Author: auspiciaoblativa

Taco Shack Sighting

Dennis blew clouds of precious mammalian warmth into the frozen night air. As usual, his engine took three or four times to turn over, and it spurted out a chunk of phlegm upon this awakening jolt. How sweet, it was imitating its owner.

Watching the ice crystals form on his windshield, he said his daily reminder prayer, the one that helped his foot find the gas pedal and his steering wheel find the Taco Shack:

Oh sweet Lord, thank you for my life. Thank you for caring for my mother’s spirit. Thank you for Glory and all the love she brings to the world. Thank you for this opportunity to learn humbly in your service. Thank you for this abundance so that I may afford health insurance. Thy will be done. Amen.

Having coaxed his chariot into forward motion, the gentle giant crept along in the crunching ice toward his nighttime employment. Arriving at the Taco Shack exactly at the moment his heater kicked in, Dennis chuckled, patted the dash, and prepared to meet the overnight shift. Here is what we are willing to go through in this day and age. Here is what we call forward progress, upward mobility. Free burritos until dawn and a bonus every paycheck for doing what no one else wanted to do!

This night, in an unscheduled urge of sheer compassion, Dennis let himself sit in the car for a few minutes with the heater on. He just sat still for a blessed moment. It was weird. But he let it happen.

Sure enough, the feels came to be felt. And he sat still for it. Breathing, and warm, and alone.

Nothing was ever happening at the Taco Shack. It seemed his job was generally to make sure this was true. And so, it seemed: nothing happened. He was there, things moved around, but nothing was actually happening.

The hollow sound of that feeling reverberated through his chest. Dennis closed his eyes and let his head rest forward on the steering wheel. No one would see him in this defeated slump, in a frigid dark place where nothing was happening.

Nothing was happening.

Happening. Like last month, somehow years ago, before the Frozen Fog hit, when tiny Glory had come strolling home from school with a handful of what looked like glitter and puffballs. As she came closer, Dennis noticed the handful was moving around in her little paws. When she really landed, beaming one of those Mother Goose smiles that made her eyes go all cartoony, it was clear what she had in her hands. Bees. The kid had a handful of fifty-some perfectly happy honeybees crawling around the holy grail of her cupped hands. The bees seemed huge, tame, and totally unphased.

These bees, Glory explained, were found inside the school cafeteria, having swarmed when the weather turned, hiving up in the speech team’s multi-tiered State Champion trophy.[1] The bees had come from the school greenhouse project, most likely, though how they got into the trophy case no one knew for sure. (“Very carefully,” Marma had said.) They had been discovered that September afternoon by an overzealous lunchroom monitor who had been lingering nearby looking for something to make wrong and fix. She had been lucky in her duties; she found the hive, promptly making it very, very, scarily Wrong and showing up with drama, squall, and fanfare to have it Fixed. The teachers and custodians that gathered had been hellbent on calling the authorities to get the bees removed, when Morning Glory Maycomb walked up gently, quietly, undisturbingly, and, tugging on the sleeve of her favorite custodian (the one who had gotten her math book off the roof when some idiot jerks had thrown it there) she declared her intention to manage the bees herself.

Now, the entire team would have shoo-shooed her and/or patted her on her naïve little head, had it not been for the principal, Ms. Vouvray, who harbored not only a profound respect for the diversity of individual specialties and aptitudes, but also a personal liking for her daughter’s best friend. With a shrewd eye, she recalled that Glory had led the honeybee project in the school garden, which had been a glowing success and Ms. Vouvray’s first witness of a child so unafraid of bees as to let them crawl in her ears. In an act of staggeringly gentle authority, as was her specialty, the principal had singlehandedly pacified the lot of teachers and the concerned maintenance team, assuring them she would personally oversee the safety of the lunchroom throughout the entire bee removal process.

It was a piece of cake, Dad,” Glory had said, holding the evidence in her delighted hands, spreading the spacious pearls of her smile. “I called to them first, asked them to sing me a little song that I could sing back to them. They did, and it went like this: Buzz-buzz bzzzzzzzah! Buzz-buzz bzzzzzzzahzzzzzzzzahzzzzzzz Ahzzzzzzz Bzzzzzzzzzz!”

Dennis had grinned indulgently, giving the song ample room to exist. It wasn’t “got a beat, you can dance to it” good, but it had a certain live-jazz quality, so he nodded in time.

Glory was blasting along, “And then, so I sang it, and then we were singing together, and it was just the same, and they let me walk up and open the glass and carry out the trophy without disturbing a second of the music! I told them in my mind that we were going to have to move so they didn’t get hurt, and they said they would trust me. We just kept going Buzz-buzz bzzzzzzzah! Buzz-buzz bzzzzzzzah! all the way out the door, and then Ms. Vouvray closed the school door behind us so no bees could come back in.”

Wow, MG. You’re made of magic, kid. So…” Dennis, enjoying the story, was still standing in front of a child with a handful of bees. He tried to adult without rushing. “So where did you put them next?”

I know, that’s what I was worried about, right? Because they had left their bee box for a reason. I think they didn’t like having two queens. But so we were walking, Ms. Vouvray and me, and one of the bigger fluffier bees came out of the trophy and buzzed around my head a bunch. I had to take deep breaths to hear what it was saying, but it wanted me to go over to the big oak tree across from the playground, so I did. And guess what was there!” She dropped her voice on the last sentence emphatically, confiding a sacred secret to the man she called father.

What? A flower. A honeypot? A little yellow bear.”

Nooo!” Glory giggled, shaking her beefull hands, causing a few of her fluffballs to sputter out and buzz around in excited circles.

Dennis backed up a few steps despite himself. (Dadcode: no fear. Make it look like exaggerated interest. Smile, blink, raise voice.) “What, then?”

It was a big hole! A big, deep tree hole up high! So Ms. Vouvray held me up to the tree and I put the trophy sideways in there so they could fly around and make their new home. It was the perfect size for them, because I had to put my hand in to fish the trophy back out. And it was… warm. It was warm like a cinnamon bun. And buzzy with happiness.”

Well, I don’t think those bees wanted to live in y’alls trophy case any more than those teachers wanted them there. Nice one, Glory!”

She stood there grinning, squealing every time the furry little buzzers crawled over the sensitive parts of her hands and arms. Dennis watched and waited for more, but no further information was offered. At last he could not hold it: “So, how in the… What…” (Steady, now, Cooldad: don’t hit all the alarms.) “I mean, why did you come home with a handful of your friends?”

Oh, Dad. They came with me! A whole bunch of them flew after me when I left the tree, and Ms. Vouvray didn’t see, so I sat down and shared my apple juice with them. It was still in my coat pocket from lunch. And there were so many of them, they had a hard time sharing when it was in the juice box, right? So I poured it into my hands. They liked that. And then school was almost over, so…”

Soooo?” Dennis batted his eyes at her like a gossipy teenager.

Well, I didn’t go to my last class. I sat and talked to the bees instead.”

MG.”

I know, I know! But I was dismissed by the principal!” The sagacious child almost, almost took on the tone of a whiny door hinge, but only due to the sudden memory of her first and only grounding.

Dennis was hardly disturbed, maybe because of the lame logic of justification, maybe because of the affect that a child with beehives for hands had on his openness to non-normative experiences.

Okay so, let me guess: then they told you they wanted to come home with you, and here they are. You just scooped ’em into your hands like pebbles, huh?”

No!” Glory giggled, relieved for the welcome space to keep telling the truth. “They crawled into my hands on their own. One by one. And we walked home.”

Raised eyebrows. Pursed lips. Squinty eyes.

Really!” she exclaimed. “They’d already gotten used to it with the apple juice. I told them it would be safe for them to travel that way, and they went with it. Well, most of them, and then lots of them liked to swirl around me as we went. But they all came along! We just kept on singing the Buzz song!”

And Dennis again remembered how much he loved this small human.

So. I see. Now: what exactly are you planning to do with them, O Beekeeper?”

Oh, Dad!” Glory laughed. “I wouldn’t have let them come if I didn’t have a plan!”

Oh, good. You have a plan.” Dennis felt the muscles of his jaw go tight, despite his general trust for the eleven-year-old.

Okay, look. The bees in the tree had swarmed into the trophy from the bee box. I think they swarmed because there were so many of them so fast, and then they had to have been in the trophy case for at least a few weeks because they had a new queen already. These bees are a second swarm split from the first swarm, which seemed safe because it was pretty big and had plenty of drones and nurses.”

Nurses?” Dennis repeated absently. In truth, he had just chosen a moment to accentuate a safe word, so that he could calm his nervous system from hearing the word “swarm” so many times in a row.

Right, the ones that help the larvae grow up.”

Mm, larvae. Not better. Dennis decided to stop asking questions and just wear the listening face for as long as he could. Lotta eye-blinking and nodding. “Right. Go on.”

Go on she did. “So, I figured if the first bees had swarmed–” Blinking, nodding. “–then the hive might have other swarms in mind too–” Continue breathing. “–and so I went to the bee box and found a new little swarm cell hanging down–” Ugh, the addition of “cell.” Wince. Blink. Nod. “–and so I very carefully pulled it off, with the help of the bees, of course–” Of course. “–and then I asked my mini-swarm if they could raise this queen, and they said yes, and so then we all walked home together!”

Glory was beaming, as a child making a book report on a story she clearly adored [2]. She was resolute, calmly stating facts. She looked at him as if they had arrived together some obvious conclusion. Dennis failed to see the plan, but that was possibly due to the sweat running in his eyes. He took a long moment to pat his face with his t-shirt, gathering the resources to navigate toward proper fatherly participation. When he looked up again, nothing had changed; Morning Glory, Buzz song, handcups, mini-swarm. Realizing he was out of his element completely, Dennis had chosen the only fatherly action available to him; he bowed. He had become accustomed to the kid knowing more than him [3]. MG was actually literally training as a beekeeper, and he, Dennis, had been terrified of bees for as long as he could remember. It was clear to him who would call the shots on this one. He cleared his throat and made homage to the Beekeeper: “Well, where are you going to put them? And what do you need if you’re gonna take care of them here?”

Morning Glory would have cartwheeled across the yard, had she not been holding dozens of bees. Instead she squealed into a joyful whoop and wiggled head to toe. The beecup remained somehow undisturbed. Dennis registered that he had bowed to the proper Queen. She spoke: “Oh Dad. I’m so happy you asked. I already thought about this, the whole way home. There’s a perfect spot behind the garage. I told them we had to ask you first. Come on, I’ll show you!”

Dennis had stood still for a moment to watch her bound off in that direction. Steady, clear, purposeful, and confident in her gifts. For just that moment, there was a lightning-strike of recognition: this is the kid he raised. This is how she is. Something he was doing was working, and working really well. More salty water gathered in his eyes, this time without sting.

By the way, I had a dream just like this, except it was llamas, not bees, and I was huge. Oh yeah,” MG had turned around to wait for him by the garage. “And they were stuck in a mud puddle, not a speech trophy. But I washed them clean in the ocean, and then they got even softer fur and it turned all different colors in the light, so people stopped using them for cargo and started treating them as equals, trading water and gardening and carpentry and gold in exchange for fur cuttings…”

The buzz had continued well into the evening. As the seasons swooped and plummetted, went to ground and ripened, fortunate conversations would spill from this unexpected adoption of pollinators: juicy, authentic connection points for the potentially-strained parent-adolescent dynamic. But that day, in that season-opener, the thing was just happening.

Happening. Dennis considered these regular magical interactions with Glory to be good examples of things happening. That’s what it was like when things were happening.

As he blinked into the flickering dashboard display of his erratically-purring mule, he took a big sigh and regained the ability to move forward with his mandatory adulting. He turned off the car, zipped up his coat, and stepped out into the frigid night. Time to make sure nothing happened.

As he walked toward the white light of 24-hour dining, he cast his ice-tearing eyes skyward for just a moment. There, encircling the perimeter round the fake adobe castle, was a huge halo of purple cloud.

Dennis raised a poofy glove and rubbed the frost from his eyes. Nope, nothing the defrost would change. Surely enough, this midnight hour was blessed by the presence of some angel’s headwear. The underside of the lavender ring echoed neon orange from the colored lights of the only businesses open in Everett, the only dining options offered to the poor local meth-makers.[4]

The cloud seemed to swell in his regard. Something was happening.

Time stood still. What angel overlooked his work? What divine being sanctified his choice to sacrifice sleep and bodily well-being in an attempt to provide for his unique and gifted little lamb? What strange weather-mage curled its embrace around that exact spot at that exact moment?

Dennis continued to stare at the halo as he walked slowly, waiting for motion to prove it holographic. He ran into a bush, allowing it to steer him back on course, but not allowing it to remove his eyes from the ethereal ring. Was it moving now, or was it just him? Were the stars and indigo nighttime inside the circle now moving farther away? Or was it just his breath adding to the pulsing frozen vapor?

A horn blared and a car screeched its tires within inches of his toes.

Get the fuck outta the way!”

This is the drive thru, old man. Not the goddamn observatory!”

Hilarity ensued inside the low-slung 80’s Cadillac as it jerked forward to exchange bills for warm steaming bags of, well, mostly flour, hydrogenated oil, and filler. Muffled yelling. Menacing laughter. A pair of eyes and forehead pressed against the rear-view in the company of a long single finger.[5]

Dennis moved off the pavement, but kept his eyes in the sky, prioritizing his relationship with a seraphic cloud over his relationship with ill-mannered tweakers. The halo remained, darkly luminescent, seeming to breathe his breath.

It was suddenly too personal for Dennis to handle. He wondered if no one else could see it. He looked away. In front of his face, he saw the reflection of his own face in the window glass of the Taco Shack; stunned, tired, old. These are the words that came, as he noticed through the glass three of his employees taking turns staring at him and laughing. He took a deep breath, let it out in a puff, and prepared to assume responsibility for the store with the drive-thru and the mockery and the fake food and the dirty money. Opening the heavy back door of the taco joint, he glanced up one more time in a reverent pause, adding a silent prayer for his life, his Glory and his mother’s soul. The ring was beginning to disperse, blurring the lines between the eye and the air, the cloud and the sky.

As the door closed behind him, sealing him into the bright fluorescent, mono-odored box, he heard a cackling of either crow or crone; which one, he was never sure.

**

1. Notable to Glory was the fact that they had chosen this golden bowl among many golden bowls, rather than holing up for hibernation in the soccer team’s giant vaunting device or even the cheering squad’s formidable urn. The pollinators wanted to spend their winter with the joy of the speech kids’ unapologetic, nerdly awesomeness. Glory and Marma heartily approved.
2. But don’t take her word for it…
3. A good practice for any parental hopeful.
4. “Meth-maker, meth-maker, make me a batch! Fry me ‘til blind, cause me to scratch!”
5. “Meth-maker, meth-maker, sell me a batch! Suck up my mind, rip up my cash!”

Dark Matter

Gallumphing through darks and hollows like an oil painter filling in the depths where the light doesn’t reach, it ran. Through silent miles that required no brush to bring out the details, it ran. A streak of nothing throttling over rolling prairie dog hills and under cover of those clamorous stars of the visual stage, it ran. Inside of the people’s screens and outside of the people’s consciousness, it ran. Against the turn of the world, it ran.

There was the sound of rustling leaves that accompanies windy autumns and the nightmares of children. There was the deadening of flower heads and dropping of seed pods that nature times perfectly with the eerie beat of seasonal drums. There was the sentinel stare of the blink between starlight that witnesses all of what passes in the night regardless of design or location. With all of these perfectly normal, perfectly unremarkable aspects of the pre-dawn, any stretching traveler of the graveyard shift or weary local insomniac without a television might very well find a lack of evidence for their growing uneasiness. But the uneasiness would be distinct, nonetheless, and icy as a bone-deep shudder. The lack of evidence would likely send them back to the constructed security of their respective dwellings to find the useful distraction of something to do and the useful explanation of something to be.

However, on the side of this rather deserted stretch of highway, there was one who detected the undetectable. She stood in the ditch where drivers had thrown their plastic bottles of piss and efficiency. She stood with her knees deeply bent and her hands hovering parallel to the ground beneath her boot-shod feet. She stood as the leaf-rustling wind moved her hair with the soft care of a lover. She stood as the seed-dropping gravity held her skin on the skeleton with the firmness of a nursing mother. She stood as the stars exploded, looking at the absent moon and listening to the sleeping birds. There was a color of solemnity flowing through the tunnel of her dilated pupils. Holding perfectly still, she could breathe down through the red leather of her soles without disturbing the air around her. In this way, she was able to witness the passage of the shadow’s wake.

It hurdled westward over the highway toward the darker night, spewing the invisible gravel of unsung molecules and unblackened carbon. The heaviness of its flight took her breath away as if the thing had landed inside her body, but knowing the dangers of such identification, she shook off the sensation faster than it came. The creature, if it could be called a creature… no, the phenomenon, if it could be called a phenomenon… no, the vacuum from which nightmares come: it passed before she could even harness awareness of its presence. It was not a presence. It was not present. The concept of “presence” could only to apply to the realm of sentient awareness, something for which the passing engulfment had no access nor concern. It was beyond sensory data. All that could be felt was its wake. A wave of exhaustion was what struck her first, then fear and dread, doom raised to the frequency of panic.

Were she less trained in discernment, she might have assigned these sensations to various thoughts circulating habitual neural pathways, making up a story to match, forging an attachment point. But she knew well enough her own shadow that she was unsurprised by the shapes it took. Dread. Exhaustion. Fear. Doom. Eggshells. Panic. [1] She knew them by name and understood that when these feelings caught her attention fully, they signaled the passage of a shadow through the field, capable of dominating the perceptive field, defining the meaning of all incoming data, amplifying the drama of her mortality. Any seasoned practitioner can tell you: the drama is not the point, but merely pointing. Rest assured, the white-haired red-booted creature crouching in the ditch of an obscure abandoned road was seasoned as a classic salmis [2], so she was focused on the proverbial moon rather than fascinated by the finger. Thusly undeterrable by the shadow-puppets adorning all available surfaces in the winded wake, she kept her attention steady, breathing in open awareness. Cautiously turning her eyeballs as far to the left as they could reach, her hawkeye vision pierced the path of what had so violently shaken unseen perceptions of the earthstar. There was nothing there. Nothing. No movement, no change. Nothing at all.

Feeling the cold rush of the vacuum left in the nightmarish wake, she deepened her breath and turned more fully to the dark of the west. As tremors shook her from head to toe, she peered with disbelief after the monstrous void, unseen and long gone. As the scene to her backside where the earth met the sky turned ever so slightly into the color that only birds can see, she glared into the darkest depth of night her eyes had ever registered.

Before long, they would learn how to register one darker.

-**

1. Def. Dep. eh? Defense Department, in the parlance. Common.
2. May I recommend a nice robust Châteauneuf-du-Pape with that?

Dark Wings

In the warm recesses of the mind, there grows a desert land that is parched on the surface, but inwardly fed by an underground river whose waters carry a medicine for the sun and whose body is displayed for both seeker and seers as a grove of date palms[1] lifting the hidden beauty of water into the dust-dried air.

Seeing as how the earth offers a reflective surface for all internal happenings, there are many places that present this same way. Afghanistan is one of them. Iraq is another. But here: Egypt.

Egypt is a place where gold might spontaneously rise up out of the sand like ice cubes in a fruit smoothie, as easily as it may paint the eyes, nose, mouth, and fingernails during sleep, suffocating the organic matter with intention for what lies beyond.

Egypt is the place where a dark-fingernailed hand pulled a tiny slip of paper out of one abalone slot in an ashtray, just seconds after placing a rouged cigarette in the neighboring groove. The owner of the fingernails ran a pair of onyx eyes over the English words, which were instantly sent to the mouth where they took shape in the absentminded sensuousness of a whisper:

to go into the dark with a light

is to know the light

to know the dark, go dark

go without sight

and find that the dark, too

blooms and sings

and is traveled by dark feet

and dark wings

~W. Berry~

The poem was rolled thoughtfully back into its little scroll. The cigarette was finished, slowly, with the flourish and curl of a dancer. The feet attached to the fingernails, the eyes, and the mouth stepped swiftly into a dim building overlooking the sunbright waters. A pair of birds watched the door close from the nearest palm, taking flight as neon signs flickered on in the doorway and windows of the establishment. One flashed the outline of beer and palm trees, alternately. One scripted out the lavish shapes of a phonetic marvel, which, when translated into English, read “Dance the Nile.”[2] One spelled out in the blocky capital letters of the modern[3] Roman Empire, “OPEN.”

-**

 

 

1. Phoenix dactylifera. For the etymology nerds out there.
2.  رقص النيل
3. “Modern” means pitiful geezer tour, right?

Magpie

There was a sharp double rainbow circle following her all through the frozen relocated clouds. Feet just itched for a barefoot day, even as she found childlike joy in crunching through crust-topped mounds in her bulky black-furred stompers. Her woolen socks were already disappointingly soaking wet, somehow slipped down that insufferable half-inch that is just too much to ignore and yet not enough to bother with the five-minute drudgery of removing and replacing the boots. So, Nordic dog walker that she was, she focused her attention on the visual delights of December.

As usual, there were tiny smiles volunteering from, on average, one snowflake per square foot all across the suburban tundra. However, on this sunlit morning walk, “Mrs.” Gorgonsen was finding herself dwindling and dawdling just as much as her sweet little Magpie in the smart red plaid jacket that brought out the deep chocolate notes of her spectacular curls.

For the record, Magpie was, like any good miniature Cavalier King Charles worth its breeding costs, both good-looking and wily. Her leash-holder’s usual “two birds with one stone” approach [1], which consisted of a break-neck pace that provided each of them with a toned rear, offered only two very small windows of opportunity to do her proverbial business. She took today’s unexpected deviation from the norm as an excuse to make several different yellow holes in the pristine snow. Once she tired of that, she took to nosing down into the freezer for the good stuff, finding hidden piles of decay, eating things she shouldn’t while her two-legged promenade partner daydreamed. What a holiday! What a joy! What a worthwhile outcome of having to put on that ridiculous Dolce-n-Gablowme fashion piece that matched the Missus’ scarf-and-hat set.

Meanwhile, The Missus, as it were, was watching a double rainbow reflected in the snow. Never before had she seen such stark colors before her. Never before had the light spectrum chosen her, her, to witness its private display of grandeur. Sure, she had read accounts of tremendous beauty, seen the National Geographic spreads and watched the youtube video [2] her kids pulled up a few times. But for a piece of it to lay itself at her feet, unabashedly glowing right into her eyes, holding her gaze with a tenacious passion for all the world to see? It was magnificent. It was flabbergasting. It was a little bit embarrassing. She felt—and she would describe it this way to no one, not even her dog (who was at the moment feasting on partially decomposed bird thigh)—as though she were suddenly an adolescent boy with a very obvious erection, hoping that no one saw, yet still drawn to stare at the inspiration of such unavoidable arousal. How shamefully liberating! She must take a hot bath when she and Magpie got back home.

MAGPIE!” Really. Had she no discipline? The pooch had engaged such a daring indulgence of her rebellious nature, she was actually digging up the small potted evergreen in the neighbor’s yard. How she had made it through all that frozen earth was a great mystery, but rather than staying to explore the situation, Mrs. Gorgonsen allowed her inner teenager to yank on the retractable leash and lead them both as far from that house as they could get in one minute.

When she regained her composure, “Mrs.” experienced a moment of belly-dropping panic. The rainbow was nowhere in sight. Where had her secret companion gone? She spun around in the snow, looking wildly for the spectacular split of spectral splendor. It was not to be found; in that maddening moment, she felt the acute hollow nesting place of a dreadful beast who lived right below the inexplicable joy that had just been touched. The cavern throbbed one dark, hidden note of finality, and then it, too, left her. Infuriating, in a way that only things which are out of one’s reach as well as out of one’s awareness can infuriate.

It was over. Something was over, and Mrs. “Mrs.” Gorgonsen had only just begun to glimpse it before she was so rudely cut off. Stupid dog. Stupid neighbors. Stupid property rights. Isn’t it always the way, mused her morose voice-over, that the minute I find something good, the minute God gives me something that is just for me, someone else comes and creates havoc, makes me crazy, and takes it away? Every time. Every time!! And she was off, letting her disappointment make broad, sweeping accusations and assessments. Every time!!!!

Having crunched back to her front walk in this distracted manner, cursing everything from the shampoo her husband finished off last week to the second grade lunch table incident, “Mrs.” was completely engrossed in her grumpiness by the time she saw the double rainbow again. It winked up at her from the shiny land iceberg next to her driveway and she yelped like Magpie, frozen in her tracks, dropping the plastic bag of shit [3] and resuming her praise for the angels.

-**

1. Or “two loaves with one knife,” for those dedicated to ahimsa. **patented MC phrase, free for public use as of this writing.**

2. In case you missed it the first time: look into the rainbow, look into your soul!

3. The dog dodged it, looked up at the entranced woman, and promptly began chewing through the plastic.

Circumambulation

Louise wandered through the falling leaves, lost in thought. Though she was hardly speaking with her feet these days, they crunched along dutifully as she leaned heavily into the elbow crooks of her crutches. About half a block earlier on her trek, she’d been passed by a spandex-wearing couple pushing along a double stroller at the speed of light. She hadn’t even been able to catch a glimpse of the two newborns swaddled against the October chill; she imagined them to be cute as little ducklings, all snuggled together for warmth. Nauseating. Watching the bright blue and black shimmering parental forms bouncing their go-getter rhythm into the distance, Louise’s mind spilled over with the shiny images of her own first days as a new mother, the same pictures she always pulled up when the thought struck her heart. Little red snuggly. Blue bonnet. Pinched-up face and squirmy hands. Eyes that never saw their sister’s.

A tiny yapping dog scurried through the path of her left crutch, causing her to start, almost taking her balance. The owner followed immediately [1] .

OH! Oh my god. I’m so sorry! Chippy, NO! Please, are you okay? Oh my god, I’m so sorry. No, Chippy! NO. Bad girl. NO!  God. Chippy!”

Watching the terrier’s little panting smileyface flinch ever-so-slightly every time its companion shouted “No!”, Louise wondered if the discipline was always like this or if it was merely for her benefit that the woman was flooring the pedal in her Alpha seat. Ole Chip clearly had no idea what she was being reprimanded for, aside from her owner’s embarrassment. In that case, Louise would have preferred the two of them cruise right on by in the pretentious Alpha Romeo of their human-canine bromance. People were always blaring their discomfort around Louise, on loudspeaker, as if she were new to this, as if she had a perpetual bone to pick with the more able-bodied population. It was obnoxious. Chippy is a yippy and undisciplined little chancre, yes. Nothing about this is improved by you falling all over yourself proving that your heart goes out to me. Just get a damn leash.

Louise noted the available reaction just in time to override. Not my monkeys. Instead she just blinked a polite, shruggy grin, “Not to worry. No harm done. You have a good walk, now.” [2]

The woman was still Oh-ing her God and attempting to brush all the chalk dust off of her clean morning slate by yelling at the tiny dog as they speed-walked. All the way down the block. Until they turned out of earshot, after which point Louise could be sure she could hear the high-pitched coos of “Come on, girl! Chippy, baaaby!” wafting through the cool autumn air. Wherever they were going, there were sure to be face-swap selfies. Adorable.

Where was she going, again? It always took Louise a moment to regain her balance after letting someone else’s disability-guilt ruffle her few last feathers. The truth was, it wasn’t a new phenomenon. She’d wrestled the symptom-tentacled dodgy beast of MS for over 6 years now, and the most annoying side-effect was the way other people acted around her. It’s very simple, she thought. It’s like if you had a headache, and when you tell your friend about it, instead of being quiet or offering you an aspirin, they furrow their brow and get in your face about how bad THEY feel about YOUR headache. Shut up. You are now the source of my headache.

Like anything, there were times when it felt better and times when it felt worse. There were pains that obliterated the sensation of everything else in the world, days she locked her door and let her husband sleep in the recliner all night. Then there were stretches of time in which the disease seemed, to observers, nowhere on the radar, times she executed her duties with a merciless efficiency that left coworkers and clients marvelling at their own disabilities. Recently, however, the latter extreme had begun calling in sick and showing up late for its shifts. Always, always, Louise had a sense of some watchful squadron inside waiting for the other shoe to drop. And, no matter how competant she felt when she came home from work, the creases layered over her husband’s eyelids were enough to bring that shoe right back into her vision field.

These days, the folks at Domestica Colombia Realty were becoming as jumpy and watchful as her inner vigilantes. Louise could be seen smoothly closing on five houses in an hour surely as she could be counted on to snap the heads off three associates and an intern in the very same hour. Just last week, following a day of stellar track-star success hurdling over a problem neighborhood’s epic challenges of landlord properties versus single-family homes [3], duly winning that race in flying colors with crowds cheering and medals dispensed, Louise came into the office over an hour late with a whole thermos full of coffee she was ready to throw in the face of the first whimperer to come her way. Within ten minutes, she got her chance, as an intern from Georgetown scuttled up to her door with an armload of copies he’d made upside-down which, he thought, “could be saved if there was some way to cut and paste individually into the folders, if you could just let me see the other files, if you don’t mind, if you’re not too busy… or… maybe… um…”

As these words quaked out of his voice box, she looked at him like a velociraptor might look at a chicken [4]. Having unscrewed the lid to her thermos, she made her way around the desk, and, wearing a steel-faced sheath around the live blade of her nerves, she slowly walked over, and, locking her grey-blue eyes on those of the young lad, she dumped the steaming liquid over the offending papers as generously as one offers gravy to a cut of Thanksgiving turkey. The boy screamed and dropped the papers on the spot, running to the bathroom for the shaky cry and costume change that would precede his resignation. Meanwhile, Louise summoned Housekeeping to get this mess the fuck off of her floor, and then requested someone please, for the love of mercy, hold her goddam calls for the rest of the day.

After twenty years as a notorious magician in the real estate, she was at times much more dismayed by the change in her work status than she was in her deteriorating physical health. What was the use of a pain-free existence if she would have nothing to show for it?

On your left,” came a chipper voice from behind, and once again the spandex-clad parents came whizzing by with their Featherlite baby portable. Great. She was getting lapped on a track she didn’t even know she was circling. But the whizz brought her blinking back to the present. And the totally un-pitying nature of their communication helped to shake her thoughts out of the internal detour, placing her firmly back into the reverie of her long-lost motherhood. Same detour, maybe, one layer away. Inception. [5]

This was before the diagnosis, even before realty. This was from that other life she’d lived.

The boy had come first. This was part of the unbearable sadness: birthing the living twin first, knowing what was bound to come next, driven mad beyond cognition and recognition as the labor pains split her passageway wide open to make way for life and death. Life had chosen to come first, already wailing with loss: loss of the warm cocoon that had offered the only shared incarnation he would ever know with his intimate other, loss of the most precious sense of completeness that our mortal forms are given, that meditative space when nothing needs to happen and everything is free and the self does not know separation in any way.

She heard the cries long before she saw his little squished face and shock of blood-red hair, and they tore the sound out of her heart. She knew this cry well already and cried along with it as she moved into the second stage of her last labor.

Pushing and screaming, sobbing and grunting, she sweated out the tears of her unborn second child for what seemed like an eternity. Everyone knew what was coming, yet in the wake of childbirth, welcoming the miracle of life into its first sensations of new consciousness, there was this wretched air of doomed hope in the room. Bloody dynamite. There was an illogical buzz around everyone’s smiles, having seen the first twin come out just peachy, all covered with the color of life and screaming a tone to match. They all wanted everything to be okay. Even her husband, the senseless bastard.

The only one who was really there with her was the midwife. She was the only one really mourning, from the moment Louise had arrived in the maternity ward all the way through to the silent finality of the dead twin’s crowning head. She had seen plenty of births and plenty of deaths to match. She had held Louise’s hand and nodded slowly into her eyes when it seemed like there was no use to continue, when it seemed like continuing would be worse than giving up entirely, when it seemed like delivering the baby its true death would be a far worse crime than dying around it, a far worse crime than killing oneself in the fantasy that there was no death as long as the fetus remained inside the space where it had once known life, a far worse crime than cutting oneself from the consciousness of its existence. Even then, with the midwife holding her hand, Louise was willing to let it come to that. Willing to keep her own life umbilically fastened to that of the Other Twin; so long as she had succeeded in giving the brother his runaway freedom, she had license to choose to forever abandon him along with her own mortal memorystation and meaningmaker. She could drift into the solace of nothingness as the tomb of that lost sister.

But the brother! Oh the brother, oh! those twenty first minutes of his life when Louise was hard at work completing the death of his sister, oh! how it would continue to ache separately in their hearts years and years and years after the cords were cut.

The face of her stillborn daughter Louise would always recall, even as the memories of the rest of that evening crumbled into sand around her. The room had gone completely still the moment the beautiful tiny face had appeared. Purple and perfect and soft and quiet, eyes closed in permanent reverie, arms curled and criss-crossed like Ophelia drifting out to sea. She was lovely, and the breath that she never exchanged with the world swept through the delivery room in the most reverent gasp those walls had yet held.

There landed a hush stark enough to fell a forestfull of trees. Nothing moved in the wake.

And then, with the rude immediacy of insurance benefits, movement resumed. They took her away. The boy was brought over. Things happened in bricks. The husband sat down. She tried to call out. The midwife was back. Her daughter was gone. The people were talking. The baby was crying. Her arms didn’t work. They asked her some questions. The husband said “Oh, honey.” Her voice didn’t work. The nurses were blustered. Machines kept on beeping. And she finally groaned out, “Get him OFF OF ME! Let me go! Give her back.” In a flyswarm of fever, she flung the baby boy at her husband and swung her legs off the hospital bed before anyone could spring into action. Bleeding like a horror film, she stood up, took two steps, and collapsed unconscious on the floor.

What a commotion that must have caused. Presently, the nervous system swarmed to subdue the tragic memory. A hot flash swirled over her tired, slow, leaf-crunching embodied memorial. Even now, years into carrying the hole, Louise still imagined herself lying there in the bloody pile with a final smirk of justice on her face. None of them could ever know the pain of what she had endured, and none of them, save for that midwife, made any attempt to even witness it. But then there she was, spiking up the emergency punch for the melodrama of the medical field. This is what they need, huh? My birthing a dead body wasn’t enough for them, huh? Well, looky here. I’m dying on the floor. Gonna be a bitch to clean up.

-**

1. Though not under the crutch.
2. Not today, Chancre!
3. Let’s be more rigorous with language, when available: “problem” in this context means “poor” and “neighborhood” refers to “place that has been encroached upon by what’s called ‘business’ & ‘development’ by those colonized to see it that way, until said place is condensed to the size of a rentable dog kennel meant to host several families and a few actual dogs.”
4. Like a great-great-great-great-great-greatˣ grandkid who just broke a family heirloom?
5. There’s the drop.

Assholes

Glory’s father had recently been awarded with an Excellence and Efficiency award as a ten-year employee at the Kimberly-Clark paper mill. How those ten years came to pass, however, was a touchy subject. The award was received like paycheck & health insurance & performance review: without fanfare.

Back when he was a young go-getter just out of engineering school, Dennis had offered up an ingenius idea on a polished platter of naiveté. To his new employers, Puffs (a subsidiary of the prestigious Proctor & Gamble), the just-barely-twenty-one-year-old Dennis had developed the idea for a bathroom tissue enhancement he called “quilting.” A longtime admirer and apprentice of his dear mother’s quilting skills, Dennis had looked for practical ways to apply this inspiration in the “real world” of mundane employment. Being a gay African-American male in the summer spice of 1980’s Baltimore, he had more than one Good Solid Reason to become a Respectable Business Professional who could really Bring Home the Bacon [1]. Thus, young Mr. Maycomb brought a family legacy, made of passion, creativity, and fondness for soft things, into a presumably-dreary career on a staff of nameless thousands working toward the production of premium quality facial and bathroom tissues.

Eureka! he had thought, bubbling over with enthusiasm on his way to the last day of his first week plodding along inside the gates with the rest of the Nerd Ignominious Herd [2]. So excited was he to share his idea with the higher-ups, he thought nothing about the insidiously stacked power dynamics that might come into play; his only sensibilities were for the upward mobility of his career and the comfort to weary red noses and rear ends that his invention would supply. When the management team called Dennis in for his first-week review, he spilled the beans on the spot, sharing his well-formed ideas and diagrams with confidence, hardly stopping for breath until he sat back to grin into the faces of the white, middle-aged, heterosexual, imitation-Armani-wearing executives. Go-getter, he thought to himself.

They were highly impressed, but also heavily conditioned and extraordinarily cut-throat, so it showed very little. Dennis was nonplussed as the interview continued in a below-average way, full of mundane daily-grind questions and little pep-talk slogans. By the time they stood to shake his hand and dismiss the meeting, he had convinced himself that there was some special etiquette that was in play, something to which he would surely be made party when his promotion came. It did not, however, come. Dennis was not made any kind of party. After the weekend passed and a deep, vague anxiety had begun creeping into perfectly pleasant moments, he began to feel the effects of ostracization. Resentful. Isolating. Pitiless. [3]

Ridiculous! thought he, refusing to admit that a bunch of toilet paper flunkies could have such a powerful effect on his self-esteem. But as the next week wore on, the worry began to show on his face. It slowed his footsteps and buttered his fingers. It spiked his dreams and spilled coffee on his new tie. It crept along in his shadow.

By the following week, he had made up his mind to Be A Good Cow [4] and concentrate on making little advances. Maybe I came on too strong, he figured, Maybe I intimidated some of the upper echelon. Maybe, he reasoned, there is a mandatory hazing period during which I’m supposed to learn the rules of the gig before I start improvising on the song. (Denny was also a damn fine sax player who sat in regularly with other astronauts of entertainment at jazz clubs of the local underground, so he was no stranger to such rituals.) Yes, that must be the case. I need to pay some respect to the order of things so they don’t think I’m here to steal the show.

To his utter dismay, after two more weeks of exemplary bovinity on his part, the general manager of the Puffs operation team announced to a staff-wide assembly that they were proud to be releasing a new product, set for production by the end of the following year. This product, the first of its kind on the market, would revolutionize the facial and bathroom tissue industry. It was entirely unsettled whether the resounding “oohs” and “ahhs” were actually present in the roomful of TP people or if they were merely a radical hallucination grown out of Dennis’ darkened corner of dismay, but either way, the collective approval in the room produced the effect of a suckerpunch to the gut. When they actually said the word “Quilted” with bright toothy smiles on their self-congratulatory faces, Dennis found himself in need of more than a tissue. Sweating like a cold drink on a summer day, he ran from the room unexcused and posted up in a bathroom stall to spill his guts and shed his tears.

HOW could they DO this? he wept. HOW could I have been such a FOOL? he moaned. WHO the fuck do they think they ARE? he shat. WHEN did human beings become such ASSHOLES? he farted. WHY does the Lord let beauty be used for EVIL? he wailed. WHAT the hell is this life ABOUT? he shuddered.

After depleting his reserves entirely in that toilet stall, he found himself lost in an almost Zen-like emptiness. Minutes blurred. The toilet seat began to deliver its egg-shaped temporary tattoo for overtime sitters. In the quiet of the cracked tile and the leaking sink, Dennis found Great Clarity [5] on three things. One: he had worked himself sick as a dog for a company that didn’t value his well-being one iota. Two: the bathroom was out of toilet paper. Assholes. Three: he was going to walk out that door and present his resignation, right after he used the leaky faucet for a bidet.

-**

1. Not every phrase can be an instant LMFAO success. Let’s look at these abbreviation fails. GSR also stands for Galvanized Skin Response, so no good. RBP could be any number of things: Regular Baptist Press, Rolling Big Power, or code on the stock exchange for the Rainbow Group. (Knowing Dennis, it was the third, wearing the costume of the first, with a wish for the second.) Lastly, since the British Horseracing Board became defunct, BHB is mostly likely to refer to Black Hole Bang, which would offer a good deal of counterintuitive perspective to the context in which “bringing home the bacon” is perceived as a valuable behavior.

2. Nice try, Dennis. National Institute of Health.

3. RIP is definitely taken.

4. BAGC? Is this a major 7th?

5. GC: Gas Chromatography, okay this one counts.

By Means of Opposites

God turns you from one feeling to another and teaches by means of opposites, so that you will have two wings to fly, not one.” – Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi –

What is this? Beau du Pont pulled a little strip of paper out of the crack in the bench, rescuing it from the splintered slab painted thick in a brown with which no chocolate nor coffee would ever be associated. He read the above poetry from the curled little parchment. The rain-warmed concrete smiled up into the bottoms of his feet. The sky sighed down. A row of pigeons lined the electrical wire, drying their wings in the emerging sunlight. With a deep breath of the well-hydrated air, Beau tucked the paper coil into his right shoe and walked into the recruiting office.

-**