Out a dreaming rider stares, window glass rattling bumps in the rails. Tilts her head up to disappear the city behind the pane and formless only water spreads out, out. Not tunneling into metropolis she coasts a Neptunian sheet. Though she thinks of home, or to and from, her thoughts are these packaged away in the closet of a day dream: that ahead is only foamy wash and a very long swim.
Hand in box again. Flip rattle flip flip stack rattle corners press against cardboard walls and soften and dull flip rattle flip stack flip he can feel the film slipping against film and backing and the corners fraying as he delves for another halting image, his hand plunged into the polaroid sea like looking for a puzzle piece the same as all the rest, or a single Lego, or a lawyer’s business card in a desk drawer. Mansion facades, children in graduation caps, sunsets, and dogs. Dogs in the dozens. Flip. Flip. Shake the box. Rattle. He puts the scene of the woman on the train into his shirt pocket and drops the orange shoebox on the coffee table’s glass. He checks his watch. He leans back into the couch and turns on the TV. He puts his feet up and the buzzing voices upturn the small hairs around his ears and he loses the dialogue and his mind wanders. It takes off, actually. The countdown’s inevitability in 10… 9… 8… a lit fuse fizzling a winding path and the cannonball, fastened to his mind by a thin wire, fires whoom up through the roof and into the night sky. Ballistic arc over and then down, over the river and down into Red’s where his used-to-be-friends are sitting at this same moment in time. And he sees his error repeated, he has been pulled along by that wire and the TV is gone now because he’s in the bar and saying words again that darken faces all the while urging himself silence.
Back again, he bends his knees, repositions his feet in front of the box, and slides his heels forwards, pushing it off the table. Dogs tumble and scatter.
He falls asleep. He knows this not because he wakes up the next morning, but because he can see himself. He hovers in a false mirror just above his own visage and can see the pupils dashing behind the eyelids, dragonflies zipping the surface of summer water globes. He can see the thin brown eyebrows, the jutting chin, the deep-placed eyes and the uneven nostrils. He sees the hair, almost shoulder-length, splayed darkly crepuscular, haloing the pale face. He has the urge to pick his own nose. He can see the thing, right at the cusp of the nostril, a thin white slug. Will he remember it’s there in the morning? He floats a ghost above a ghost. The cold clothes, shallow breaths, the temporary departure of sentience. He moonlights as a dead man.
Now the dream flips him up, right-side up so he sees the ceiling fan, and he is dropped into himself, in shock of infinite freefall.
Sunlight.
Sunlight slashes across him through the blinds. He lifts his arms and moves his hands among the motes of dust and they strobe softly as they float from slotted light to slotted light. He puts two fingers into his shirt pocket and pulls the stack of pictures. Putting them between his curled lips, dry, he sits up and unbuttons and removes his shirt. He stands, steps over the legs of a man sleeping face-down on the floor, and goes into his bedroom. His hand smooths the corner of a movie poster, uselessly asserting fuzzed masking tape. He tosses the shirt vaguely towards a laundry hamper and pulls the photos out of his mouth to swallow saliva, then drops them onto the nightstand. It holds them up with its black-coated metal, spindly curls daintily tangential against the carpet. He reaches over another man, naked in his blankets, slides his hand over the sheets and pulls a flannel from them, buttoning some of its buttons. He brings the photos into the pocket of this shirt.
He steps through the torn screen door into the outdoor kitchenette (fun and energy-efficient, this fully-equipped outdoor kitchenette will take any party to the next level. With three hidden compartments for beverages, an automatically retractable awning, and decorative strings of tasteful white lights, is there a better way to reinvent the summer gathering? You choose the tile, you choose the paneling, you choose the life you want). Two men hunch over the frosted glass table, sharing a plate of scrambled eggs dotted with hot sauce and they greet him with laughter as they tap their bare feet on the scuffed ocean-surf-sapphire tile to the fiddle of folk radio. He counts the rent, a pile of bills under a quartz crystal on the cocktail fridge. He finds his boots on the stovetop and he takes the stone walkway to the picket fence gate, off-balance on the melted rubber heels.
Sidewalk squares sedentary and even, road wide so the noise of the neighbors’ garage doors doesn’t shut-shut-shutter the silence of a 6pm dinner sit-down, lollipop trees with ample berth for the telephone wires. The 6mbps wires gliding on sex into home offices and screeching back to their creators delivering the details of internet shopping habits. The sun is wrinkling wind-rolled shards of tree bark and the smell of their vitality almost reaches his nose before instead he takes inthe reek of sprayed and beheaded astrolawn. He wipes his nose on his sleeve and picks a low-hanging leaf from a lollipop tree to wipe away the evident snot, folds the leaf, and blows his nose on the back.
He stands at the bus stop in a bowl of summer light and leafblower drone and low howls from the highway over the berm. The sky meets his smile as he turns his head back, squinting at the noon sun, staring a moment too long. The after image is a smeared purple stain which blocks the bus until it grows to fill his view. He trips up the steps and hands the driver a five, keep the change, dropping to sit next to a man reading a newspaper. The man is wearing shining brown leather shoes, gray suit pants, and a silver watch. He has no shirt, and the bottom edge of the newspaper is hovering in the thick gray hair on his stomach. In the corner of the left page is a small ad for a storage sale sponsored by a methodist church and he decides to see what is available at the sale.
When the bus stops at a depot under a hotel he transfers to another going into Jersey City. He tells the second driver he has some change somewhere here, let’s see, then he grips the railing of the bus dizzy sorry that’s the heat getting to me and the driver waves him on sternly.
In the seats in front of him two women discuss their husbands. “Frank’s a fucking psycho” and truly has no place being around those children but they love him and his transience; his absence cultivates fondess and forgiveness. “I wish Raj ever came home at all,” says the other. “It’s weeks in Tokyo, hours in London-” meanwhile strip malls are suds carried past in the roadside riptide. The world is a car dealership. We are all the last donut in the box or a floppy dollar in the coke machine, signs with jagged speech bubbles, triangular flag strings sales announcements folios ties black shoeshine urinal spray branded pens radiant fillings. Drawers hiding antidepressants. Business cards. We are frenzied pitches and hem-hawing hesitations, squatting appeals to children and canned jokes. There’s a script for everything and what can I do to put you in the leather seat of this car – designed by NASA by the way, did I mention that? – and watch you motor away, today? We are thin motivations and waxed-and-buffed tile floors and desks marooned in the middle of the antiseptic sheen “-just minutes at home and the whole time his phone is on and flashing work, work. I tell him ‘Raj you can’t keep doing this to us, have one fucking conversation with your manager that isn’t an expression of servility’ and he brushes me off with some roses and toys for the kids.” Frank’s wife: at least he’s good with the kids.
The women get off in New Brunswick, now in an argument about organ replication. The driver is laughing at radio jokes. In her laughter she’s spit some of her soft pretzel onto the windshield and the bus lurches when she leans forward to wipe it off. It lurches across the tamed Passaic and the sprawled, bowing Hackensack. The pavement of the bridges is dry and brown, an approximation of clay. Behind the trees and the apartments and across the golf courses and swum out into the Hudson Bay is a large copper statue whose human form startles an eye attuned to corners and glass.
He asks the driver to drop him at Mercer Street. Sorry sir, I just go to the terminal. Or: Which Mercer Street? He asks her to stop now, in that case. She pulls over and he takes his time on the steps, holding himself in the door frame to test the air. The driver hits the horn hard. He is startled, so he apologizes, and meets the sidewalk with his warped bootheel.
He faces an old man leaning with one hand on a walker, the other clutching a Black & Mild. The stench of the cigar fills the convenience store awning under which the old man stands sentinel. Later tonight, when the man smokes the cigar’s counterpart in the pack in his shirt pocket, the streets will be radiating the heat of the day and the moon splashing a flag’s shadow across the sidewalk, and he will balloon the awning with hot, moist lung-expelled smoke, finally enough to pass some buoyancy threshold, and he and the store will rise in a slow roar. Ripping progeny pipes apart from their mycelial mothers, the concrete nest will levitate exposed, and dropping gravel in the wet plains west of Secaucus it will shake in the wind and begin to plummet with some grace, thundering to wedge itself in the comfortable and zoning-ordinanced space between two confused suburban homes and the store’s owner will have to build up a new supplier network to provide the requested goods here, the right kind of craft beer and the Ms. Meyers soaps.
Next to the smoking man there are three vacant beach chairs arranged in a semicircle. The man grins. The man coughs. The man takes a drag. The man spits. The man asks him for change. No sir sorry sir what flavor is that sir? Vanilla that’s right thank you. And he leaves the walker and cigar and shining sweaty forehead behind in vain search. Then he turns around with a doorknob question:
“Hey, you know where the methodist church is, on Mercer Street?”
“Take a left, then another left, then another left, then another left. Hee hee hee!”
Complying, he strides up the block, a steeply inclined street and he feels sweat dripping onto his hips and back as he climbs. He reaches an intersection and turns left around a laundromat that is empty, but it seems all the machines are running. He looks ahead and sees he is on the peak of a small hill, and across the way he sees a fence overlooking a trailer park and behind it a small, man-made-rectangular bay. Supported on the top of the chest-height fence by screwed planks is a damp wooden sculpture, a ring about 4 feet tall and 1 foot deep. Broom handles are attached around the outside of the ring. He reaches into his shirt pocket and looks through the photos. He finds the one with the boy sitting perched within a ring, just like that one, with water and trees behind him just like here, with an older couple, probably grandparents, standing in front, taking a picture of their boy. In the photo, these three are unique among the other families in the park behind them because of their generational gap and their lack of a dog. He had salvaged the photo from a nearly-discarded scrapbook at a cousin’s funeral service.
Prostrating neuter before a boy Apollonian aloof in a wooden scythe-box ascended front of the sun, which drowns itself in the darkening canopy. A thin arm in a sagging sleeve is wrapped around a curled back encumbered by flesh and air. But the greatest burden lightens daily because the bowl of life is atilt, the water is pouring out into the dry soil and the lovers grin to know of their sweet deaths.
He walks past the wooden ring above the fence, comparing it to his picture. The coincidence confirms some meaning for him. The road dives down ahead, merging in a swoop with the windstream migration of Rt 78. There are no left turns except an alley next to a closed-down theater. Nailed in the brick of the alley’s opening is a green street sign too worn-down to read. Two girls and a young boy come out of the alley with hockey jerseys slung over their shoulders give me the phone you dumbfuck I’m telling mom you said that word go ahead but you want ice cream later, yeah? they start running when they escape the shade of the alley. He turns in. Steps over a wet garbage bag spilling out from below a dumpster. At the end of the alley a wooden boardwalk is raised above the littered, urine-soaked pavement and hosts the shackled stalls of a hidden market. It stretches to either side along another alley crossing the first in a T shape. He climbs the boardwalk’s wooden stairs and follows its path to the left. He passes hung t shirts, stacks of cabinets, pinball machines, lamp shades by the hundreds, televisions, books; the faded curled spines of brown books. A dark-stained wooden cross with a mirror finish flashes above the mayhem, hoisted out sideways by iron supports drilled into the brick wall and below the cross a sign with a pictorial representation of a chapel and below that a laminated schedule for the storage sale. He ducks his head under a towel hung across a stall entrance. The stall is full of towels on wooden rod hangers in rows, stacks, layers. Multitudes. There are white towels offwhite deep red cool gray and the vivacious nautical botanical patterns that you find slashing like wounds down the shore. As he walks among them they brush his shoulders and they shudder and the disturbance causes the rods to tilt and towels to slip, sliding to the end of the hangers and they fall all around him to cover him and he’s smothered in their soft plush and their rough vinegar smells and he continues walking under the weight of multitudes of towels, a flood of them. He is descending into a towel tunnel and he breathes through the fabric, laboring air into his lungs. There is no sunlight down here but a glow grows at his feet and he kneels and begins to pull towels out from under him, excavating the light. A guitar melody meets his ears through the thick fiber walls and every towel he removes reveals another layer of a song and he can hear the words
An-da-lu-si-a with fields full of grain
I have to see you again and again
Take me Spa-nish caravan
Yes, I know you can
and after a pause the panic rises in their instruments and in his throat and he is spiraled down, wrung-out in a now all-white light. He blinks, again and again. He is staring at a lamp bulb. Looking away at the stall’s attendant – hey buddy, what’d you do that for you tryin’ to blind yourself? – whose face is covered in a purple afterimage, he puts down the lamp. Got any film equipment? Yeah try the stalls down the opposite end the church there. The attendant props him up by putting hands on his shoulders. They’re warm, and steady. They hold him up and push him out.
He looks up at the buildings that back into the alley. They’re brick and concrete and stucco. They have windows and false barn doors and fire escapes. They’re two to three stories high. They are topped with water towers. The sun has skated past the opening overhead and seethes light on the top row of windows while the bottom of the alley darkens. He finds the booth with the cameras, the film, the lights, enough for a few professional studios. The attendant is an older woman in jeans with a t-shirt picturing a man with rumpled hair. Over it, a long white cardigan. She is playing a greatest hits album on a turntable. She sits on the edge of a wooden bar stool with her arms crossed and one foot on the stool’s peg, the other on the boardwalk floor.
“Come on in. Take a look around,” she says.
“Thank you,” he says.
“Nice day.”
“If you say so.”
He examines stacks and boxes and cartridges. 531, 235, Karat, 828. He doesn’t know what any of it means.
“What do the numbers mean?” he asks.
“If you don’t know, you probably don’t care,” she says.
“What if I want to learn?” he asks.
“You don’t,” she says. “What can I do for you?”
“Pictures,” he says, showing her the stack from his shirt pocket. She nods. Then again more vigorously. She is jutting her chin in the direction of the table he is leaning over. He realizes that she is indicating that he should lift the tablecloth and look underneath, and that though what he’s looking for is under there, she doesn’t have the patience to watch him go through the piles of photographs, the rubber-banded albums, the framed and the torn, the stained and the defective. He gives her a dollar and throws as many as he can into a plastic bag and she flips her record as he backs out of the stall.
Slouched low in a beach chair outside of the convenience store, he shares the awning with the man with the cigar as he rifles through the pictures. Flip flutter. He waves the smoke away from his face as he pulls pictures of dogs and sunsets and wedding parties from the bag, dropping them into the garbage pail in front of the store. Those your folks? asks the smoking man, gesturing briefly with his left hand before returning it quickly to the walker.
“No,” he says.
“Why are you throwing them away?”
“They’re not mine.”
“The fuck you looking at other people’s pictures for?” the man asks.
“I’ve got chips in the pool,” he says. “Which one do you like?” holding up a pair of photos. The man leans forward.
“You’re going to miss your bus you keep it up with those photos.” He looks up and down the road. The bus is waiting for the light at the end of the block. He jumps from the chair and dashes up the hill, stumbling then throwing himself up off the pavement straining his wrist then he’s knocking politely on the bus door. The driver looks at him and she’s unwrapping another soft pretzel with one hand and pushing the lever to open the door with the other sir this is not a bus stop you realize? and he hands her a quarter what the fuck is this, 1925? but he is already in the back and there is no way she’s getting out of that seat to force him off the bus because she wants to get home in time for the debate. She’ll be in the dog house if she can’t speak intelligently about it and without those morning coffee talks with the captain her career’s over so she just lets this bum lay down in the back.
He raises his hips, thrusts out a leg and uses his boot toe to turn the reading light on as the bus hums onto those silent, smooth, thin roads, fluent through the meadow stalks, cutting the curtains of the smell of nothing dying. The moon strokes the top of the bus like an absent-minded lover and the silent passengers bounce in their fabric chairs, embraced by the disco hotel carpeting and the thin, underdeveloped plastic chair arms while their legs shrink to fit their allotted areas. A man answers the phone, says nothing, the voice on the other end says a lot, and he hangs up. A boy can’t decide how far back on his head his sweatshirt’s hood should sit. The driver laughs suddenly to a joke played through her headphones and the bus lurches and rides the rumble strips and though it doesn’t slide off the side of the road what if it did? and just tipped into the swamp there and bubbled into the thick deep.
Here’s one, he thinks, here’s something: it’s a photo of a man with a red trucker hat and a red flannel shirt and a thick red beard holding a glass flagon of beer with a hand on someone’s back – only their arm is visible – and a face of apology. Or: it’s not a photo but a hole in space and the cabin of the bus decompresses explosively throwing him through the tiny square hole into a bar called Red’s.
As he pushes the bar door inwards, brushing snow from his hair, he has the feeling of doing things in the wrong order. Inside, a bouncer sits on the edge of a stool with large forearms crossed at his chest – the man recognizes him, and recognition turns to wariness, following him with its glare as he makes his way to the bartender. She is a woman with long blonde hair tied behind her head. She is wearing a black polo shirt with the Red’s logo (a red-feathered bird with inexplicably long legs). She’s polishing a glass while listening to an old regular retell stories of their young and grossly overpaid boss’s old and creepily amiable boss’s time-theft.
He gestures to the bartender, holding up two fingers then tapping his head with his middle finger’s knuckle. A young man at the bar sees this and elbows his friend. They are laughing as they pick up two wiffle ball bats leaning against the wall below the dart board and the bartender pours two generous shots of vodka, then slides two yellow hardhats over the bar to him. He loops their straps over his wrist and then picks up the glasses. He turns to the crowd in the bar. Most are huddled in pairs or alone with their jackets pulled around them to shake the memory of the cold winter air. A chaotic slavic polka rolls out of the speaker system. He finds the red trucker hat and begins to navigate – followed by the two guys with the plastic bats – between purses slung on chairbacks and cavalier elbows stuck out in attempts at confidence.
Along with the red hat hover the faces of three women above a round hightop towards the back of the bar. He approaches as their conversation stalls. One of the three women sees him and sits up, torn from talk by his appearance. Before the man with the red hat can turn around to see who she is looking at, the hat is pulled off. In a familiar motion, he fits one hardhat on the man’s head, slipping his wrist from between the straps.
The sitting man turns around and pulls the helmet away. “Fuck off,” he says, when he realizes who is standing behind him.
“Old time’s sake,” is his reply.
“You shouldn’t be here,” says the woman who recognized him. She has dyed her hair with a purple streak and a blue streak. He likes it, and would like to be able to say so. She looks past him, refusing eye contact. He turns back to the standing man.
“I should be here. We should be here. None of you can take a joke,” he says. Though nothing he’d said when he was thrown out of the bar months before had been a joke, it wasn’t meant to be entirely serious. He’d only conveyed the words with vitriol, the kind of dark dissatisfaction that grows in the gaps between people. The standing man puts the hardhat on the table, arms crossed, refusing the drink.
“More for me,” he says, and throws back his head to pour down the first glass of vodka.
The moment the alcohol hits his throat he is smashed in the back of the head by one of the plastic bats and the two guys behind him are now both bent over laughing. Everyone in the bar is chanting some Russian word. He never bothered to learn what it meant. He sways on his feet, dizzied by the impact and holding back vomit. He adjusts his hardhat, turning to face the guy who hadn’t swung his bat, and lifts the second shot glass as if to perform a toast. He smiles, tipping his head back the way he’d do, months later, while waiting for the bus, smiling in the sun. He smells trees’ bark, though he doesn’t recognize the scent. The man with the bat sways uncertain. He looks for guidance at the people sitting at the table but they are all looking past things, wishing in their minds that this wasn’t happening, uncomfortable with the outcome of events. The smell of the bark is fading, pushed up and away like a front of warm air by a new smell: discarded grass, recently mowed, unable to pull moisture from the earth from which it has been severed, yet smothered by a heavy blanket of dew, carelessly slated to evaporate.
When he is hit in the head a second time his vision goes. He stumbles into the red flannel shirt and hugs it to him like a blanket. Or: He hangs off of it like fitting his fingers through the schoolyard fence. He recovers just before sliding to the ground and pushes himself up, using his old friend’s chest for balance. The room’s spin jerkily slows and stops and he is offered a plastic bat to hold himself up.
“The hole you’re digging yourself into is starting to look pretty roomy,” says the man as he fits his trucker cap back on.
“Let’s go outside.” It is the bouncer, arisen from the throne on the edge of the stool in front of the door. He feels the bouncer’s large, heavy hands wrapping around his shoulders and feels himself pulled backwards to the front of the bar.
“Put it on his tab!” he shouts to the bartender, pointing back at the group of friends. He shrugs off the heavy like cement hands and, theatrically using the plastic bat as a cane, walks out into the street. He is unused to crying and is glad when the tears come to wet his face. He tries to catch them in his hand but it makes him dizzy to try to do so while he walks, so he lets them drop to the ground. They melt into the snow, a vanishing trail.
The bus from Jersey City drops him off at the bus depot and the driver is speaking with her colleagues as they prepare for the next scheduled departure. He knows he will not be allowed onto another bus and he begins to walk home. He is sweating in the summer mid afternoon sun.
He could be in a prehistoric swamp. He can ignore the buildings, the lights, the roads. He can ignore the lollipop trees, which are not really trees but a concept of trees designed by someone who grew up in a concrete-and-glass booth looking out at other booths and generally content with the stolid existence of all of the booths. Ignoring these things he needs to simply pluck a stalk of onion grass growing alongside the sidewalk, chew on it until his saliva turns green, and smell the air for a draft of marshy decomposition. Then he can be in the swamp.
In the prehistoric swamp things are nameless. If there are people, they are also nameless, and really there isn’t a distinction between things and people. In the prehistoric swamp, he might see all things as people: The way a person reacts to rainfall – feeling its tiny impacts, feeling it brush the dirt from their arms, taking in the splashed-up odors of what is around them – is no different from the way a real tree or a stone reacts to rainfall.
All the people out in the swamp, the ones huddled among the tree roots and the ones bathing in its streams, in turn are merely other things. The way a stone forgets the destruction of a nearby stone is the same as a human who forgets the splitting open of their kin, though it happens right in front of them. Though a stone is split open by a rumble in the earth and its crumbled half, no longer rooted but instead compromised with a new network of cracks and separations, leans against its neighbor, its neighbor stands still in the rain and continues its slow journey from dirt to shape to dirt again.
Arriving home, he walks up the driveway having taken off his melted-rubber boots, soles of his feet stinging with the grit atop the pavement. He falls into the cracked white leather of the outdoor kitchenette’s sofa. The porch light is on and illuminates his hand and drops his hand’s shadow onto the sapphire tile. Looking at his hand’s shadow – the silhouette of a great oceanic mammal in a great sapphire sea – makes him feel like his mind is loose at the places where it connects itself to the inside of his skull. This feeling is not unpleasant. The bag of photos slides off of the couch as he loosens his grip, feeling very tired. A photo falls into his view.
Two golden rings, lit with the flicker of a shrine candle, intersect with two more golden rings, the twin shadow of a man’s glasses frames in the double pane of a dark window. His stare conjoined with that of his bisected soul disestablishes the one. Without access to his own reflection, the truths and surety of optics are a well-made raft, like bamboo rope and sapling ply, on which he too easily drifts through the unwarped glass.