January272012

Beverly Hills, California

To:

Mrs. Leonore Billingsly

928 Alpine Dr.

Beverly Hills, CA 90210

 

First of all, CONGRATULATIONS on the purchase of your very own Drive-o-Matic 3000!

Automata is the sole global provider of computer/car hybrids that do the driving FOR YOU, and we are committed to leading the way into the future of the fully automated luxury driving experience.

The Drive-o-Matic 3000 is not simply a car, but an innovative new lifestyle choice.

Go ahead, sit back and relax as your computerized chauffeur, Fritz®, drives you safely to your destination – wherever that may be – and alleviates you of the daily stress of actual driving.

That said, we have received your letter of complaint and are passionate about finding the best solution for you, valued costumer Mrs. Leonore Billingsly. Your input is invaluable in the process of our improvement, and we are committed to providing you with the ideal experience for the Drive-o-Matic 3000.

The problem, as we have studied your letter of complaint, is that, while the Drive-o-Matic 3000 appears to be operating perfectly fine in getting you to your destination, it seems to be utilizing routes that take you through, as you noted, “impoverished and dangerous neighborhoods,” the likes of which “[you] would prefer to skip over entirely.”

Now, in case you are unaware, your Drive-o-Matic 3000 uses a complex formula of global positioning software (GPS) and artificial intelligence (A.I.) to find the BEST and most TIME EFFICIENT route to your valued destination. Therefore, we would just like to be clear that it is not Fritz’s® fault, as your claim suggests, that you are being driven into areas to which you deem “undesirable” or “sketchy.” While Fritz® seems the logical scapegoat, we urge you not to blame him in this situation. Fritz® is simply acting within his nature. That being said, it was not our intent for Fritz® to have a social or political consciousness. He has not been programmed to express any sort of pejorative or didactic agenda, and we apologize most certainly for “the guilt” that the Drive-o-Matic 3000 has brought to you and your family over the past month.

Here at Automata, it is our policy not to adhere to any political/ideological standpoint. Our only agenda is to do what is in the best interest for A) our valued customers and B) our company.

We do commend you for the “affluence” – which you have volunteered to share – “that [your] family has sustained over the years” and by absolutely no means at all is our company pointing fingers at people of your status of wealth and success. We treat ALL of our valued consumers THE SAME, regardless of their past, previous or current financial situation, as well as any other potentially discriminatory criteria.

Yet, we do certainly apologize for the foul mood that our product has put you in. This is especially true during the weekend getaway detailed in your letter. We apologize, but we need you to understand that Fritz® was not “intentionally” winding you through a detour of “a number of tougher neighborhoods in South Central LA,” on the way to your weekend place on Balboa Island.

And while we are certainly puzzled why Fritz® left the 10 freeway and made an unannounced stop in the parking lot of a pawn shop in “an uncomfortably urban area,” as you put it, we can only assume that Fritz® needed a quick moment to recalculate his route, in order to provide you with the best, and most direct, course to your destination. How was Fritz® to know of the foul word laden graffiti that splattered the pawn shop wall; the foul word which, to your dismay, your son Alastair now seems to utter freely at home as well as school. On a side note, while we think it’s wonderful that you have “a good friend who is black,” we don’t exactly see how it pertains to the Drive-o-Matic’s performance.

I must ask at this moment, whether you have completely read your user manual? You claim to have “shouted repeatedly at Fritz®,” but I must remind you that Fritz® responds most effectively to “a calm, and assured, tone of voice” (User’s Guide p. 476). I mean this in the most constructive way I can, but perhaps shouting at Fritz® wasn’t the optimal course of action in the scenario you described.

May I refer now to your assertion that you have earned the right “through your personal wealth,” as you’ve stated, “not to be constantly reminded of such poor living conditions?” We at Automata also agree, that it is NOT your fault that you inherited this wealth. However, we must politely urge you to consider that other valued consumers of the Drive-o-Matic may reside in what you have deemed as “undesirable areas.” And while we understand that the current costs involved with the Drive-o-Matic 3000 may restrict families of certain incomes from enjoying the luxuries we provide, restriction for any certain status of wealth, couldn’t be further from our goals at Automata.

Our ideal future is one where every person can have a Drive-o-Matic of their own, safely transporting their loved ones across this great nation of ours.

However still, we have great sympathy for the state of distress in which you arrived at your beach house, and we at Automata are deeply sorry to hear of the resultant bad mood that hung over your weekend spa treatments. And how can I not most whole-heartedly agree that the stress of your situation must be the sole reason to blame for your husband’s slightly higher than average score on the golf course.

What’s most puzzling to us is how, even though you say to have vocally communicated your displeasure to Fritz®, he chose to drive you in an even lengthier route on the way back from the beach house. This time winding you through “a lengthy and comprehensive tour of East LA, as well as – inexplicably – swinging by Skid Row downtown.”

Subsequently, we are also puzzled by how whenever you’ve since taken the Drive-o-Matic out in the city – even for a simple, leisurely, joyride – you claim that Fritz® seeks out “routes through the worst areas imaginable,” while transporting you to your valued destination.

Here is where we urge you to sit down with Fritz® and have a heart to heart. We believe it could be a healthy and beneficial option for the both of you. However, Mrs. Billingsly, if you still remain unsatisfied, we will gladly send one of our technicians out to perform a complimentary diagnostic on your vehicle.

As you’ve stated repeatedly throughout your letter, we at Automata understand that you are by no means “a classist, racist or bigot” of any kind.

It should be said that we at Automata have a strong commitment to diversity and that through our operation – along with the initial programming of Fritz® – we hope to bring the world TOGETHER rather than divide it over differences of background, race, religion, gender, and sexual orientation.

That being said, we are taking great pains to improve our product and it is through your valued input that this is possible. We believe that through input like yours, that the Drive-o-Matic 3000 can reach it’s absolute potential.

We urge you that despite your initial dissatisfaction with our product, that you give the luxury lifestyle of the Drive-o-Matic another chance. It pains us greatly to think of your Drive-o-Matic becoming just another unused car in your “seven car garage.”

Lastly, how could we at Automata forget to convey a warm greeting to your frequently cited friend, and gardener, Hector. He certainly seems to be “the stand-up person” you keep asserting – although this reader was not always entirely sure why – that he is. And while it may be tough for him now, riding the bus all the way out from El Monte each morning, maybe, as you say in your letter, “one day he can save up for a Drive-o-Matic of his very own.”

 

Sincerely,

Janice Clarksdale

Automata Motor Vehicle Industries

Auburn Hills, Michigan

Postcard: Found at the Melrose Trading Post in Los Angeles, CA in October 2011.

January192012

Chattanooga, Tennessee

I saw a dead body once. We were on a family vacation, heading south.

My brother and I sat in the back of the van, watching cartoons on a travel TV that was secured in place, between the front seats, by bungee cables.

We’d taken our shirts off in the heat, and were perspiring, loud, and rude. We fought. We insulted. We slapped, and pinched and punched. We jammed saliva covered fingers into one another’s ears and gave out Indian rug burns. We made flatulent noises by tucking our hands under our sweaty armpits and flapping our arms. We wrote curse words on a notepad - ones we were too afraid to say in front of our parents - and threatened to beat each other “into pulp.” My brother was older than me, and bigger then, but I tried to overcompensate with the sting of my words.

Dad rolled down the window. We heard patrol sirens whining, distant chops of an idling helicopter. Something was wrong. You could just feel it, like nausea or hot sun on your arm.

Nobody seemed to know or care why we’d stopped. Some people left their cars, danced to radios, or chased each other in circles. Others darted off into the woods to urinate. One long haired man hopped out of his van holding a lawn chair. I watched him run ahead a hundred yards or so, plop down, crack a beer, and wait for his ride to catch up.

We inched ahead.

Eventually, we reached the accident. Shards of metal and glass were scattered everywhere. A sheen of oils and hose-water glistened on the blacktop, reminding me of the time my brother busted the fish tank in Ms. Carl’s second grade classroom.

At some point, traffic began to slow. Cars were lined up, bumpers kissing bumpers, as far, and straight, as any of us could see. The first car was completely smashed in. The hood was bent upward, and the windows all blown out; a crumpled, glossy, magazine picture of a car. A crew of paramedics and firemen circled around it.

The other car was off in the woods that bordered the highway, barely visible, wrapped around a tree.

My brother was the first to see the body. We rolled by it slowly, stuck in the tedious pull of traffic. He pointed at the white sheet lain delicately on the road.

“Don’t look, boys don’t look,” said my Dad, in a tone I don’t think I’d ever heard before. “Close your eyes.”

There was nowhere else to look.

I didn’t recognize what it was at first. All I felt at the time was confusion. Why was this person resting on the blacktop? My god, how hot they must have been! How sweaty and uncomfortable it must be under there. I was concerned. Did anybody realize they were there? Someone was going to run them over! Why wasn’t anyone doing anything?

I fished through the bottom of our Igloo cooler and grabbed a bottle of water.

“You should give this to that person,” I said, passing it up to my Mom. “What person?” she asked. “There’s somebody under that sheet.” Mom took the drink, but didn’t respond.

“You moron,” said my brother as he flicked the back of my ear. He seemed almost delighted. “That person under there is dead. They’re cooking like a steak on a skillet and –”

“Christopher!” said my Mom. I could see the bottle trembling in her hands.

I looked back and saw a hand reaching outward, from underneath the sheet. It had five fingers and unpainted nails – a man, I assumed – just like mine, just like my hand.

Dad remained silent, staring forward into the rear-window of the car ahead of us. Two oblivious children, bowl-cut, in matching overalls, pulled their mouths back with their fingers, making faces, waving.

None of us said much after that. We cleared through the traffic and resumed our usual speed on the highway. We returned to our thoughts, our TV.

At a picnic table in Chattanooga, a few hours later, my Dad pointed up at a mountain off in the distance. “Let’s go up there,” he said, nodding with his chin, while dipping a tear of grilled cheese into a styrofoam cup of soup. “Let’s see what it’s like at the top.”

Mom nodded, chewing, looking out and away.

We parked at the base of the mountain, and a cable car took us up the side. It was steep and felt like a roller coaster, ratcheting up to that first drop. I felt a stab inside my stomach. I imagined us reaching the top and sliding all the way down the other side, flipping and rolling – I thought suddenly of the car in the woods along the highway – into Chattanooga, uprooting plants and trees, crushing pedestrians, tearing through the windows of buildings, out through their back walls like an exit wound. I felt guilty and weird for thinking this way. I wanted to go back home.

We reached the top of the mountain. We could see forever, it seemed.

“Seven states,” said Dad, flipping through his annotated guide book. “It says you can see seven different states from here, on a clear day.”

I tried to imagine that I could see them, all seven, but it was cloudy and everything looked the same from this height. I couldn’t distinguish one state from the other. The sameness was overwhelming. All I could see were the same trees, rooftops, baseball diamonds, cars, fields of green, and the little moving specks that I assumed were people.

I could also see the network of roads, like the gray spidery veins that ran down my mother’s bare legs, which scared me to the point of closing my eyes. For I knew that if I opened them, I could trace the roads back to the scene of the crash.

My brother stepped up behind me and I flinched, waiting for another flick against the ear, or a tennis shoe to the back of my thigh, but he said nothing, did nothing. He looked out with the rest of us and remained silent.

It was getting near dusk when we returned to the van – which was cooler now – and drove off into the night.

We stopped at a roadside motel, later, to sleep. I couldn’t, however.

And while I tossed and turned – pacing, at times, around the darkened room – the rest of my family slept well. So well, that they remained asleep in the glow of a muted news program, which replayed footage from the crash site over and over – as if their nightmares were projecting outward from their minds, across their foreheads, faces.

I don’t think I dreamed of the crash though, once I finally fell asleep. In fact, I don’t even remember what I dreamed of that night.

Postcard: Found at Antiques of Old Wilmington in Wilmington, North Carolina in January 2012.

January162012

Hot Springs, Arkansas

“Is your mother around?”

“Maybe. Who’s this?”

“Park Services.”

“Just a moment,” says Owl. He points the phone at the floor, makes stomping noises, and returns with a high pitched squeaky voice. “This is her.”

“Ma’am, we have reason to believe that a member of your family – Arthur – is living amongst the alligators.”

“Alligators?”

“You know, large amphibious reptiles?”

“Yes, of course, I know.”

“You need to come get him immediately.”

“He’s living with them?”

“Yes.”

“As in sharing a living space?”

“Yes.”

“Well how do you know it’s him?”

“It’s him.”

“What proof do you have?”

“We have his wallet, with his driver’s ID. We found it outside the pen.”

“Pen, as in where you keep the alligators?”

“Correct. We have a small zoo here at the park. Including a pen with five full-grown American alligators.”

Owl pauses. “Is he okay?”

“For now.”

“What do you mean for now?”

“He’s okay for now, but he’s living in a goddamn gator farm and he refuses to leave. That doesn’t exactly bode well in terms of bodily health, or life expectancy.”

“What should we do?”

“Like I already said, you or someone in your family needs to get down here immediately – like, right frickin’ now. He’s put himself and others at serious risk. We’re still deciding if we’re going to pursue legal action.”

*

“You got the money, right?” I say to Owl.

“I took it from her sock drawer, like you said.”

*

We’re on the road – Owl and me. It’s late and the only light within a thirty mile radius is being held over a book under Owl’s chin.

“You’re doing it wrong,” he says without looking up.

“Doing what wrong?”

I look down at my feet. We had rigged shoe-boxes around the pedals – tied up with twine – so I can reach.

“Everything.”

“You’re not allowed to drive. You’re too young.”

“So are you!”

“Momma’s gonna flip when she wakes up tomorrow.”

“Can we stop soon?”

“Why?”

“I’m hungry, and I gotta pee.”

*

We stop at a roadside diner. It’s four in the morning and everyone looks at us weird, like we don’t belong – which we don’t. There’s a man with a glass eye looking at us from the jukebox, which plays some twangy old country song. He tells us he’s a preacher, but I’m not game for trusting anybody.

A woman with bee-hive hair serves us sunny side eggs and toast and we eat them fast and try not to watch as the preacher waltzes by himself.

“He’s dancing with a ghost,” Owl says between slurps of a chocolate milkshake.

I sit back against the vinyl seat cover. He smiles, his eyes bug out through his circular lenses. The kid only needs a milkshake, and everything is fine again.

“What do you think happened to him?” I ask.

“Who knows?”

“No, not him.” I nod toward the preacher.

“I think something happened once he was away from home, you know, after he left. Like something in his brain changed. One minute he was fine, and the next he was a crazy person.”

“Yeah, but what actually happened?”

“I don’t know.”

“I guess we’ll find out real soon.”

“I don’t want that.”

“Don’t want what?”

“I don’t want that to happen, to me too.”

“Why would it happen to you?”

“I don’t want my brain to change.”

“It won’t.”

“But how do you know?”

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“How do we know anything for sure?”

“Shut up, will you?”

“If it can happen to him, it can happen to anyone.”

Owl looks over at the preacher, who’s now planted against the jukebox, trying to stand up, with his hands caught in his coat pockets. He looks like a linebacker, fighting against the line of scrimmage. A waitress scurries out from the kitchen, and grabs him by the shoulders. She straightens him right up.

“Get out of here!” she says. “Get!”

The man nods apologetically, and staggers out through the front door, into the darkened parking lot. We watch him grow faint, and disappear into the night.

“This place is weird,” says Owl.

“Yeah, let’s go,” I say.

We pay and leave.

*

Snot globs out onto the phone receiver as she cries. She wipes her nose with the sleeve of her sweatshirt. “It’s my boys! They’re gone and the car was stolen, and I don’t know what to do!” she says.

“Ma’am. Ma’am. Take a deep breath. Can you please repeat yourself?” asks a masculine voice on the other end of the line.

“They’re gone. They’re gone.”

“What happened to your boys?”

“I woke up. Oh lord –”

“You woke up, and?”

“I woke up this morning and I came downstairs and and and the car was gone. And I ran upstairs, and I looked into their bedroom, and they were gone. They’re gone and I don’t know where they are. It’s a kidnapping, I swear it.”

“Is there anyone of suspect, Ma’am? Does your family have any enemies? Anyone who would have any sort of motivation?”

“No, no.”

“Even from within the family. Family’s always where we start.”

She freezes.

“Unless their father –”

“Their father?”

“Oh lord, bless those sweet boys. They didn’t do nothing wrong.”

“Ma’am, what about their father?”

“We’re not exactly doing well, if you know what I mean.”

“You’re divorced.”

“There’s other words for it I just can’t –”

“– But legally?”

“No.”

“So you’re separated. Estranged.”

“Yes. Lord, I know he’s got something to do with this. This has got his stink all over it.”

“How long has it been?”

She reaches down and grabs an egg from the open carton on the kitchen counter. She crushes it it in her hand, and lets the yolk run along her palm, down her wrist. She takes another in her hand, and squeezes until it bursts. She shakes her hand free of the eggshell remnants and looks out through the the window above the sink, into the yard. An acre or so. The grass has overgrown, swallowing up an old riding lawn mower in the right corner of the rectangular yard, against the oak lined perimeter.

“Ma’am?”

“’Bout two months now, off and on. From what I know, he’s been spending most of his time at his brother’s in Clarksville.”

“Has he ever done anything like this before?”

“No, but –”

“But?”

“Lately he’s been acting so strange. Been irrational. Not all there.”

“How so?”

“Just strange, that’s all.”

“The more you can disclose, the more quickly and efficiently we can work to find your boys.”

“Like, I walked out into the yard, maybe two weeks ago, and he was back there without a shirt on, splitting logs with an axe. I say to him, Art, what on earth are you doing? We don’t need firewood? It’s the middle of summer? And he’s covered in sweat, and he smells funky. And he says to me, Bonnie, you can never be too careful. And then I realize –”

“– What did you realize?”

“It’s discomforting to say aloud.”

“Did he try and harm you?”

“…”

“Ma’am?”

“He was cutting the same log.”

“I’m sorry? What same log?”

“It was the same log. He’d been putting the halves back together and cutting the same log down the middle, over and over, for hours.”

“Have there been drugs, or alcohol abuse?”

“He drinks here and there, but I wouldn’t say that word.”

“Abuse?”

“Yeah.”

“No, I mean has he abused you or the children in any way?”

“Oh, no, no. He’s not like that.”

“Is there any chance the children could have taken the car themselves? Maybe trying to go somewhere, or run away?”

Her panic turns to something else.

“Now why the hell would they wanna go and do that?”

*

We zip down the highway. The warm summer wind whistles loudly against Owl’s narrowly cracked window. I have one hand on the wheel, and the other with my index and thumb in the shape of a “C,” keeping my sleepy, drooping, eyebrow propped like a pup tent.

“We need to hurry,” I say.

“What does it mean?” he asks, after a pause, closing his book with a thump.

“That we took too long at the diner,” I say.

“No,” he says. “Life. The cosmos. Everything.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I’m reading this book and it says that the cosmos is infinite, and that the earth is actually very small.”

“What are you reading?”

“I keep thinking that maybe Dad realized something like that,” he says.

“Something like what?”

“That if the earth is very small, than that makes us even smaller, and I don’t know about you, but it’s enough to get a person thinking, you know? And asking strange questions. It’s a real fish-hook in the brain.”

“Alls I know is that he needs our help,” I say.

“Maybe it was too much, maybe he felt so small, maybe it made him snap.”

“I’m going to make you snap if you don’t cool it with this nonsense.”

“Try me.”

I reach over, and snatch the book up from his lap.

“Hey!”

I toss the book out the window. The pages flap violently, as it arcs into the darkness of the woods edging the highway.

“You’re going to have to pay the library fine,” he says, twitching.

“Couldn’t give a squirrel’s behind,” I say.

“You’re an idiot,” he says.

“Don’t try and figure everything out,” I say. “You’re only going to be disappointed. You’ll get made fun of at school.”

“No,” he says.

Owl puts his thumb up to his mouth, tears at his cuticle with his front teeth.

“What? You think you’re going to be able to figure it all out?” I ask.

“No, you’re an idiot cause you missed the exit back there,” he says.

I groan. Owl smirks, but it soon fades off.

“I’m scared for Dad,” he says.

“Me too,” I say, and look to turn the car around.

*

Lt. Raffles of the missing persons unit, is a large man with wide hands and a sturdy neck. He hasn’t let his hair grow in more than a centimeter since the mid-80s. He sits in an office with wood-panel walls, wallpapered with inspirational posters. Key words include: excellence, teamwork, perseverance.

Raffles – who’s been up for two days and counting – raises a cardboard coffee cup above his head, and taps the butt end, trying to free the last drops of whip cream topping. He crunches it in his grip, and it sails across the room into the wastebasket.

Before he can celebrate, Bonnie bursts in. She’s got a bound in her step, sputtering a series of words and phrases and sounds that nearly blows the crew-cut off Raffles’ head. Bonnie is a full bodied woman, with hair the color of a sunburn, in denim shorts and a form-fitting t-shirt, and not entirely unattractive, he thinks. Yet, there’s something about her legs that throws him off, like they’re disproportionally thick for her upper body. Raffles is a professional, however, and he clears his mind of these thoughts.

“Woah, woah,” he says.

And while ninety-five percent of her words blend into a maelstrom of unintelligible sound, as she paces back and forth under the spinning ceiling fan, across the carpet, he does, however, catch the three words that matter:

??????????? “Two.” ???????????

?????????? “Missing.” ?????????

??????????? “Boys.” ???????????

*

We reach town in the early morning. Everything is calm, and hazy, and glowing. Like the whole place is hiding under a thin cotton bed-sheet, trying to sleep in as long as possible. Church bells clang thickly from a pointed sliver of a tower, from a hill in the distance. The sun rises above us, rippling – I think of the egg-yolk from the diner.

My eyes are heavy. I dip for a moment in the opposite lane. Owl screams. I jerk the wheel, and right the car back into the lane.

Owl reaches over and smacks the back of my skull. “You almost got us killed!” he says.

“Shut up Owl,” I say, taking a swing back at him.

“You don’t know where in the H-E-double-hockey-stick we’re going,” he says.

And he’s right, I don’t.

I stop in a school parking lot to ask for directions, but Owl tells me that we’re better off finding it ourselves, cause truancy is a “punishable crime.”

“It’s Sunday,” I say. “And I highly doubt thats true.”

“Can’t be too careful,” he says.

I drive off.

*

We idle at a three-way stop sign. I shake Owl awake with my right hand, grabbing him by the front of his oversized Razorbacks t-shirt – our father’s originally, from his college days. He grumbles, and rubs the sleep from the corners of his eyes.

“Do you have any idea where we go from here?”

Owl places his glasses back on his face.

“Existentially?” he asks, straightening up his spine against the seat.

“No, you dingbat. Should I go right or left?”

He shrugs. “How should I know?”

I guess right, and get lucky. About a half mile down the road, I see a sign for the park.

*

In the squad car, heading South, with his windows down in the morning sun, Raffles’ eyes dart from the road over to Bonnie, in the passenger seat, her hair tied back, waving behind her like a wind sock. He watches her as she rubs her palms across her half-bare thighs.

“Stay professional,” he says, under his breath.

“What was that?” she asks. Her eyes have a desperate intensity about them. They remain fixed on the road, forward, in the only direction that matters; the direction her boys are in.

“Nothing,” he says. He looks over once more to see her lips moving, her hands now clasped together in her lap. “We’ll find your boys.”

She smiles politely, and nods.

“We will,” he says. “No need to worry.”

Raffles realizes, with a quick smack of guilt, that she’d been praying.

*

It’s hot now, and muggy.

Owl and I are led into the park by a woman missing two fingers; ring and middle, on her right hand. Owl asks her if it was a gator that took them, but she ignores the question.

“Where’s your mother?” she asks.

“She’s parking the car,” I say.

The zoo section of the park, itself, is fairly small and shaped as an oval. A wide dirt path, loops up, out, and around, sparsely populated by wandering families; men with high socks and fanny packs saddled on their hips, trailed by motherly figures in foam visors pushing strollers, sweating into the necks and armpits of their sun-dresses. The outside of the oval is bordered by several run down exhibits, gated off petting areas, and enclosed specialty houses for snakes and birds.

“Where’s the gator pen?” asks Owl, head spinning, looking around – not unlike his avian namesake.

“You’re looking at it,” says the woman with missing fingers. We step forward, and take in the fenced off interior of the oval with layers of thick chain-link fencing, at least ten feet high, encircling it. The pen is mostly water, with a small dirt island in the center – slightly larger than, though the same shape as, a pitcher’s mound. We stand next to a food cart, with a large grill, housing a mound of meaty kebabs, and a plume of thick steam swirling off from it. “Gator on a Stick,” it says, which I find entirely morbid, considering its proximity to the pen.

“Your Dad should be locked up,” says the woman with missing fingers, finally. “Of all the crazy things I’ve seen.”

Owl pipes up, he’s all scrawny, nervous, energy at this point. “It’s not his fault.”

“Save it, pipsqueak,” she says.

“Momma broke his heart, and he didn’t take it well,” he says.

“I think he’s got the devil in his brainpan,” she says.

“Don’t say that,” says Owl. “Something changed in him, that’s all. It could happen to anyone. You. Me. Anyone.”

“Nothing in this here world could make me do a thing like that,” she says.

“How’d he get inside?” I ask.

“Don’t know,” she says. “He got in sometime yesterday evening before we closed. Past our security guard apparently– worthless bastard. Must have climbed up, and jumped inside. Speak o’ the devil,” she says. She points. We see a shadowy figure darting through a collection of trees and bushes. “He’s in there, somewhere.”

“Is he safe?”

“No,” she says. “Of course not. Not at all.”

“So what do you want us to do?”

“How the hell should I know,” she says.

“I’m a kid, you can’t talk like that around me,” says Owl.

“Sorry,” she says.

“Don’t mind him,” I say.

Owl scowls in my direction.

“Do you have any plan of action?” he says.

“It’s just that he won’t respond to anyone,” she says. “We were here for half the night with park officials, trying to talk him out, but it’s like he doesn’t even know what’s going on.”

“Why didn’t you just get the police down here to deal with him?”

“There’s jurisdictional complications,” she says.

“What does that mean?” I ask.

“That they haven’t been brought in yet.”

We watch as the thick, spiky, reptiles mill about on the island, vie for select patches of sunlight through the trees overhead.

“Nobody’s real eager to jump in there, you see,” says the woman after a pause.

“They DID bite your fingers didn’t they!” squeals Owl.

*

“It stayed with me,” Owl says, years later – while seated on the chipped wooden steps of his porch, in the quiet of an early Fall evening, bobbling his two-year old on his knee.

“What did?” I ask.

“Those alligators, each one pushing, and shoving, and snapping for their bit of sunlight.”

*

I catch eyes with my father. My father’s eyes – the same color, shape, as our own – peak out through a massive tangled beard that’s taken over the majority of his face. He’s there, tucked within a bush and a tree. My father, the former bank manager now shirtless, wild eyed, and feral. My father, the man who’d survived a war in a desert three-forth’s the way to Timbuktu, but hadn’t been able to brave the split from our Momma.

I feel nothing, but pity for him seeing him there. And, strangely, anger.

Owl, then, throws himself against the chain link. He attaches, like one of those sticky hand toys you’d get from the vending machine’s outside of a Sam’s Club, and begins to shimmy up.

*

“We got their license plate in town.”

“Uh-huh.”

“The car dipped into another lane for a moment. Didn’t realize it was the kids from the missing person’s report.”

“Well they were.”

“They went into the park.”

“You didn’t pursue?”

“No.”

“But you called it in?”

The officer raises a hand to his face and begins to pick his teeth with a loose hangnail. Raffles snaps his fingers in front of his face.

“Stay with me, here. I said, you called it in?” says Raffles.

“Yep.”

“So why not?”

“Why not what?”

“Why not pursue?”

“Didn’t think it was worth ticketing for.”

“Didn’t think it was worth ticketing for?”

“No, sir.”

“What kind of two-bit Barney Fife operation you got running down here?”

“We’re just as god made us, sir. Plus, there’s jurisdictional complications.”

“There always are, aren’t there.”

“I guess so?”

“That wasn’t a question.”

“Oh.”

He hears a car door shut, and looks back across the street. Bonnie stands on the sidewalk now, pacing back and forth in front of the large plate glass window of a karate center. Behind her, a row of ten or so boys of varying ages, resembling paper-dolls in their oversized blocky uniforms, chop and punch and kick and shout in synchronous harmony. She watches them through the window, and lights a cigarette. With her free hand, she pinches the cotton fabric of her armpit, and attempts to shake it out. She turns. Her words fly out in a nervous drove, smashing together above the quivering heat of the blacktop.

“Didtheyfindthem?Whatisgoingon?” she asks.

“Stay put, Mrs. Harris. I’ll be there in a second.”

Raffles, turns back around. “Do you have any idea what they’re doing in the park?” he asks.

“I don’t know, sir. Maybe they’re having a goddamn picnic.”

*

“Get out of there, you’re gonna get yourself killed!” shouts the woman with missing fingers. She turns, and kicks at the dusty path with her work boot. “This isn’t happening, no.”

Owl pushes through the water, twisting his body with each step to build momentum.

“You two came here by yourselves, didn’t you?” she asks me.

“If we came together, then we weren’t by ourselves,” I say, jaggedly.

“I mean that wasn’t your mother on the phone, was it?”

“No. That was Owl.”

“That was what?”

“Owl, my brother.”

“Your family is a bunch of lunatics, you know that?”

We watch as Owl darts, athletically, around the perplexed alligators. He jukes, and takes a running leap past them.

“Dad! We’re here, Dad!” calls Owl.

Our father, in the bushes, retreats. An alligator shuffles toward Owl. It moves more smoothly, and quickly than I imagined. It brings its jaws together. They come down with a harsh snap, like the sound of a rubber band on a forearm. The sound travels across the pond, through the fence, and reverberates off the back walls of the nearby information center at the moment that a cluster of children led by three adult chaperones exit the building, all wearing conical hats, secured by elastic underneath their chins. The group is all smiles, and shouts; a birthday party, I assume. A small girl wearing a princess tiara, holding a set of balloons in her hand, is the first to notice. She screeches and points, letting the balloons go – up and off into the air above the park. Everyone, of course, yells. They gasp. A larger crowd of park-goers move in to see what the commotion is all about. Within minutes, the path has cleared and over thirty or so people have gathered against the fence to watch. The chaperones move to cover the dozen or so children’s eyes, and begin ushering them, as a group, in through the doors of a nearby penguin house, diverting any of their concerned, innocent, questions.

“They’re just playing,” says one.

“They’re professionals,” says another.

“Alligators don’t eat people. They’re nice creatures. They only eat vegetables,” says a third.

Owl shoves up and through into the bushes. I see the two of them embrace. Owl points toward me, and I wave. My father holds his hand up, limply, and lets it hang.

Whatever spell had held our father seems, for the moment, broken.

They disappear into the thicket. And I imagine that I can hear them, faintly, but I can’t.

*

Arthur and Owl stand in a small pocket in the brush, enveloped on all sides by the  mostly artificial Evergladesian flora. The mid-day sun hangs above through canopy of branches causing gray shadows to undulate across the dusty ground at their feet. The shouts of the growing crowd outside the pen, are hardly audible here. It’s calm inside, almost serene. Owl forgets, momentarily, about the alligators. Instead, he’s reminded of the feeling of being younger, and hiding in the bathtub. How he’d hold his breath, and slide under the surface of the water, look up at the ceiling, and watch it jiggle. How he’d count as long as he could. How he’d hum, and make motor-boat sounds, and dispel the arguments coming from down the hall.

“Come home,” says Owl through a pinched nose; the smell is gamy, unbearable, like a neglected seed pan underneath an old birdcage.

Arthur stares back at him blankly. His eyes are glazed donuts. A mosquito attaches itself to his neck, just under the fold of his chin – he does nothing, lets it drink. After a moment, he slinks back and obscures himself with a tree.

“You gotta come home,” says Owl.

“I can’t,” he says.

“You can,” says Owl.

“No.”

“Something’s changed in your brain.”

“My brain is fine.”

“Why did you leave us then?”

“I didn’t feel like I was worth anything, anymore.”

“But you’re worth something to me. This isn’t where you belong.”

“Everything’s too heavy.”

“What’s too heavy?”

“Everything.”

“Do you feel small?”

“Yes.”

“I know what it’s like to feel small too.”

“I don’t mean small small. Height small.”

“I know you don’t.”

“But you’re too young to know.”

“I know that the cosmos is infinite, and we’re just a little speck.”

Arthur looks up through an opening in the tree branches, and sees the cluster of multi-colored balloons drifting, off and way, toward the sun.

“You have to try,” says Owl.

“I am. I do.”

“Well try harder.” Owl kicks the ground with his heel, into the dust. He hears a thick hollow sound; plastic, underneath.

“What do you know about anything?”

“What are you even doing here?”

“I thought it was one place that nobody could find me.”

“You can do this.”

“No, I can’t.”

Owl extends his hand to Arthur, who looks at it as if he can’t quite figure out what to do with it.

“I –”

“– Please.”

*

Owl and my father, emerge from the bushes, together. They move in one direction, and are swiftly cut off by the newly piqued snarls of the largest of the five reptiles. I shout, and pound my fists on the fence of the pen. The woman with missing fingers, pulls me back.

“It’ll be okay,” she says.

“Get away from me!” I yell into her mid-riff.

Three alligators now circle the bushes. Owl and my father move in another direction. No luck. Owl shrieks. My father pounds his hands across his chest like a gorilla. One of the gators opens it’s mouth. I see a glimmer of its teeth, like smooth, bone-white, stalactites, and stalagmites lining the entrance of a cave.

The crowd encircling the pen has grown – fifty plus I’d guess – and has pushed up to the fence, yelling. The woman with missing fingers steps forward. “Keep moving people! Nothing to see here!” she says, but nobody listens. Not even for a second. I look across their faces, and I hate them. I know why they are there standing there; that they – although who would ever admit it? – want to witness something tragic.

The circle of gators parts. The largest of the alligators lifts itself out from the pool of water, and up onto the island. His back glistens; the sheen and jagged texture of crumpled tin-foil. He lumbers toward them. He snaps his jaws. Owl and my father hop backward. Owl, reaches up and grabs a tree branch. He pulls himself up, walking his feet up the base of it. He hangs like a sloth.

“Up here!”

My father tries to follow, up the tree. He grabs at a different branch, but it buckles, and splinters and cracks in his hands.

He falls to his knees in front of the alligator.

The alligator snaps. The broken branch lands at my father’s side. He grabs at it, and swings, pivoting on his bare heels. The branch connects with the beast in the side of the head. It recoils.

“Don’t hurt it! Just get out of there!” shouts the women with missing fingers.

And then Owl begins to slip. He yells. His glasses fall off his face, below him. He falls hard on his back with an “ooompth.” Dust kicks up around him. I hear him groan. He fumbles blindly for his glasses, but can’t find them. Our father sees Owl on the ground, and remains immobile, whether for fear or whatever is paralyzing him. The large gator thrusts forward, suddenly, and nearly catches him in the meaty part of his calf.

The gator changes course, and moves in toward Owl. My father bolts over to the moving alligator, and begins clubbing it over the head. It thrashes and snarls. He jumps back.

Owl’s feet spin underneath him, and he stands. He snatches up his glasses. He shoots forward, toward the wading pool as the gator’s tail whips across the ground, with phenomenal torque, connecting just below the knee, and sweeps Owl’s legs out from under him. He cries out and floats sideways, across the surface of the pool, before landing face first. He hangs there, arms outstretched, motionless. His oversized t-shirt billows out like the skin of a flying squirrel, drifting across the surface.

“Owl!” I shout.

He remains still.

“Owl, get up! Get up!”

My father looks over at Owl, and dives headfirst on the top of the gators back. The gator instinctively barrel rolls across the dust spinning with my father, who clings on. It twists, and thrashes. I see a mark on my father’s forehead; a line of blood, like a strand of maroon yarn, being pulled down the side of his face, his neck, and shoulders, collecting in a growing spool against what is left of his t-shirt. He’s thrown free from the alligator and hobbles up. He dives out into the water and scoops Owl up with his arms like a fork-lift. Owl rests motionless against his chest. He pushes against the force of the waist-high water. The alligator from the island reorientates its itself, finds its target, and slips silently into the water. The crowd screams, and points, collectively.

I realize that I’ve been crying. I can’t stand on the side any longer, I take off toward the pen, scramble against the chain link fence when I feel a wide hand grab the straps of my overalls, and toss me aside. I buckle and fall, back into the dust, rubbing my knees raw. A large shadow overtakes me. A figure steps up to the fence. I look up, and see her running toward me in her jean shorts.

“Mother?” I ask.

Then:

Bang. Bang. Bang.

The shots ring out above my head.

Several darts lodge into the thick skin of the ancient beast. I see it’s head lower down onto the surface of the water, and it floats, motionless, like a piece of scaly drift-wood. The remaining alligators scatter to the edges of the pen.

Lt. Raffles lowers his gun, and removes his sunglasses. “Tranquilizer,” he says.

“What a professional,” says the woman with missing fingers.

I’m knocked to the ground, again, this time with a hug. Momma holds on to me so tight that I can’t even try to stand back up. I can feel her heart about to tear through her shirt. She is covered in sweat, and remains silent. She reaches her hand out toward Owl. I hear a pained release of air escape from her open mouth, her breath is sour against my face.

“Momma, your breath,” I say.

My father reaches dry land, just outside the fence. He lays Owl on the ground in the grass, and stands over him. Owl’s eyes remain closed, his face expressionless, his arms at his sides, limp.

Momma jumps up, she springs to the fence. “Owl, baby, honey, wake up, wake up.”

He places his hands together and pumps Owl once, twice, three times, against the chest. A rush of grimy water spills out of his mouth, and across his shirt. His eyes flutter open, and he looks around, confused. He coughs up another mouthful of water, and gasps for air.

“Am I dead?” he asks, finally, to the twitter of the cheering crowd.

“No,” says my father. “No, you’re alive. You’re okay. You’re alive.”

*

Unsurprisingly, we are grounded when we return home. Over the next few days, Momma is so upset she uses combinations of words we’ve never heard her use before. Words that rhyme with duck, and spit.

“I just don’t know what to say to you both,” she says, while fighting through a mixing bowl of instant mashed potatoes with a whisk. Globs of the newly thickened white substance drop to the linoleum floor with a wet pop as she waves off our protests, our side of the story. Her eyes though, remain fixed in the living room, on our father, who lies on his side, on the couch, his hands together propped under his head like a pillow, staring through the glow of the television, and into the wall.

I give up on Momma, and walk into the living room.

“Hey Dad,” I say, but he doesn’t respond. I put my hand on his shoulder. I realize after a moment that, while my father’s eyes are open, he’s snoring. As I walk away, I hear him cough. I turn back around to face him and see that he’s now looking up at me.

“What’s up Dad?” I ask.

He doesn’t answer. He remains silent and still, keeping eye contact. I can’t tell if he’s slipped back into sleep or not.

“There’s work that needs to be done,” he says.

“Sure,” I say. “But you should get some sleep first.”

The telephone rings. I see my mother wince, pick it up, answer, and take it into the pantry. Owl motions for me, and I hurry back into the kitchen. We grab two empty glasses, and push up against the door. We place them against the pantry door and listen in.

“Okay,” our mother says. We hear an excited squeaky voice on the other end of the line. “What exactly are the charges going to be?” she says, after a moment.

The pantry door swings open. Owl drops his glass onto the ground. It shatters upon impact. Tiny shards glide across the floor like miniature ice skaters.

Her eyes are bloodshot. Her face looks worn. I notice the deep ridges carved in her forehead.

“To your room,” she says, placing her hand over the phone. “Both of you! Now!”

*

Later that night, from our bedroom, we hear a sound; a sputtering, mechanical, sound.

“What’s that?” I ask.

Owl shakes his head.

We each hop out of bed, and move up to the triangular window, in our slanted roofed – converted attic – and look down, out into the yard. The yard is dark, save for an illuminated, pyramid shaped section in the middle, from the back porch floodlight. The sound grows louder, and more pronounced. We see a long shadow projected across the yard now, expanding, devouring the light. And he appears, moving slowly, riding atop the lawnmower, cutting a horizontal strip out of the knee-high grass. His beard is gone. He stares straight ahead into the dark. Our father.

The rumbles continue for an hour or so, before cutting out abruptly.

“Check it out,” Owl says, later, while seated in the windowsill.

“We got school in the morning,” I say, muffled, with my head under the pillow like an ostrich.

“I can’t hear you,” he says.

I sit, up and drift over to the window.

“Look,” he says.

I look down. “What?” I ask. “He cut the grass, how cool.”

“Look closer,” says Owl. He begins to trace the mowed lines with his finger along the window.

I see it now. The grass is cut erratically, a random assortment of criss-crossed lines and concentric circles, filled in with tufts of still-tall grass.

“What do you think it means?” asks Owl.

We hear a knock on the door.

“Come in,” I say.

Our mother walks into the room, followed by our father on her arm, showered, shaved, bandaged. It’s the first time we’d seen them standing next to each other in months.

We ask what’s wrong – we expect more punishment after all – but instead, silently, they move up to the windowsill and squeeze Owl and I close together, as if – should they let go – we would untether from their grasp and drift out through the window, off into the cosmos, where we would be alone, and our insides would turn to mashed potatoes, and our heads would pop like party balloons.

And they thank us, thank us, thank us.

Postcard: Found at the Antique Warehouse Mall in Memphis, TN in October 2011.

January22012

Key West, Florida

“I have these dreams,” you say, “these extended dreams where everything feels so real and true and I’m lost somewhere in the midwestern United States, a memory, rather, or a feeling of the United States – the geography all out of proportion, like an antiquated map of “The New World” – yet I know it’s the midwest, and I believe in my existence, because my windshield is frozen solid and I scrape off the ice and my nose is running in the cold and then, when I’m finished, I sit down into the car and begin to drive and I’m speeding down the highway and my radio is throbbing with music and I keep driving and driving and driving and I have this anxious feeling shooting out through my fingers, along my nerves, back down into my stomach, like there’s something chasing me or, even worse, that there is nothing chasing me and it’s something only sensed or felt, something self-fabricated, and everything is happening so fast, and my car is hurtling southward, and the terrain begins to change and it’s warmer, and buildings are painted in pinks and lime-greens and yellows and I feel a rejuvenation, hopeful even, and as I’m driving I begin to sweat and I remove my jacket and my hat and scarf and toss them out of the window and watch them tail off over the highway through my rear-view, the scarf billowing like a ribbon out over the blacktop, and I can feel the sun on my face and I roll down the windows and allow the humid air into my lungs, but soon that nagging familiar feeling of dread returns, and I’m driving along the highway and there’s water all around me, and there’s no traffic and I cross over bridges and then there’s this empty stretch of a pier jutting out over the water – simmering with mid-day heat; I imagine all the creatures living under the surface, swimming, reproducing, evolving, some neon and gelatinous, feeding on microbes, in the trenches of the under-water world, and then I reach the end of the pier, as I’ve run out of highway, and there’s nowhere else to go and yet I feel I can’t go back – can’t return to the snow and cold, that great grey disillusion – and I consider jumping in the water, but instead I stand and wait for the sunset, waiting for some change, any change, and I’m struggling to make sense of everything that has happened, because already my memory feels fuzzy and I’m unsure of how I reached this point, this moment, at the end of the pier and so on and so on and so on – and then, usually, I wake up.”

Postcard: Found at the Hartville Antique Center in Hartville, OH in December 2011.

December282011

Cantil, California (Part 1 of 2)

“I don’t know if I believe in space,” she said.

Hannah lit a match, and held it in front of her eyes. She leaned over, grabbed the crank, and rolled down the window to toss it into the warm desert night. Zach watched her from the corner of his eye. Her scrawny knees poked through the holes in her jeans like they had for as long as he could remember. The sun had been setting forever. They could hear the whistle of wind overhead now that the radio was broken.

“What did you say?” he said.

“I don’t know if I believe in space.”

“Like space as in the space of this car?”

“No, like up in the sky.”

“What are you talking about?” he said, hands tightening the wheel as they rounded a curve.

“Like, the stars. Space. You know?”

“You don’t believe in the Final Frontier? Will you roll up that damn window please?”

“Yeah. How do we know it’s really up there? I’ve been reading these theories about moon landings –”

“– Roll up the window.”

Hannah cranked the window back up. “Yeah, but how do we really know that space is up there?”

“Are you stoned?”

“No.”

“It’s not just above us. It’s like all around us. This is stupid. I can’t believe I’m even arguing with you.”

“You have your opinion, and I’ll have mine.”

“What, do you think the world is flat too?”

She paused, and looked out the window, up at the moon.

“Goddamn, how long have we been driving?”

“A long time.”

“I don’t even remember when or where we started.”

“You’re really annoying me right now.”

It was then that they both noticed the thudding cadence underneath their car - which had been there for miles now, and had provided a sort of comforting rhythm - but now seemed problematic.

They rolled to a stop along the empty desert highway and hopped out and circled the car. The desert glowed around them, silvery and lunar. A slight plume of smoke sighed from beyond a rock formation off in the distance.

“Must be indians,” Hannah said, half-joking.

There was a screw stuck in the back right tire. Zach pulled his hoodie up over his ears, as the desert was colder than they’d expected by night. A sulfuric smell wafted at them from somewhere.

“We gotta find one of those call box things,” she said. Zach put his arm around his sister and assured her they’d be fine.

“I’m scared,” she said. What if one of those cacti are a real human being and they are waiting in the dark of the desert to attack us?” She was right too as, in the dark, every cactus and tree resembled a human being. An army of grotesque, shadowy demons closing in on them from every direction as far as they could see.

Zach nodded toward the plume of smoke of in the distance. “We don’t have a donut,” he said.

“I’m not hungry anyway.”

“No, pinhead. A spare tire.”

“Oh.”

“Should we ask for help? They could at least tell us how far the next town is.”

“It’s probably a bunch of hobos. Or fugitives. I’m not going.”

Frustrated and hungry, Zach took off into the desert, toward the moon, scratching his legs on the scraggly creosote shrubs; or squat, globular demons scratching him with their fingernails.

Hannah cried out, and hurried after him in the quiet darkness.

When they’d finally worked their way behind the rocks, they could hear acoustic guitars, and the clinking of beer bottles. They peaked from behind a boulder. There were four or five people, seated.

“Stay back,” Zach said. He looked over the crowd. He took his time. He felt a rush of nerves. They sat quietly, leaning their hands in toward the fire. Everyone awash in a flickering orange glow. Lighters pricked up cigarettes. A zonked out dude lightly tapped a xylophone, as another strummed a guitar.

“I think it’s okay.”

“Be careful,” she said between bites of her nail.

Zach approached the bonfire cautiously with his hands up and open. A series of heads owled around in their direction.

“What do you want? Who are you?” said one of them, alarmed and standing.

Zach explained their predicament in detail, as the group began to relax. At closer range, all five people around the bonfire looked older; less hair, weight around their waists, creases lining their cheekbones.

“We saw the smoke above the rocks, that’s why we came over. Can you help us?”

“Who’s we?” said a wide girl with dreadlocks. Hannah slinked out from behind the rock and flashed a peace sign. “I don’t think there are any call-boxes nearby.”

A bearded guy in a poncho scoffed while jabbing the fire with a stick. Zach caught him looking over Hannah, but didn’t know how to react.

“What about a car? How’d you guys get out here anyway?” asked Zach, now frustrated by their communal nonchalance.

The joke was on him, it seemed.

“Our buddy should be coming in tomorrow with his pick-up. If you can’t fix up your car, he can give you a lift. We’re a long way from anywhere, though.” He pointed vaguely, with a shaking hand. “You’re not gonna fix it before morning.”

Zach took a seat on a log, Nobody really said much. Zach noticed a scraggly abandoned house several hundred yards away up on a slight hill. There was no visible road leading to the house. There was no light in any other direction.

Zach saw her approaching from the direction of the house. She walked, tense and bouncy like a slack-line. A mane of blonde hair exploded from within her hooded sweatshirt and an unlit cigarette bobbled on her lower lip, seemingly attached with adhesive. She circled the group, giving out hugs and high-fives before momentarily catching Zach’s gaze from across the fire. She sat cross-legged in the dust under the shirtless wing of a goateed man with a tie-dyed bandanna covering his head.

He caught Zach eyeing a clear plastic carrier placed next to him. He leered back at him.

“Rattlesnake,” he said.

An animal bayed from a distance as a long-haired guy in a beanie tried to get a campfire song going. It was getting cold, even for the desert. Zach could sense the blonde girl’s eyes darted across the fire at him, but he tried his best to politely deflect them.

They talked, and drank warm beer, and the night continued.

At one point, someone suggested a game in the house nearby. It’d been boarded up for years, but was well known around the area as a sort of refuge for local runaway teens and vagrants. Flashlights were retrieved from knapsacks and passed around. Zach didn’t want to play, but Hannah insisted.

“It’s like flashlight tag,” said the guy in the poncho.

The group gathered around the dark, boarded up, two-story house, and took off inside.

Intoxicated screams and laughs echoed through the unlit house along with a thundering popcorn of boots. Clouds of dust tossed around everywhere from the unfinished interior, caught in the quick flashes of light. There was no furniture.

Zach felt a rush of pleasure clambering up a darkened staircase. He heard the muffled call of his name from Hannah somewhere downstairs. As he turned the corner of the hallway he saw a figure dart through in the brief strobe of his passing light. He took off after them into an unfinished bathroom; an empty sawdust hole where a jacuzzi could have sat.

He moved in and caught her face in the mirror. She leaned against the bathroom counter, placing her hands behind her. Her blue eyes bored into his.

“I saw you looking at me earlier.”

Zach fumbled for a response.

They lingered for a long moment. The dust in the room surfed haphazardly around the room in the breeze from the open window.

“Can I say something?” she said, toying with a ring in her lower lip.

“Sure,” he said.

She leaned slowly towards him, her smoky, bubblegum lightened, breath attached itself to his face. “You don’t know where you are, do you?” She took his lower earlobe in between her teeth.

Zach jumped back, thumping against the wall behind him. He watched her, primal and yet aloof. She laughed.

“What do you mean?”

They both noticed the silence and Zach felt suddenly excited by her, rather than scared. He had to lean forward slightly, awkwardly bent at the waist, to conceal his oncoming erection.

The voices in the house had moved back outside. The girl pulled her hand away and stepped back. “We should get back,” she said with the smirk of someone hiding a secret. Like two friends drunk at a church service. She slipped out of the door into the creaking sighs of the house.

Zach stayed. He peaked out through the top window at the now animated crowd below the house. He reached into his pants and tucked his erection up behind the belt of his pants to hide it. He noticed a clock on the wall in the room. At first he was shocked to read it at five in the morning, but soon realized that it wasn’t ticking. The second hand remained docile and transfixed. The moon reflected in the plastic covering of the clock.

He darted out of the room, and spent the rest of the night trying to avoid her.

Thump. Thump. The sun burned into his dry pores, lit his face on fire. Thump. Thump. Thump. His lips cracked, his hair felt stringy and dusty. He realized that the thumping came from a sneaker, gouged into his side. He opened his eyes.

“What do you want?” he asked.

Her shadow cloaked him from the sun. He could only see her outline. The sun was too high for it to still be morning. She was down to her underwear.

“You’re the only one still asleep,” said Hannah.

“Where are your clothes?”

“Some of us are going swimming nearby.”

“We gotta fix the car. We gotta get home.”

“Let’s go swimming.” The rest of the group stood around the campfire remnants, several with towels slung over their shoulders.

Everything seemed different in the morning light. Everyone older and less attractive. Their scabs and pockmarks now visible. Who were these people? he thought. The girl wasn’t there.

He told her to go ahead.

Zach sat upright. His skin felt tight and dehydrated. The group took off toward a rock formation, Hannah bobbing along at the front. He noticed her circling the – now poncho-less – bearded guy who glanced over at her, tucking a desert flower behind her ear, blushing.

Walking to the car, Zach noticed how blue and clear the sky was. There were no vapor trails anywhere.

Postcard: Found at Stagecoach Antiques in Akron, OH in December 2011.

Page 1 of 1