Thursday, July 20, 2023

Vixen

The two men had been hiking through the backwoods for three days and nights and had yet to pick up on the trail when the older man turned to look back at the younger man, holding his finger to his lips while using his eyes to draw attention to a clearing about fifteen meters ahead of them. When the younger man's eyes found the clearing, his dirty, sunburned face split into a gap-toothed smile. The older man's hand shot out and he covered the younger man's mouth before he could make a sound, then they both kneeled low to the ground, taking cover behind a blossoming mountain-laurel. 

"Well I'll be," the younger man whispered, his voice breaking with excitement. 

The older man held up his finger to his mouth again, his eyes narrowing into a threatening scowl. 

"Sorry, sorry," the younger man muttered, his face turning red as he settled on the ground behind the dark leaves of the laurel.

For a long time the two men sat quietly, peering into the sun-lit clearing, watching with equal parts admiration and desire the small scarlet creature. The older man's eyes were locked on the small fox, this body frozen like stone. The younger man on the other hand, was beginning to feel more and more antsy as the minutes dragged on. At last, he turned to the old man and whispered, "just shoot the little bitch already."

The old man turned to look at the younger man, the calm, fluid motion of his movements suddenly feeling very menacing. "No," he said, almost without sound, "I have been watching this one for a long, long time. You try to shoot her, you die."

The younger man's face went red like the ruby skin of a ripe apple and he sunk in on himself before gathering his courage and putting his face in the old man's face, their noses almost touching. "The fuck you just say to me, old man?"

The old man moved casually to one side so that his view of the vixen was no longer blocked by the young man's red face. "I told you not to shoot the fox," he said, his voice soft. 

"I ain't come out on this here hunt to do no sight-seeing, you old son-of-a-bitch," the younger man said, his voice growing in intensity. In the clearing, the fox had caught sight and scent of the men and had positioned herself to look directly at them. She appeared to be staring into the eyes of the old man. 

"You hear me, you old fuck," the young man said, struggling up to his feet. He reached back and pulled the riffle off his back, then sighted up the fox. She turned her attention from the old man and looked directly at the young man. He broke out in a cold sweat, his finger on the trigger. "I'mm'a shoot 'her," he sputtered, "I'mm'a shoot her!"

The old man came to his feet, thrusting a knife blade between the younger man's ribs and sinking it deep into his heart. The younger man dropped his riffle, gasped and shuttered, then fell to the ground, his blood pumping out of the wound and soaking his flannel shirt and orange vest a dirty, dark red. 

In the clearing, the fox looked at the older man, then ran back into the forest.

Sunday, July 16, 2023

White Knight

The lady sat alone at the edge of the forest, her back to the thick line of trees, eating a fried patty of ground beef, topped with cheese, and sandwiched between a soft bun that had been cut in half. Behind her a small troll crawled from the darkness of the forest, across the loamy earth toward the lady. In his gnarled little hand he held a fist-full of cursed charms that had been festering since the lady was a girl, forged by none other than the lady's twin - a twin who had been consumed by her own dark magic years ago. 

As the troll crept up on the lady, she seemed to be totally unaware, absorbed as she was eating her midday snack and staring into the small mirror she held in her other hand is if contained all of life's secrets. The troll edged closer and closer, the charms beginning to burn in his clenched fist. But just as he was about to spring upon the lady, the thundering sound of a charging horse broke the serene silence the lady had been enjoying and a galant white knight burst from the tree line, the hooves of his warhorse crushing the troll's misshapen skull into a brainy soup that quickly soaked in to the moist earth. 

"White Knight," gasped the lady, looking down at what remained of the troll.

The knight said nothing, only pointing with the tip of his long sword to the still-clenched hand of the troll and the fist full of charms it was grasping. "Oh-my," said the lady, instantly recognizing the charms. She reached out and grabbed them, tucking them away in the hidden pockets of her skirts, her face flushed with flabbergasted embarrassment. 

"Thank you, White Knight," she said after collecting herself.

The knight said nothing, but as an errant cloud passed in front of the sun, she watched his shining white armor become black as night, his snow white steed become suddenly like a shadow, and the knight's blue eyes turn to pale ice. Just as quickly, the cloud moved on, and the sun shone its brilliance down on the knight and she had to blink her eyes as his armor and horse again gleamed pure white. 

"You are not a white knight," she said, her voice careful. 

He looked at her, his gaze fixed and unwavering, then turned his horse and rode back into the darkness of the forest, disappearing into shadow without a word. 

Thursday, June 8, 2023

The Fox and the Racoon

From across the park the raccoon appeared to be yawning or maybe just stretching his jaw as wide open as he could while waving his short arms in comically exaggerated gestures. From time to time the raccoon would add to this display - a little jump or maybe a spin. The fox watched all of this from afar, maybe grimacing here and there but remaining otherwise as silent and still as a stone. 

After a short while, the raccoon stopped what he had been doing and stared at the fox, blinking slowly, his eyes fixed on the fox's face. The fox, for her part, made pretend that she didn't notice the raccoon. After another short while the fox turned to look at the raccoon and screwed up her face into a menacing scowl. The raccoon, not sure what to do, scowled back. The fox then narrowed her eyes and glared daggers at the raccoon, who immediately sank into his own coat and tried to become invisible. 

The fox continued glaring at the raccoon until, feeling somewhat awkward at the raccoon's invisibility, made an effort to smile, though it was rather ingenuine and wolfish. After some few minutes, the raccoon gathered himself up and went back to waving his short arms about. 

The fox harrumphed and then looked away, resolving not to notice the raccoon again.

Friday, February 3, 2023

ChatGPT Short

Once upon a time, there was a brave space man named Captain James. He lived in a time when humans had started exploring different planets and galaxies. Captain James was a part of a space mission to explore a newly discovered planet.

As he and his team landed on the planet, they encountered many challenges like harsh weather conditions, unknown species and limited resources. But Captain James being a brave and determined space man, always found a way to overcome these obstacles and complete the mission successfully.

One day, while on a routine exploration, Captain James stumbled upon an alien spacecraft. To his surprise, the aliens were friendly and they asked for his help in saving their planet which was on the brink of destruction. Without a second thought, Captain James agreed to help and together with the aliens, they came up with a plan to save their planet.

With his bravery and quick thinking, Captain James was able to save the alien planet and establish a strong friendship with the aliens. As he returned to Earth, he was hailed as a hero and his story became an inspiration for future space missions.

From that day on, Captain James continued to explore the universe and always remained at the forefront of the latest space exploration, discovering new planets and making new friends along the way. 

Monday, January 2, 2023

2023

 Been feeling rather listless in the past few months. There are several projects that I have in mind but I just can't get started on them. This year is off to a great start.

Friday, December 2, 2022

The Void

She stared at him, unable to speak. Fear, anger, confusion, and excitement all boiled inside her. 

"You've been here all this time?" she asked, incredulous. "Why? It's been years. Why didn't you come for me? Why did you just abandon me?"

"Years," he said softly, his blue eyes fixed on her. "This means nothing to me. In the void, moments draw out into decades, days into eons. You've waited years? I have waited a thousand thousand lifetimes for you in the cold, desperate emptiness of the void, with nothing but my own burning pain to keep me company."

"But I've waited for you, also," she said, her dark eyes heavy with grief.

"Don't lie to me, not now, not at the end of all things," he said, his voice calm and hard.

"But why," she asked again, looking away from him to hide her shame. "Why now?"

"Why ever?" he asked. "It could have been today or seventy years from now, it would have been the same to me either way. Time has no meaning to me now. I am infinitely patient."

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

девочка

He took a deep breath as he left the building, sucking in the wet night air before he set off, trudging through the gray drizzle toward the next nondescript building, hands tucked in his pockets, eyes forward. These shit holes all looked the same, all smelled the same, all peddled the same garbage, but each had its own unique menagerie of incels, cat-fishers, and pedophiles that kept it in business. There was just enough crossover to set down a subtle trail of breadcrumbs to the next crime scene, but they almost always ended up as dead ends or self-fellating feedback loops. Sometimes it was like connecting dots, other times it took a leap of faith. 

After a short walk he came to to the next building. This place was old. The red bricks were cracked and worn and the door didn't fit in the frame. He gave it a gentle push and it flung open, slamming against the brick wall with a jarring thud. With the door open, a riotous flood of neon light spilled out into the wet street, bathing him in a grotesque rainbow of debauchery. He squinted his eyes, peering through the doorway and down the hall, then took a deep breath and pushed himself into the building. 

He made his way quickly down the hall, skipping past doors that his gut told him held nothing. One hall led to another, then another, then another. One floor led to another, then another, then another. Hall after hall, floor after floor. Ever so often there would be something that would catch his eye and he would take note of it or nibble at the bait and take a closer look, but each room turned out to be just another dead end.

The weight of the night was beginning to settle on him, pulling at his shoulders and blurring his vision. "One more," he whispered to himself, something between a promise and a threat. He shook the weariness from his eyes and jogged up another flight of stairs, taking them two at a time. At the top of the stairs he was hit in the face by the large neon letters: "девочка". 

"Fuck," he said to himself. "Gotcha." He reached into his jacket, pulling out the only weapon he ever carried, and kicked in the door. 

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Pookie is Dead

Eloise sat at the dinner table anxiously folding and refolding napkins into odd shapes. Her husband had gone to meet her son at the transit depot. They would be home any minute. She looked down at the table, frowning at how she had arranged the paper plates and plastic cups. Was this how you welcomed someone home after something like this? Did you throw a little party?

She looked at the clock hanging over the built-in in her small kitchen, then leaned over the dining table to look out the window. There was a middle-aged man walking down the sidewalk with his hat in his hands. She hadn't seen her son in over ten years. Could this be him? The man saw Eloise in the window, nodded with a forced smile, then kept walking past her house. 

Eloise turned her attention back to the dining table, this time fussing over the decorations that she had hung up. They had been out of "Welcome Home" decorations at the dollar store so she had picked up "Happy Birthday" decorations instead. She felt the sudden urge to rip them all down and go lock herself in her room. When she looked back toward her bedroom her eyes fell on the worn down sofa and the empty spot where her son's cat used to spend her afternoons. The animal had left a permanent indentation on the sofa even though she had been dead for several months. Eloise pursed her lips. She hadn't thought about this part of her son's homecoming. He loved that cat and she had never had the heart to tell him that she had passed, especially in the last months of his incarceration. 

"That goddamn cat," Eloise muttered to herself. She had never understood her son's love of that animal. It was cunning and lazy, quick to anger, and difficult please. It wasn't even pleasant to look at with its mottled yellow fur, uneven teeth, and crooked tail. She'd cared for it because it was the one thing her son had ever asked of her while he was in prison. "Promise me, Ma, take care of her," he said to her as they escorted him out of the courtroom. And she had. For ten long years she had treated that awful little monster like a queen and it had repaid her diligence and her son's patient love by dying unceremoniously just short of his release.

Just then the sound of her husband's old truck came rumbling in through the window. She leaned back over the dinning table, straining to see her son through the truck's glossy windshield. The next few minutes passed as if in a dream, each moment bleeding into those before and after it, as she fought back tears, holding her boy in her arms. After she was able to get hold of herself, she put him at arms length and took him in. He was a skeleton, aged beyond his years and stinking to high heaven. His eyes looked tired and his skin was deeply creased. When he smiled, there was no light in it, just a weariness. But he was home. That was all the mattered.

"I'm so happy you're home," she said to him at last. 

"I am, also," he said softly, his eyes scanning the room around him. He gave a sharp whistle, his eyes lighting up with anticipation. "Where's my girl?" he asked.

Eloise glanced nervously at her husband, then looked up into her son's eyes. "I'm sorry," she said, taking his hand. "Pookie is dead."

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Untenable

My mother never really had a firm grip on English and so when it came time to choose my name, just days after her and my father got off the boat in Los Angeles, her instinct on what would pass as a proper American given name failed her miserably as she uttered my name to the doctor: “Untenable.” Apparently neither the doctor nor the nurses attending her had any inclination to disabuse her of this choice. In my first years, this name didn’t affect me much. My parents didn’t speak English at home, and anyway they and everyone else in my family called me “Ten”. 

It wasn’t until I started elementary school that I started to suspect something was wrong. On that first day, I had never seen so many pink-faced, blue-eyed children in my life. It was as if I had gone to heaven, and now I was surrounded by a choir of golden-haired little angels. But this illusion was shattered the moment Ms. Jollenbach stumbled over my name during roll call. 

“Un... ten...able?” she asked hesitantly. Unaware that there was a problem, I raised my hand eagerly.

“What’s your name, sweetheart,” she asked me, smiling. “I believe there’s a mistake on this printout.” At this, the little angels in the room began giggling maliciously.

“Untenable,” I said proudly. This only seemed to encourage the children around me. “My name is Untenable,” I said again, my confidence deflating like a balloon with a tiny hole in it. 


Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Legacy

Ethel was reading a Hamish Macbeth novel when she heard someone knocking on her front door. "Who is it?" she called out, not taking her eyes off the page.

"It's me, Ethel. I mean it's me, it's Agnes," a muffled voice answered.

"Oh, Agnes, it's unlocked, come in," Ethel said, scanning the last two paragraphs on the page then tossing the book on the kitchen counter. 

"Ethel!" Agnes cried out as she came through the door, "Why aren't you ready yet?"

"Ready for what?" Ethel asked, unconsciously patting at her short bob. 

"Today is election day," Agnes said, pursing her lips in annoyance. "You're going senile, Ethel. It's a wonder you don't forget where your nose is."

"Oh that," Ethel scoffed. "I knew you'd come get me when it was time so I didn't worry myself with setting a date in my head."

"Well I'm here," Agnes said, "now let's get going. Everyone in the unit is going together and we have coordinated with the other units to make sure our turnout is as high as it can be - well, except for Doris in number 3, she had a fall this morning; and Elmer in 45, his horrible daughter already mailed in his ballot - but the rest of us will all be there, voting as a block."

While Agnes chittered on Ethel grabbed her cardigan and then the two went out to catch the shuttle waiting on the palm-lined street outside. The shuttle was nearly full by the time they got on, but they were able to find a seat together near the front. 

As the shuttle started down the road, a plump woman in her early 80's stood up at the front of the bus. This wasn't particularly noteworthy as the average age of the people on the shuttle was 79. 

"Hello, everyone," the woman said to her fellow riders. "My name is Phyllis, you might know me. Anyway, did everyone get a copy of their voting card as they got on the shuttle?"

She held up a card with large-font instructions printed on both sides.

"That's just wonderful," she said with a cheery smile as everyone nodded and held up their cards. "Anyway, you all know what to do," she continued. "For many of us, this might be our last election, or one of our last, so this is why we all vote together; together our votes have more power, together we can really make things happen." She held up her card as if looking over the instructions, then turned back to the people on the shuttle. "Anyway, when you vote, just follow the instructions on this card to the T. This is the state-wide platform that we all agreed upon, a platform that will mess things up for future generations as much as possible. It will take these kids decades to untangle the mess that we will be leaving behind for them. We can't live forever, but by voting together, we can ruin things for everyone else long after we are all dead and well into the future. And the best part is, none of us will be alive to have to deal with the consequences!"

At that, the entire shuttle erupted in cheers and laughter. Agnes turned to Ethel and nudged her with her elbow. "I just love this," she said. "I just love shitting the bed for these future generations."

"Agnes!" Ethel gasped with mock horror. "Language, please!"

Both woman burst into wild laughter. 

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Dentures

Paul kicked at the pile of corpses rotting in the midday heat, pushing a bloated old man off a boy whose pale face was covered with patches of soft fuzz. 

"Hey," he called out, "I've got one here." 

John looked up from the mouth of a middle-aged man then walked over to where Paul sat hunched over the dead boy. "Be careful with it," he said, gazing over Paul's shoulder. "You don't wanna crack 'em."

Paul waved off John's advice and gave a swift yank on the large pliers he had shoved into the boy's mouth. "Look at this!" he yipped, holding the large pearly tooth up for John to admire. "That's a thing of beauty."

John snatched the tooth from the pliers and then held it up to his own gap-toothed smile. "How does it look?" he asked Paul.

"Looks like this boy's mouth is going to buy us meat for dinner," Paul laughed, smashing his boot on the boy's chin and shoving the pliers back into the boy's mouth to extract another tooth. 

He made quick work of removing the rest of the teeth while John cleaned each one and then placed it in a small pouch. After they finished they moved on to another pile of bodies and then another, searching for men with teeth worth taking. By the end of the day they had collected a small fortune in teeth. As they made their way from the killing field the two men chatted merrily. 

"What will you do with your cut?" Paul asked John. 

"I'm gonna buy myself as set of new dentures," John said with a rotten grin. 

Thursday, June 2, 2022

Tigre

You like to think that the people in the memories you tell yourself exist only for you. They march through a singular plot line over and over, never growing old, never growing tired, never deviating from the comfort of the familiar story you have replayed for yourself a hundred thousand times. You look forward to sleep because those are the times when you see them, in your dreams when they are the most real. They talk to you and comfort you when you are alone in the darkness of night. They are yours and yours alone. They’ll never leave you. They’ll never betray you. They’ll always be there for you. They become a refuge from the fucked up realities of daily life. You visit them more and more often, reliving those moments and sometimes even venturing outside of those memories until you realize that they will respond to you, they will tell you the things you want to hear, they will do anything to make you happy and whole. You no longer need to sleep because now you can talk to them when your eyes are still open. You never have to be apart again. It’s a fantasy, but you don’t care. You visit it as often as you can until the line between reality and fiction starts to fade and then eventually, nothing is real. 

In the pale dusk, she is bathed in a soft light so that for the first time I can see her, truly see her and all that has happened. Her dull eyes and white hair, pale skin and thin lips. She is an empty husk. The girl who has walked beside me through the darkness for all these years is gone. I let her fill my vision and as I raise my head I meet her hollow gaze and we share a long moment of dark silence. 

I think back, as I peer into her face, to a time when her black hair was loosely curled and her skin was tawny and soft. When her bright eyes, dark and beautiful, glimmered in the twilight. When I was away from her, I would often think back on what had happened to her, what had happened to us, and watch her in my mind’s eye; walking right into the same hurt and suffering over and over, my memory projecting the scene onto the backs of my eyeballs, the plot never wavering, the results never changing, and each time I would watch this my stomach would tighten up and my palms would sweat and my heart would skip a beat and in this way I would live forever, my heart cheating the rules that bound that rest of humanity to the path of life and death, ever playing that scene over and over until I knew it all by rote and my heart ceased to beat all together. 

She never aged. She never changed. She was always perfect, in the summer of her youth even as I could feel winter coming for me from over the horizon. I put my hand over my still chest and she turns her face suddenly away, screwing up her eyes and biting her bottom lip so that her pale white chin blushes. I reach to strum her heart strings, to strike a soothing chord, but she falls away from me, and flops down in a large recliner, pockmarked with cigarette burns and patterned with stains, motioning for me to do the same. 

"Les caresses n'ont jamais transformé un tigre en chaton," she whispers around the butt of a cigarette.

Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Silence

Softly, quietly, silently I sit


in darkness at the end of May.

Friday, May 13, 2022

Happy Birthday

"What's wrong?" she asked, nuzzling his scratchy face.

"Nothing," he said, turning away from her to concentrate on his work.

"Something's wrong," she persisted. "I can tell. You know that I always know when something's wrong."

"I just need to work," he said. "I'm so far behind. I don't think I'll be able to catch up for months."

"Don't work," she said, pushing her way into his lap. "Work is stupid." She dragged her long nails across his chin, her crooked pinky catching on the corner of his mouth, and then kissed him on the lips. "Let's do something fun," she said. "Let's do something we both like."

"I can't," he said, avoiding her eyes.

"Why?" she said with a mock whine. "Nobody's here. All you do is work. You never pay attention to me. And today is my special day. It's my birthday. Did you forget? Today you should give all your attention to me. You love me and I know you want me. Stop fighting it and just love me."

He sank into his chair, letting out a heavy sigh. The ache, the pain, the hurt welled up inside him, crushing in all around his heart like a burning fist until it felt like his chest was caving in on itself. He closed his eyes, screwing up his face, emptying his mind, but it didn't help. Nothing ever did. It never stopped. It never let up. It never went away. It was always there; that fucking pain, invisible, intangible, incurable. If he had the guts, he would have cut it out himself, years ago. But...

When he opened his eyes, she was there, patient and unaging, her dark eyes fixed on him. "I'm here," she said softly.

He reached out to touch her face and she grinned eagerly, her tawny cheeks flushed with excitement. He felt his own heart begin racing frenetically, his guts twisting with anticipation, his fingertips buzzing with longing.

But as his fingers felt for her face, there was nothing but empty air and he leaned forward over his desk, alone. "No," he said to himself. "No, you're not."

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Gray Eden

“I thought you were applying to grad school this semester?” she asked. “What happened? What changed?”

“I’ve thought about it a lot,” he said, running his thumb along the side of his nose. “I’ve got too much going on. I don’t need to pile on more junk. It’ll weigh me down.” Somewhere outside, in the deep blue distance of the skyline, zipping above the horizon, the sound of a jet ripped through the air, rattling the windows of the building like the tail of a coiled snake. He let his mind race along the cliffs, out into the ocean, into the frothy, churning vastness of the water. 

“But you’ve been wanting to get back into school for so long, ever since I first met you. Remember when we first met and you were starting that program? You were so excited. Why didn’t you finish it?”

He looked past her for a moment, thinking back on how different things had been back then, back when they had first met. It felt like it had been a lifetime ago. Some things he could remember so clearly. Other things were floating just on the periphery of his memory, just out of reach. “I got distracted,” he said at last. “I had too much going on. I was working too much. I was burning the candle at both ends. It was a recipe for failure. I was bound to fail, actually, given what I had going on. Who could have succeeded with all that on their plate? I don’t want to do that again. I’m not going to make that same mistake.” He stopped and looked at her for a moment. “Besides, I have so much more going on, now. I have the kids. I have to think about the kids. I’d rather spend my time with the kids than in a classroom, listening to someone drone on about whatever.”

“Was I the reason that you dropped out of school the first time? Was I a distraction?” She smiled as she spoke, her red lips and white teeth grinning, her black hair hanging like a sheet of silk across her shoulders, down her back.

He hated her. He told this to her every day. “I hate you,” he would say, “please leave me alone. Please get out of my life.” But she never left. She was always with him, everywhere he went. Sometimes she would disappear for a few minutes and he would take a deep breath and feel a profound sense of relief, but then she would be back again, staring at him with her dark, unblinking eyes, clicking the stud in her mouth against her teeth.

“Yes,” he said, at last. “And no. I can’t blame you totally. It was just too hard to work full time and take classes, especially those classes. I suck at math. I’ve always sucked at math.”

“But you’re an accountant,” she teased. “You’re so good at math. You always help me when I’m stuck on something.”

“I am not an accountant,” he said, shaking his head. “I still don’t understand how I got into this field.” He thought back to when he had been hired, to that very first day and the interview that had landed him the job. He had just moved back from the Bay Area and had been struggling to find work as a programmer, like what he had been doing in Oakland. He had applied to hundreds of jobs, but had had no luck in even landing an interview when this call for a position as an accountant had come out of the blue. Desperate for an income, he has accepted the position, even though he had no formal training as an accountant. Now, six years later, he was still working that same job, even after everything that had happened. His job was a prison. He would never get out.

“You can get out of it, just go back to school!” she said, encouragingly. 

“I can’t,” he said. “I just can’t. I’m not going to spend all that time, when the kids are so young, away from them. I’d rather be with them. I’d rather spend my time with them and raise them and give them as much of myself as I can. They’re the only thing I care about in the world.”

“What about me?” she asked. She looked genuinely hurt, but he knew that it wasn’t real. Nothing about her was real. Everything she had ever told him had been a lie.

He turned and walked away, toward the floor to ceiling glass windows in the conference room. The windows faced west, overlooking a golf course that stretched off toward sheer cliffs that dropped into the churning Pacific hundreds of feet below.

“I won’t do it,” he said out loud, to himself. “I’m not going to be away from them.”

When he turned around, she was gone.

He stepped out of the small conference room and walked past a large C-shaped couch, and then down a short hall. The hall opened into an intersection of other hallways. One led straight ahead, one to the left, and one to the right. He turned right and followed the hall past the men’s restroom, past an elevator, and then to the office that he worked in.

The office was full of small cubicles and the tiny sounds of clicking keyboards. Everything was gray, from the floors to the ceilings. The southern face of the office was lined with floor to ceiling windows that looked out on a small lawn studded with large trees and hedges. Across the lawn, there was another office building with a red brick facade and black mirrored windows. He meandered through the maze of identical gray cubicles with small gray nameplates on them.

His own cubicle opened to the south, so that his back was toward the windows when he sat at his desk. He would often peer over his shoulder while pretending to work, turning his head so that he could see through a narrow path between cubicles to the world outside the office, to the sun and the sky, the grass and the trees, the wind and the birds. He had spent time in jail before, in solitary confinement, locked away for months straight, never being allowed to go outside and smell the fresh air or feel the sun on his face. Being in the office, being at work, reminded him of that confinement, only here it was worse, because he could see freedom anytime he wanted by simply turning in his chair, but it was always just out of reach, always there but never accessible. He spent his days trying to imagine a way out of the prison that was a “successful” career, but all of the things he came up with fell flat. At the end of the day, he needed the money, and he needed the benefits. He had two small children. He would make any sacrifice to provide for them, even if it meant trading away his happiness for the security of an office job.

He sat at his desk, staring blankly at the computer monitors in front of him. The walls of his cubicle were lined with pictures of his wife and his children, notes with account numbers for write-offs, interest, and bank fees; drawings his kids had made, and other miscellaneous printouts. Two cubicles over, he could hear the jolly voice of the office manager, Maria, chatting loudly with one of his co-workers.

“Did you love it? Was it great? How did she like it?” Maria asked in rapid fire succession. Maria was in her early sixties. She was overweight and quite homely, with a mannish face and short, thinning hair, but she was the kindest, most jovial person in the office.

“Oh, she just loved it,” the co-worker, Nicole, said. “It was great, really just amazing. It was different than when you and I went, just different. But the man who played Mufasa was the same. We met him after, outside; we stayed after to go and meet up with him outside. But all the children were different. They had different children. It was just so good.” Nicole was incredibly fat and very short. She was in her mid fifties but acted like she was in her teens. The world revolved around her and her opinions and she had no time for anyone that didn’t agree with her or at least submit to her point of view. Her moods would swing wildly from moment to moment. She hated fish and was allergic to coconut.

“It must have been great,” Maria said. “We didn’t have that drive - I mean you didn’t have it. It was right here in town. You know, they say that it’s the best musical of all time.”

“It really is,” Nicole said. “I just love that soundtrack. It’s so good.”

Meanwhile, in the cubicles adjacent to his, the four people in his team, the small group that handled cash and compliance in the office, were discussing Diana’s dinner plans for the weekend.

“I don’t want anything sushi,” she said. “After Tuesday, I was sick. Tuesday night and Monday morning were not good for me. It was not good. No good.” Diana was in her late fifties. She owned a motorcycle and fantasized about living off the grid. She had no children and her elderly mother was still alive, so Diana had never grown out of being a selfish teenager, interested in nothing but her own gratification. She was deeply conservative and believed wholeheartedly that there was a vast liberal conspiracy aimed at depriving her of her freedom and her liberty. She kept her hair in a short perm and wore long flowing outfits that hid her wide hips and de-accentuated her short stature. Diana hated all things ethnic or un-American.

“But you had the chicken,” Natasha told her, “even the chicken made you sick?” Natasha was in her early thirties. She had the body of a ten-year-old boy, if a ten-year-old boy were capable of growing basketball-sized breasts.  Natasha’s job in the office was to scan documents and then index them in the convoluted electronic document management system that stored all of the office's digital files and correspondence. She owned a camera in addition to her cell phone and this fact made her the unofficial office photographer.

“I know I had the chicken,” Diana said, “but it must have been something… It was something at that place…” She let the implication hang in the air without explicitly telling everyone that the reason she had become sick was the inferior quality of the food, inferior because it was Asian, and that it had been prepared by people of an inferior race. All of this had conspired to guarantee that she would become ill. In fact, she hadn’t been sick at all. But now that she had told everyone that she had been sick so emphatically, she herself already believed the lie so sincerely that it had become a truth.

“What exactly are you interested in eating?” asked Kate, whose cubicle opened towards Diana’s so that their backs faced each other while they were working. Kate’s cubicle used to be Diana’s, but Diana moved to her current cubicle nearly five years ago because the light coming in from the floor to ceiling windows on the south side of the office was too bright and was giving her headaches. Kate had taken a promotion about three years ago and had moved into Diana’s old cubicle, which had been vacant up until that point. Kate had a two year old son that looked like a tiny doppelganger of Mao Zedong. Her husband was most definitely a closeted homosexual.

“You know,” Diana teased, “salad… steak… normal stuff like that.”

“So you want American food?” Kate asked, laughing.

“Yes!” Diana said, exuberantly. “And if it’s gluten free, of course.”

At this moment, Ryan, the newest member of the cash and compliance team, chimed into the conversation. His cubicle was on the other side of a wall from Kate’s, caddy corner to Diana’s. Ryan had only worked in the office for about three months, but he enjoyed injecting himself into every conversation that he overheard, no matter the topic. He was secretly in love with Kate and every action he took in the office was in fact part of a plan he had devised to impress her and win her affection. Ryan was in his mid thirties.

“Y-y-y-ou know, D-d-d-iana,” he said, his voice building in volume as he stuttered over his words, “if you’re looking for American, because t-t-that’s what you’re looking for, American, and you’ll be Downtown, you know, like that’s what you said, American and Downtown, then there’s this place.” As he spoke, he lost his stutter. Diana, chirped her acknowledgement of what he was saying in all the appropriate places to show that she was listening attentively. “Well, like, you know, there’s like this place,” he continued. “It’s, uhm, well, like, it’s this American place, Downtown. Like, it’s so good. Like, it’s really good. So, like, well, y-y-y-ou want to go there, okay - if you aren’t going anywhere else, you know? Like, if you don’t have any other plans. Because, like, if you have something else, then whatever, you know? But, like, if not, then totally do this, okay? Like it’s so good. It’s called Sully’s. It’s American, Downtown, and, well, like, it’s great. You have to try the fries. That’s it. If you go. Like, if you have no other plans. Like, if this is the place you go to, because you can’t choose or something, like, then, like this is the place you should go. And go to the menu and choose the ‘Sully’s Fries’.”

“I will, thank you!” Diana said after a moment of uneasy silence following Ryan’s verbal outburst. “I really will, that sounds so good.”

“Just, like, check it out or something, if you have no other plans, you know, if you aren’t going somewhere else,” Ryan continued, encouraged by Diana’s positive reception.

“I really will,” Diana said. “Thank you, Ryan.”

He sat motionless, listening to the banter. Everyone here bantered. They had so much to say, so much to share. The sounds of their voices got under his skin.

“Let’s get out of here,” she chided. She was sitting on his desk, wearing a purple turtleneck dress and a pink wig with stark bangs that hung just above her eyes. “You hate being here, I hate being here; let’s just go.”

He put his earbuds in, ignoring her. He clicked around on his computer aimlessly, opening and closing windows robotically. The electronic buzz and pulse of downtempo instrumentals hummed in his ears like a digital mosquito. He felt as if there were a weight crushing down on his chest, on his hands, and on his stomach. She sat staring at him, her legs dangling from the gray desk. The sounds of clicking mouses and tapping keyboards wiggled into his ears, around his earbuds, like a thousand little chisels chinking away against his concentration.

“Come on,” she said, smiling. She put her hand on his hand. He looked down at where her fingers would have been. Her long nails. Her tanned skin. He was alone, surrounded by people who knew nothing about him, surrounded by people he couldn’t stand, surrounded by people that he felt no connection to. He was completely alone. He looked at where she had been sitting on his desk. He looked at the gray walls of the cubicle, dotted with photos, and odd notes. He felt nothing inside, nothing but weariness. A vision of falling flashed before his eyes. Falling through the sky; down, down, down. 

“Come on,” she said. She was standing behind him, wearing gray leggings and a black tank top. “Let’s go.”

As he stood, the weight that had been crushing him slid from his body and clattered to the floor with a sound like two trains slamming into each other at full speed. He took a deep breath and then walked into the sea of gray that surrounded him.

He walked through the maze of cubicles, past people melting into their chairs, fusing with their computers, evaporating into the aether of the office. She went just ahead of him, her long black hair flowing in a non-existent wind that touched only her, carrying the scent of her to him so that he was floating in her essence. As he watched her move, he thought to himself that she wasn’t real. Nothing about was real, and nothing about her ever had been. She was a figment of his imagination. She always had been. She always would be. Where was she now? What was she doing? He hated her. He felt it deep inside the core of his body. He hated her so very much for what she had done to him, how she had used him and then abandoned him. She turned to look at him over her shoulder, her teeth flashing white in the fluorescent lights, her hair framing her face like a black and purple crown, billowing in all directions like the rays of an anti-star; darkness, all consuming, all knowing.

He burst into the hallway, unable to breathe, the sun pouring in through tall windows running the length of the hallway like the luminescent ribs of a sleeping monster, pulsing with light as the dappled shadows of trees played across the panes. He walked down the hallway, his legs made of sand, melting into the gray ocean, his blonde hair hanging in his eyes like rays of the shining sun stabbing into his pupils, his lungs shriveling in the recycled air. She stood at the end of the hall eating a cookie, admiring her own reflection in a large glass door. Every step was like moving a mountain. He felt on the verge of collapse. She laughed gayly, the way she used to when she wanted to emphasize the point of what she was saying. The sound of her voice filled the hall, echoing like the laughter of a thousand Buddhas, shaking the building violently. On all sides a grim funeral procession moved past him, candles held in gaunt hands, faces covered by white shrouds, bodies draped in white robes.


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