” I said.

The plastic smile faded from Betty’s face and revealed the concern it had disguised. “I dunno man, Leslie’s right over there,” she said. “I don’t think she even knows what happened, really. I hope she never does. Can’t we just tell eachother old stories and get drunk?”

“You’re saying something’s not up? Come on, Betty. You make it so obvious,” I said. “Oh, don’t look at me like that.”

“Like what,” she said. 

“All coy like that,” I said. “Come on,” I said. “You want to tell me everything. You want to spill your guts. You’re making those comments because you want me to drag it out of you and have it be a good drama. But I really don’t want to play your game. Can you just give me the story? Please. What happened that day? Don’t I have some right to know?”

“What comments?” she said. 

“You know, the melodramatic ones like ‘I hope she never finds out….’ dun…dun…dun…” I pretended to play an organ. 

“I didn’t say that. And if I did I wouldn’t say it like that.” She leaned forward on the table so she could turn away from me to look at Sam. “I think I want to have something to eat,” she said. “I’m hungry all the sudden. Maybe we could all just go get something to eat?” she said. 

“What’s the deal here?” I said. I was irritated and I sort of slammed my beer on the table.

It must have been pretty loud because Betty kind of bounced up in her chair and looked around nervously to see if I hadn’t caused a scene. “Will you be quiet? Jesus. Ok, ok. Take it easy. We’ll tell you. We can tell him right, Sam?”

“Shit, Betty, I don’t know that this is the best time.” He was looking down and holding very still as though he were trying not to be noticed by anybody. 

I motioned to Leslie at the bar for another round. 

“It’ll be a better time after another whisky or two,” I said. “Come on you guys, you gotta relax. You look like you’re about to hold the place up.” 

We all drank and Betty and I both coughed. 

Then Bohemian Rhapsody came on quietly over the radio.“Oh fuck,” Betty said. She reached for her phone to turn the stereo up and got out of her seat, grinning at us and gyrating her hips. Sam and I both cringed significantly. 

I looked at him in sadness. “I forgot that Betty likes Queen.” 

He didn’t look away from her, but he nodded his agreement. 

We continued to watch in mesmerized horror as Betty shamelessly pantomimed a dramatic performance for us complete with an air-guitar solo and a clumsy knee slide. Matt pulled low his Chicago Cubs cap.

“Can’t we just have an honest chat?” I said. But my pleas were met by her waggling Freddie Mercury finger. She loved how we hated it.

When the song finally came to an end, Betty leaned in close to me, panting beerily after having lip-sung her lungs out, and whispered, “ok…he…” she paused to take a deep breath…“wasn’t…” another deep breath…“drunk.”

“What?”

She held up her hands in apology and rolled her eyes, still breathing very hard. She was beaming. “You….said…I should….need to…relax.” It took her a while to catch her breath. By the time she had recovered she started to look sad again and repeated, “he wasn’t drunk.”

“Who wasn’t drunk?” I said. 

“I thought you were supposed to be smart, college boy.” She looked around and lowered her voice. “Jim, you dummy.”

I squinted at her in confusion. 

Unblinking, with eyes full of earnestness like an insistent child, she repeated, slower this time, “he wasn’t drunk.” She gave an exaggerated nod as if to certify the statement.

“Yeah, I got that but what do you mean ‘he wasn’t drunk’?”

“When he crashed his Harley. He wasn’t drunk.”

“Yes, I know what you’re referring to but what does that have to do with anything? So what if he wasn’t drunk?” I was starting to get a bit agitated. Who could possibly have cared if Jim was drunk or not? Besides the police, I mean. We were talking about a guy who drank beers all afternoon every day. I looked to Sam in the hopes that he might explain what she was trying to say a bit more sensibly, but it seemed like he was intentionally averting his eyes from mine. 

Betty closed her two hands into fists and rubbed them together as she exhaustedly lowered her forehead into them and almost whispered, “I think they wanted it to look like he was drunk is what I’m trying to say. But he wasn’t. I know he wasn’t.”

Sam gritted his teeth and watched something going on behind our backs. 

I said, “who wanted it to look like he was drunk? The cops? Betty, what are you talking about?”

“I don’t know. No, not the cops. I don’t think so. I don’t know. I know I sound crazy. God, I feel crazy. I’ve never felt like this in my life. But you have to listen to  me. It’s true, I know it’s true. See, there’s this. Right here. Look at this. Just look. See. Sam found this on the bar when he came in to open up Sunday. That was the day…”

“I know,” I said. 

“Anyway it was just sitting there waiting for us to find it. Look at it, there. Read it. You’ll see,” she said. 

She was holding out a slip of paper, a ripped piece of a small pocket-sized notepad page. It read: “They’re coming. Not what you think. Key in shop. Know when you see.” 

Well, it was definitely a note from Jim. That was the first thing. And I had no doubt about it. His was a very distinctive and boyishly neat scrawl—all caps and no style, like an architect. But what did it mean? I had received so many messages like that which had turned out to be so cryptic only out of a concerted effort by Jim to use as few words as possible. Betty would have, in her ten or so years of bartending at this place, become more accustomed to these riddles than I ever had. Those skeletons of a thought. This wasn’t exactly like catching Kaczynski. Minimal linguistic forensics were required to determine that messages like “2. Meat. Or else.” only meant something like I had to have a check ready for the pepperoni guy by two or we wouldn’t get a delivery the next day. I was sure it had to have been something like that. 

Why wouldn’t Betty think so too? She was staring at me from across the table while she waited to see a reaction come across my face. When I met her gaze she lit up. “Come on! How fucking ominous is that?” she said. “There’s no way it’s a coincidence. On the day he died? It has to have something to do with it.” She jutted her head forward aggressively at the look I met her with. As though anything were obvious right then. “Right?” she shrugged her shoulders and raised her hands ever so slightly like she didn’t even have to say duh. Then she turned to Sam. “Right?” 

Sam looked directly at her for a long time like he was trying to decide what to say and then he said, “I don’t know, Betty. What makes it so hard to think that he was just drunk?”

“This!” She said, “this makes it hard to believe!” She held the note in the air and flapped it around. “You know what else makes it hard to believe? Jimmer rode motorcycles his entire life. All over the whole country. Remember he talked about following Ken Kesey’s bus from California to Oregon and then down through Nevada? God, he made it sound so beautiful.” She took a big drink from her beer and rubbed her eyes with both hands. “He had weeks and weeks on the road. He told me he ran into Neil Young in the South Utah desert and rode right next to him and his wife for half a day. He rode with Andrew—see, he’s right over there smoking outside—every Sunday all down through the gorge and up into Washington. You’ve seen how many bikes he has in his garage, maybe twenty?” She went on. “He rode with his kids all the time. I mean, I of all people even let the guy take my own children out and show them how to ride dirt bikes. That's how much I trusted him. And he was probably drinking the whole time he did that too.”

Sam and I both waited to see if she would continue. You know, to see what was her point. 

“It just doesn’t make any sense that a few beers could have caused him to crash like that on that little street not even ten minutes away from his house here. I don’t know what but something happened. It had to have. I know you think so too, Sam.”

Sam didn’t look up or say anything at all but his silence became one of acquiescence. 

“See!” she said, “Just think about it. They want us to think he was drunk. I don’t know who, but they do. Did I just rhyme?” She burped and adjusted herself in her seat. She was getting very excited, almost exultant. “We just need to figure out why. And we have this clue. You know, ‘they’re coming for me.’ He left it so we’d find it and then we’d find them. He said ‘the key is in the shop.’ So we have to look there. There’s something in there that’ll tell us who was after him. Something is going on. And he wanted us to know. He wanted us to find out” She rested her hands flat on the table and took a deep breath. Case rested. She waited to see if it had caused its intended impact. 

I’m not sure that it did, though we went along with it anyway. I looked hard at Sam, long enough that he eventually had no choice but to meet my glare with his own eyes. This seemed to break the ice some between the two of us, and his look softened after a second. I couldn’t remember a single thing I’d ever really liked about the guy. “How long have you two been here?” I said.

He knew exactly what I was asking. He said “we only had the one round before you showed up” and shrugged. 

I didn’t know what to say. “Well, jesus guys, I dunno” I said. It was completely crazy. I had heard about grief doing this to people but I had never seen it before myself and I didn’t know how to deal with it. That’s what I’m trying to say: I didn’t know what to do. I thought it best to try to appease her. We both must have thought so. “I guess we better have another round and go see if we can break in and poke around in the shop,” I said. 

“We don’t have to break in.” Betty said. “Sam’s got a key. Manager, remember?” She grinned and jigged her thumb at him.

So the three of us had a couple more whiskys and then we went for the shop. No cars drove by on the street beside the bridge as we entered the swinging door of the gate. It led behind the bar and before the entrance of the shop, a two story gabled building with corrugated aluminum siding and red and green painted trim around the windows and the doors. 

Sam unlocked the big wood door with an iron skeleton key and pushed it open. We followed him in and he turned on the lights. It was just like I remembered it. It smelled like sawdust and shellac and stale beer. And just as I had always remembered, there was still no discernible system for the arrangement of things. For me, it was complete madness. There were pieces of lumber to one side and pieces of half-built chairs to another, a tablesaw in the middle of it all so covered with random tools and pieces of scrap wood that it was hardly identifiable as a tablesaw at all. The workbenches, too, were buried beyond recognition. There was an antique cash register, two old U.S. army issue motorcycles with sidecars buried in cables, a little blue MG with the hood open and the engine suspended by the chains of a come-along above it, wooden doors for old wooden boats, a maidenhead for a sailboat, porch columns, massive ten-foot-long old-school logging hand saws, vintage neon lights and bar signs, tools of all sorts and shapes, and grease, and beer bottles, and various cans of paint and chemicals and weed everywhere. 

I looked up at Betty and Sam helplessly. “Where do we start?” I regretted intensely going along with this ridiculous treasure hunt. 

Sam looked pissed off. “Hell, I don’t know,” he said. This is all just fucked up.” He kicked a piece of scrap wood and put his hands on his hips and looked down and took a deep breath. Then he looked back up at us, “I’m sorry. I’m just a little upset is all,” he said. 

Betty didn’t give him a second thought. She was in a state of adrenal-type fervor, such was her excitement at the prospect of finding another ‘clue.’ “You know what the problem is?” she said. “The problem is that we’re looking at this stuff and thinking its a huge mess. But it’s not. Is it? To Jimmer this was organised, you know. I guess it was.” She looked at me appealingly, “wasn’t it? So maybe we just try to think like Jim? I don’t know.”

“Yeah, yeah. That’s not such a bad idea,” I said. I winked at her, “I guess you are a little smarter than you look.” She gave me a bitter, saccharine smile and flipped me off. Then turned away from me to see where Sam had gone.  

“Sam, what time you been opening the bar on Sundays?” she said. 

He took a while to respond. When he did, he said it quietly. “I guess I usually get in around ten or eleven depending on the day.” He was looking away from us and remained like that. He’d been standing off to the side of us just holding still and not saying anything. Thinking, it looked like.

“Get it? Do you get it?” Betty clapped her hands together. “We just think ‘what would Jimmer be doing around nine or ten on a Sunday’ and we look around there.” She turned straight to me. “I am smarter than I look, you fuckin’ dickhead,” she said. 

Sam stiffened. I watched him bring his hand to his mouth and rub his upper lip in pensive frustration and stare away from us into the corner of the ceiling. 

“What would Jim be doing at ten in the morning?” I said. I couldn’t think of anything.

The smile drained away from Betty’s face as she repeated the question softly to herself. She pursed her eyebrows and chewed on her cheek. She looked up at Sam and me. “What did Jimmer do in the mornings?” she said. 

  A loud, exasperated breath escaped from Sam’s mouth. He still didn’t look at us but I saw him blink very slowly and shake his head. It seemed like he might burst at any second.

I didn’t say anything, only took in the chaos of the place. The little objects spotlit by dusty beams from the streetlights just outside the windows. Betty began to root around at the clutter on top of the tablesaw with a renewed sense of urgency and Sam started looking through the tool benches over away from us in search of another beer. 

I let the futility of it all sink in. Let it wrap me up inside, right around the center of my belly. And for a second it felt like I could just do nothing at all for the whole rest of my life, like it would be better if I did nothing. You know, like what was the point? But more than that. Really a lot more than that. “What are we doing in here anyway?” I said. And suddenly I felt like I might start crying.

“What?” Betty said. She stopped whatever she was doing to look me down. “We’re looking for whatever that note was about.” She was angry but she was trying to act like she was only confused. “What are you talking about? We’re here to get this sorted out. To figure out what happened?” she said. 

“Nothing happened, Betty!” Now Sam was almost shouting and he turned back to face us. I don’t think I’d ever seen him so angry before. It didn’t exactly seem right coming from that thin, quiet figure—that’s what I remember thinking. “Nobody killed Jimmer,” he said. “He crashed his bike and he died and that’s it. There’s no conspiracy. There’s….there’s….there’s no plot or scheme or whatever you think there is. For christ’s sake, he just crashed. It was an accident. He crashed. That’s all. That’s it. Crashed and died. End of story. And it was probably his….” he trailed off. “He was probably….”

He stopped short. It was as if he realized very slowly that we were really still there in that workshop with him and he was really talking out loud at us. Betty had this horrified and angry look on her face. I could hardly look at either one of them. I didn’t know what to do. 

Before any of us had figured out what to say there were three loud, hard knocks on the street-side door across the shop from where we stood. Knock, knock, knock. Quick and even. 

We remained motionless there in our mutual bewilderment. I don’t know what reverberated more powerfully in those drawn out seconds: the three ringing echoes, or the undulating quietness of the buzzing lights and our heartbeats and sharp breaths. It was as though it were alive and taking shape before us. It felt like there couldn’t be anything in the whole world louder than that silence. 

Nobody moved and we all three of us looked at each other to see if somebody might. But we didn’t. We stood there stunned and dumb like herd animals. All we could do was hold still. Then Betty started to cry, louder and louder until I was praying for that silence to come back. Louder and louder. And still we just stood. And she cried. Louder. Louder. Until there was nothing else. 


Thinning Out

The morning, busier than ordinary, began with me sending a ridiculously long text message. It read:

Hey mom, 

Kenny’s getting in today for a quick visit. Thought I’d let you know. Not sure if he filled you in or not, but they’re remodeling his restaurant or something so he finally has a chance to make the trip back out. I hope he’ll go see you and Dad next. He didn’t tell me his plans. 

Anyway, me and Gracie are real excited. She’s never met him before, you know. She spent all week going through all you and Grammy’s old recipes to cook his favorites. I tried to help out but she’s got something to prove. She wants to show him she can cook, see. We got in the fridge right now, cardiac potatoes, peanut butter pork, spaghetti pie, and a nice looking coffee cake. I told her a hundred times he’d only be around a day and a half. But you more than anyone know how these things go. 

By the way, she wasn’t able to pull off the oatmeal cookies despite several attempts and one almost manic episode. Things very nearly approached violence after the third failure. They won’t make it in time for Kenny’s visit, but if you could please send a batch or two. 

Your son, 

J. 

P.S. Did you see the picture of him they put in the article about that James Beard stuff?? I didn’t want to say anything until I heard what you think. But my god…

Sent. I set my phone down. Why was it that as parents got older every form of communication with them closer approached the formality of a letter?

Just then Gracie emerged from the bedroom in a huff. “Why’d you let me sleep so late?” she said. I always woke up first—a bad sleeper—and had been assigned the role of alarm clock. 

“It’s not even ten, babe,” I said. 

“I just have a lot to do to get ready, is all,” she said. She looked at herself in the mirror and messed up her dirty-blonde hair and then smoothed it back down. She came up to where I was sitting on the couch and leaned her hips against me while she hit on the joint I was smoking. 

“Oh you do not,” I said. “Everything’s fine, believe me. The two of us lived together for years, remember. Believe me, he wouldn’t notice even if it was a mess.” It was a small house so there wasn’t much cleaning to do in the first place. And it was such an old house so that even when it was immaculately clean it still looked a little dirty. “I thought we might just have one last relaxing morning to ourselves, that’s all,” I said.

But almost before I could finish speaking there was a knock at the door. “Who the hell could that be at this time on a Sunday?” my girlfriend said. 

She opened the door and there stood my brother. Neither one of us could have guessed at that. 

“You’re already here!” she said. She feigned excitement, but I could hear the horror of  unpreparedness come through in her voice. 

I remained on the couch. “Baby brother!” I said. “Wasn’t I supposed to get you at the airport at noon?” 

He still hadn’t smiled, just kind of stood there on the doorstep. “You didn’t get my text last night,” he said. “Some bullshit with the airlines and a canceled flight. I got bumped to an earlier one. I texted you about it last night.” 

“Oh, my bad,” I said. “I guess I just missed it. Sorry man.”

“No, it’s cool,” he said. 

There was an awkward silence. 

“Well, come in, come in, sit down” my girlfriend said.

She stepped aside so he could bring in his bag and set it down by the couch. I watched him come through the doorway, but I could hardly look. I didn’t want to see. I wanted to cover my eyes. He was so fat it was hard to believe. He must have been a hundred pounds heavier than the last time I’d seen him. He looked even worse in person than in that awful photograph. He looked completely miserable.

“Oh, god, I’m so sorry,” Gracie said when he’d set down his bag. “Im Gracie!” She extended her hand. “I’m so excited to finally be meeting you!”

He took her hand in his big soft grip, thick white flesh enveloping those beautiful bony fingers. “Kenny,” he said. “Can’t wait to learn a little bit about my big bro’s new lady.”

“She’s not that new,” I said. But nobody acknowledged it. So I said, “here man, have a seat. You wanna smoke a joint?”

“No, thanks. I quit a couple years ago,” he said. 

“Really?” I said. I was genuinely surprised. “I thought people in your line of work smoke this shit all day and drink whisky all night. At the very least. For stress, I mean.”

“Well yeah, some people do. But not so much in the kinds of places I work anymore. We try to keep things pretty professional,” he said. 

“Right, right, of course,” I said. And I thought, you look real fuckin’ professional. “You’re still doing grill there, right? Or was it sauté?”

“Yeah, I started out as sous, but they made me CDC a little over a year ago. I still work those stations all the time though,” he said. 

“That’s what I thought,” I said. 

“Your mom told me the place you work is really fancy, right? Like it’s supposed to be kind of a big deal, like five Michelin stars or something? And you’re like a hot-shot chef?” Gracie said. 

“It’s pretty nice,” he said. “But it only has three stars. And I don’t know about hot-shot, I just do my best because I like it there. I do my best, and I think our food makes people happy. That makes me happy so that’s all I care about, really.”

I rolled my eyes. “They pay you good, too? Or is it still the way it used to be?

“It’s a little better, but not much. I guess I’d say make about enough to get by,” he said. “What about you, though? You already know all about my job and what I do. Last I heard from you you were working on a novel, I think? About a man who goes out to sea alone so he can find himself if I’m remembering correctly. Is that right? How’d that go? You must be getting that published by now.”

I shifted a little on the couch. I couldn’t quite get comfortable. “Oh yeah, I’m still working on that. I’ve been so busy, you know. So many different projects going at the same time. New contracts, and deals, all that stuff. Things are very good still, we’re very lucky everything is so easy and good,” I said. “Oh yeah, I got a write up in a magazine for that old short story recently.”

“That’s awesome, man! Good for you! Is it that same one about the drifter?” he said. “Kind of a western?

“Yeah,” I said. 

“Which magazine?” he said. “I’d like to read that write up,” he said. 

“Oh, it’s a small one. You probably wouldn’t be able to find it online anyways,” I said.

Gracie came to my rescue, as usual. She said, “Hey, before you guys get too caught up, I bet Kenny would like to get a little settled in, and maybe have a shower. You must have got up real early to be getting in at this time.”

“Yeah, I guess it was technically a red-eye,” he said. “That sounds great, thank you Gracie. Should I call you Gracie, or Grace?” he said.

“Oh Gracie, please, yeah, just Gracie,” she said. “Ok the bedroom’s just down that hallway there on the right, and the bathroom is across the hall. And take your time, we’re not on schedule yet.” She winked at him. 

“Thanks,” he said and he went down the hall.

I remained on the couch, and started rolling up another joint for myself. I simply could not believe how fat he was. Could not believe it. My own little brother.

I knew something like this would happen all along. And I’d told him. It had been a point of division between the two of us. We’d had the one big blowout over it and that was that. It was right after I’d come home from my first summer fishing in Alaska, my very first job outside the restaurant industry and I’d been bragging about how much money I made there. We were sitting in our loft apartment in Portland, drinking coffee or beer and smoking weed probably. 

“I'm telling you man, once you start making a little real money you’ll see. Restaurant work is not the way to go. I don’t think I could ever go back now.” I think we got to arguing on some comment like that.

“Yeah, I know. I just love it so much,” he said. “I don’t really care about how much money I make right now. I just want to do something I really enjoy. And right now I do. I’m excited to go to work everyday and every day I have a great time there. That’s plenty good enough for me right now.”

“But what about later?” I said. “What if you decide you want to do something else but by then you’re in your mid-thirties or something and it’s already too late? I’ve worked with so many older guys working in shitty places who are just fucking miserable, man. They make no money, they either don’t have a family or never see them, their bodies start to fall apart. It seems so awful. I just don’t want that to be me. Or you for that matter.”

And this is where the real division started. He said, “yeah but don’t you think those guys were always kind of just losers? You know, they were lazy and they always took easy jobs and never had any ambition and were drug addicts or alcoholics or pot heads. They lived like irresponsible teenagers. And then suddenly they were old and in the same place they’d always been. That’s what I think.”

“Really,” I said. “That’s surprising, because I kind of think the complete opposite. I see guys like that and I see somebody just like me who had dreams just as real and vivid as mine are now, but theirs never came true. Sure maybe they made the wrong decisions and that’s on them. But I don’t think I’m immune to that. I’m terrified of turning into one of those guys.”

He didn’t say anything, so I went on. 

“I fished with this guy Dan up there. He was a cool fucking guy. He really liked how I was an english major and how I took a bunch of philosophy classes. He told me he was gonna be a philosophy major with an english minor before he dropped out of college and hitchhiked across the country. He hitchhiked and bummed ferry rides until he ended up in Alaska. That’s what he told me. He said he’d always kept a little notepad in his pocket so he could write it down if somebody said something nice or a good line popped into his head. And he’d camp outside town and write poetry. He said he was gonna work hard and have adventures and make some money and then go back to school and get on with his life. That’s what he told me he thought he would do. I hear stories like that and I think, ‘this guy was just like me,’ you know. He had some real dreams and ambitions—write books, start a band, really do something—and he got this job that he liked but he didn’t want to do it forever. Just like us, you know. He never would have imagined himself being where he is today. In the exact same place. Just like you could never see yourself turning into one of those bitter, broken, old line cooks. But people get stuck. Somewhere along the line Dan did, and now it’s too late. He missed his chance, you know. I’m so scared I’ll miss mine. Aren’t you? Don’t you ever think about that?

“I know what you mean, man, but I just really don’t think that’ll happen to me. I know it won’t. I’ll figure something else out eventually. But for right now, I just love cooking. I want to learn as much as I can about food and maybe when that stops I’ll figure something else out. But I am passionate about this. For right now, it makes me happy. Isn’t that enough?” he said. 

It wasn’t enough. I tried not to say any more. He was getting frustrated, I could tell. He was quiet when I spoke and averted my eyes. He hated conversations like this, when people told him what to do—especially when the people were me. But, as usual, I couldn’t help myself. I had a big old soapbox and I loved to talk to him from on top of it. 

“Kenny,” I said, “don’t you think guys like that, like Dan, would have said the exact same thing when they were our age? Like they thought what they were doing was ‘good enough for now’, and maybe the next year they’d go and do something else” I said, “one day they woke up and they were forty and they didn’t have any other choices. It seems like every year that goes on is one year closer to getting stuck like that. It’s like you’re building a cage around yourself.” I said, “that’s why I got out. You don’t have enough time to get good at all the things you want to get good at, so you have to be careful.”

“But I want to get good at this. I guess I haven’t figured out if working in restaurants has a place in my dreams or not yet. I don’t know what I want. I just like it enough that I want to see if I can make it work,” he said. 

And I said, “you aren’t listening to me, dog. I’m trying to tell you you’re gonna be miserable if you keep doing this for too long.”

“No man,” he said. “You’re not listening to me. You never do. I’m fine. I like what I do. I can handle my own life.”

“Oh, my bad, I didn’t realize that,” I said. “I guess I just didn’t realize how fucking put together you are.”

“Yeah, man, I am. I’ve got it. I don’t need you to help me out, okay, thanks anyway,” he said. 

That put me over the edge. I said, “Oh yeah so when you lost your ID last year and never got a new one, or broke three phones I paid to replace, you had that all handled right? What about when you got all drunk and knocked over your laptop? Who paid to fix that? Who drove you to the fucking Apple store? Now that I mention it, who drives you anywhere? Who covers your rent when you spend all your money? And you even make more fucking money than me. You’ve got it though, right? I’ll just let you keep handling everything.”

“Oh fuck you,” he said. If you’re gonna tally it all up like that, don’t bother helping me out with anything any more. You offered to do that stuff, remember.”

“Because you never do that shit on your own!” I said. I started to shout. “Are you serious? Fuck me? Fuck you dude. I look out for you. I help you out all the time. Don’t fucking tell me ‘fuck you’, you fuckin’ dickhead.”

That was when Kenny started to cry and his voice started to break. He said, “well you can just go ahead and stop all that now. I don’t want it to be like this, man. But I don’t need you red-dogging every decision in my life. I don’t want you looking out for me. Don’t worry about my dreams. Don’t worry about me at all. Just fuck off and stay out of my business.”

“You really fucking mean that?” I screamed. I was so pissed off, now that I think about it, that we must have been drinking. 

“Yeah,” he said. “I really mean it. I don’t want you doing anything for me ever again. You think you’re so much better than me. Well, guess what? You’re not. You’re just as much of a fuck-up and a piece-of-shit as I am. You don’t have any place trying to run my fucking life for me.”

“Alright then. Fuck me, I guess. That sounds good. You take it from here. See how that goes. I’m done with you, if that’s what you want to do. Don't take my advice. You’ll see. Just wait, you’ll see for yourself. When you’re poor forever. And you never have weekends or regular hours off so you never find a really good stable relationship. Or if you do you don’t have enough time to make it work. And for the rest of your life you never have friends you don’t work with. Not really. Not people you see on any kind of regular basis. You’ll be alone. And you’ll drink. And eat too much. And give up on everything in your life outside of work. You’ll be a fat, pathetic, miserable son-of-a-bitch, and I won’t give a shit. Just you wait.” I said. I was storming out. “Oh yeah and one more thing, fuck you Kenny. I really mean that. Fuck you.” I slammed the door. 

When I got back to the loft he was gone. And so were all his things. We didn’t talk for a long time after that. I guess we got a little line of communication going—a text here and there—after a visit home for Christmas maybe a year or two later. To keep mom happy, you know. But even when I did try to reach out, I never knew what to say, so I kept it brief. It's so hard to really say what you mean in a text. And a phone call always seemed like it would be too uncomfortable. After a certain amount of time apart it was hard to imagine what we would be able to talk about at all. 

And now here he was in my house. And I had been right all along. That was pretty much obvious now. One look could tell you that. 

Gracie walked back into the room dressed and done up and interrupted my thoughts. She said, “why were you being like that with him?” She looked irritated. 

“Like what?” I said. “By the way, can you believe it?” I held out my hands in front of my waist like I was holding a giant bowl.

“You were being all dumb and macho,” she said. “You know exactly like what. Like subtly putting him down with everything you said. What’s that? What are you doing?” She whispered, “oh, stop it. You’re terrible. He is not.”

I put my hands down. “You don’t think he was doing that same stuff to me? Trying to put me down?” I said. 

“Yeah you were both doing it,” she said, “but you more than him I think. That’s what I’m saying. At least you were more obvious about it. And meaner.” She paused for a second and I could see she was choosing her words carefully. She said, “did you really not see his text about the flight change last night?”

“What? Of course I didn’t see it. You think I would do that? And then lie about it?” I said. 

“You’re right, you’re right. I don’t know why I asked,” she said. 

But I was forced to ask myself: had I seen the text? Had I seen the text from him and ignored it by some baser instinct? As if the sight of his name could trigger a subliminal response to ignore and retreat.

I didn’t get much of a chance to think about it, because he came out of the hallway to join us again. He had on blue jeans an old black Melvins t shirt I’d given him years and years ago. I guess I couldn’t be totally sure it was the same shirt. 

One thing was clear though, he’d recovered his humor after the flight and long cab ride. Now he had this big smile on his face. He was looking right at me and he couldn’t stop smiling even despite what appeared to be his sincerest efforts. He looked like a goofy kid, just like he looked when we were little. He said, “it’s good to see you bro. I missed you. I really missed you.” And he pulled me off the couch to hug me. A big humongous bear hug. 

And I thought maybe, just maybe things would be better this time. 

Everything Must Go

Everything Must Go

A sloppy handwritten note on crumpled, coffee stained legal pad paper is tacked to a bulletin board in the entrance of an aged apartment building. It reads “Yard Sale: 38D.” As a couple enter the building briskly out of the rain and fold their umbrellas respectively, the man stops at the bulletin board.