Two Poems by Christos Kalli

Have To
 

A Have to

Hanging in the middle

By my unibrow. Have to is my middle name.

Everything I do I Have to do. 

Even that every 21 days I Have to 

Cut my hair makes me Have to be sad. 

                 We are not so different, you and I. 

                 Stop and think, every time I said

That I Have to go, I said I will be back,

And I was back with less of myself and more

Have to. In fact, even now that I breathe,

That we breathe, it’s a Have to. Now that I blink,

That we blink, is another Have to, and if you say

That you don’t Have to, you lie. You. 

                 We are not so different, you and I, 

Which brings me to my point that I am not unique. 

I am sad 

Because my Have to is the same as yours. 

When I see me

In other people’s mirror I always Have to say

It’s not what it looks like.

 

 

 

 

 

Senseless
 

My voice is in the kitchen

Cooking lava cake and it is

Ready to erupt. Meanwhile,

In the valley, my sight is 

 

Swimming against the currents

Of the river and hooks  

A fisherman. In the library

My taste is reading well-

 

Seasoned books of the past.

My sound is out in a suit

And a collar mounting

Firmly to the cheek and it

Is serious about finding

 

Peace. A bomb charms 

My touch and it is ready

To blow up. My smell is

Watching the landing on

 

The moon and something’s 

Fishy. Me I am here pressing

Black and white ice cubes

On the back of my tongue.

 

 

 

 

 

Christos Kalli, born in Larnaca, Cyprus, is currently studying for his undergraduate degree in English Literature at the University of Glasgow. He is active in the English and American poetry scene, and he is always trying to broaden his network. Recently his poems have appeared or are forthcoming in the London Journal of Fiction, Stoneboat, The Hartskill Review, Sunset Liminal, Prole, Lunar Poetry, among others.

Small Town Politics (For Kids) by Rita Twan

Ms. Alice was just trying to teach us a lesson, is what we told the police when they asked us. It was two days before the class election and Ms. Alice said we should conduct a poll of who people were going to vote for. So everyone ripped a scrap of paper from our notebooks and we passed up our folded votes.

DeMarcio, Dana, and L.J. were the choices. DeMarcio makes fun of my “fat chinky” brother so I sure as hell wasn’t voting for him. I cried and told the principal because my brother isn’t that fat, he’s trying really hard and it’s tough because my mom keeps giving him really big lunches. The principal told me it wasn’t okay to cry all the time and that what was I going to do when I got to middle school because the teachers there don’t let us act like babies.

I wanted to vote for Dana because she’s Black and there aren’t any other Black kids in our grade and I know what that is like because I’m the only Asian girl, but Dana told everyone she hates Chinese people and I asked her why and she said I definitely didn’t hear right because she said Chinese food, she hates Chinese food not people.

One time L.J. said that the reason everyone likes the cream part of the Oreos is because white is better than black and then Dana got really red and I started to cry and then Mr. Suarez told me to sit outside in the hallway by myself because I was interrupting Spanish class and I told him I’d stop crying and he said to say it in Spanish because “no English in this class and no ching chong either” and so I wasn’t going to vote for L.J. either.

I was really only trying to be funny because sometimes I want to say something but I can’t because I don’t really have friends and my voice is quiet and I don’t really speak out loud in classes. So I thought, haha wouldn’t it be funny if I did a write-in and so I wrote “SpongeBob Squarepants” really fast and handed that up.

Ms. Alice tallied up our votes on the board and I could tell when she got to mine because her face pinched up all small probably because that is not how she expected her lesson to go and she said, “Who wrote SpongeBob Squarepants. That’s not funny this is not a joke.” Except it was funny and everyone laughed and I laughed too even though you’re not supposed to laugh at your own jokes.

So then the next day everyone is talking about it in the hallway and I’m excited because my brother always says I’m funny, but my parents say my English is too fast for them to understand so usually I think maybe I’m not funny because one out of three is not a very good review. I wrote in my journal that it was a very, very good day because I learned that I am funny. But then it’s the election and SpongeBob Squarepants gets 40 of the 62 votes and it turns out that is actually very bad because then we didn’t have a student president. The student president is in charge of planning our Spring Fling dance, which is a big deal for our grade because it means we are done with elementary school and are big kids now and can go to middle school.

We are supposed to vote for a king and queen just like high schoolers on TV do but our teachers said “You lost your right to voting and to dancing.” This was okay for me because I am not very good at dancing and also I guess not very good at voting, but it was not okay for DeMarcio who got very very mad because he wanted to be king and he starts walking around the room and breaking things and Ms. Alice tells him to sit down or she will give him detention. DeMarcio tells her he’ll do what he wants and that his dad pays her salary and can shoot her in the brains, and then he turns over the hamster’s cage and then the hamster starts going very fast all over the room.

The other kids are frozen and Ms. Alice is too because we are scared to step on the hamster but Ryan stands up and takes his shirt off and starts screaming, “NOOOOO NOT MR. TWINKLE” and he runs into the hallway and starts smashing his head into the lockers. Ms. Alice can’t run well because she is old so she goes to the principal and he says that special kids like that should be forced to take medicine and he calls Ryan’s grandma to pick him up but Ryan’s still running and then he smashes into DeMarcio’s locker but this time he falls on the ground and there’s blood everywhere and Ryan is screaming on the floor and I am crying.

DeMarcio runs into the hallway with a fist of broken crayons and hamster bedding and he sees the blood on his locker and Ryan on the ground and he gets mad and he starts kicking Kyle and then more kids come out from the other classrooms to see what’s going on in the hallway and then DeMarcio slaps another kid on the arm and says “RYAN COOTIES” because everyone plays that game and everyone starts to hit everyone because no one wants Ryan’s cooties and they’re screaming and the ambulance comes but we’re all in the hallway and they can’t get through and Ryan is bawling and asking for his grandma.

The next day DeMarcio’s dad comes in with his badge and he puts Ms. Alice in handcuffs and he sits with us and so does the principal and they tell us Ms. Alice was a sick woman who took away our constitutional right to vote and she would never hurt us again and that teachers forget that our good American tax dollars pay their salaries. I start to cry and mumble “I..was just…trying..to be…funny” in between gasps but the principal makes me sit outside by myself. I am interrupting the class.

 

 

 

Rita Twan is borrowing lots of money from the government so she can fix your teeth one day.

Two Poems by Jessica Scicchitano


I Return to the Body
 

Me, a prick
who tried toes at jazz
and tap, like most young
suburban blood preparing
to age in puny glory.
I hid between Lycra, tulle,
skin, where cartilage retreats
to harden, like a nose chewy
from cocaine.

For years,
I hadn’t known the color of a used tampon,
not knowing my own color for years.
What the hell is a petrol tarnish, the falling
Euro, a stamp collection, shop class?

And there I am.
On the cusp, wearing
a body antennae,
stringy blonde on blonde
on blonde on popsicles
on chocolate
on hegemony
timid in New York vagrancy.

Yea, sure, there’s festivals.
Cannes, Lilac, Crawfish,
but I need a good terrorizing,
to beg God not to steal what’s eerie
from clanging bed coils, linen, lofty
sophistication with women.

And there I am, 
and there you are,
lighting my mangled body
mashing your thumb into the cow lick,
the wick of my wickedness.

Tears of slick kerosene,
a stinging lubrication
and I zone out of the ohm
inside my moan while I meet
the sun in tongues.

Clouds conceal, but it’s me bouncing
to the deep synth music of early death.
We lie devoted assault and battery,
a moon shot, moon slick magnetism,
there’s method in it,
yes, prism on
prison on pop,
sexual privy, 
posing as clover,
syndicating stench of marine life.

There isn’t enough water to dull the heat I feel
from speedy aging and I wouldn’t waste time reviving a
time-sickened leaf, tempt December garland to rehydrate.

This (the body)
is as unremarkable as water in fine stemware,
a continuing tinge of things that
crystal cups are made of.

 

 

 

 

 

Sal y Pimienta
 

I like a man who draws the line
at an SSRI, man with an ability to feel
the time of day with his eyes closed,
the sun's position imprinted on his palm.

A man who brushes his teeth
when no one's around
simply to "feel right," almost right, ravaged
by America, believing he's getting a good night's sleep

while lashes flutter, loves homeopathy, cats, 
homeopathy for cats and desire to repeat
what he's read, who wakes and does. A man
who feels certain marijuana is safe, even sharpens 

his wit, who walks with a pretty woman to make his cock
come alive, always going home alone
to devour leftovers in a crook of a pantry,
crumbs flying, who won't sit to detox.

I like confident men who dance well, court raindrops
before they're erased by the windshield wiper, men
with various settings to swipe ghosts clothed as fog,
sour dinners logged circa. 1998, how these are all equal.

He'll recognize the smell of plasticity, 
walk with his friends and take his pulse, 
gush over blood pressure changes, whether conversation
is the cause. I like him in whom I am frightened

to discover myself, both of us despising
words like "unfurl," resorting to bloodletting.
We rub the antidepressant powder places beyond
our gums, afraid of convertible-car-luxury-drugs

prison with an intellect backing us up into the moon
driving together toward an exit too engaging, 
too connecting, left only to "like,” too little to love.

We stare for long periods at paintings we'll never correctly
analyze, the desperation in our eyes more missile
than massage. We set fire to the masterpiece.

 

 

 

Jessica Scicchitano was the Nonfiction Editor of Salt Hill Journal throughout her fellowship in the Syracuse University Creative Writing MFA Program. You can find some of her work in PreludeSixth FinchBirdfeast, and more. Plagued by claw machines, Twin Peaks, and cows, she will continually wish to co-host a show on QVC and dread her olive oil allergy. She lives in Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn with her three-legged cat, Will.

Commerce by Edward Yoho

 

Anders looked at the mod-freak standing behind the counter. When he’d made his first visit here a week ago, the proprietor was ‘out’ and a different goon had been on duty. Out of pure habit, Anders rapidly, but thoroughly, catalogued the employee’s enhancements to determine threat potential. Arms and legs fitted with internally anchored exoskeletons. Glistening blue, chemically and mechanically impervious skin. Two ocular implants. Slight bulge in the abdomen indicative of a substandard hormone pump. Two and one half meters tall, 200 kilos. All told, more than $300,000 in augmentation that he could discern in less than five seconds. Anders suspected that the owner of this establishment valued the brute intimidation approach to keeping his clientele from becoming unruly.

The employee last week refused to divulge the name or whereabouts of the proprietor. He’d been a four out of ten on the threat scale, and Anders had turned him inside out. The mod-freak this week was at least a nine. Beyond this being a misplaced allocation of capital, Anders thought, it was becoming tedious. I may as well enjoy myself. He looked forward to the challenge of neutralizing the goon behind the counter.  

The interior of the lobby / reception area was in the same, ill-kempt condition as he’d remembered it. The semi-sentient mod-freak behind the counter was bad enough, but the décor was positively grotesque. Black wool carpet covered the floor and walls. Acoustically absorbent tiles on the ceiling also in black. The counter was made entirely of glass and covered in fingerprints. Dim lighting. Six overstuffed, black leather chairs. The temperature was 16 degrees Celsius. The tang of cheap cologne was eye watering. The only sounds were the mod-freak’s nasal breathing and the soft purr of an air circulation system.

“Yo, sport!” Anders announced at ¾ volume so he’d be heard over the circulation fans. He walked up to the counter and continued in a more conversational tone. “What’s on tap?”

The mod-freak turned, selected a menu from the stack directly behind him, and sent it sliding down the counter. It stopped precisely one centimeter away from Anders’ hand. They certainly didn’t hire him for an expansive vocabulary.

He turned his attention to the menu and ignored the mod-freak. Anders, like almost every other person on the planet who could afford it, also had genetic and cybernetic enhancements. In his case, all of the modifications he’d chosen weren’t done solely to satiate his vanity or the usual, banal reasons. Most of them also allowed him to be vastly more effective with his chosen profession. What he lived for. The deal. The sale. Convincing others, one way or another, to buy what he was offering. Products, consultation, and protection for the sex trade. He was the legendary merchant for items to enhance coital bliss. He was the undisputed ayatollah of the libido. He was the Godfather of the fuck trade. You’re Goddamn right.

It took less than thirty seconds for Anders to commit this week’s entire 110-page menu to memory, and required no more effort than it took to turn the pages. Anders’ photographic memory, his single most expensive mod, cost $750,000 and was worth every cent. In the last twenty years, he’d invested just over $19 million on physical and intellectual improvements. His mods were extensive, exhaustive, and, most importantly, totally invisible. Moreover, he could easily afford it since he earned, on average, $5 million a year on commissions, consulting, and brute-force protection.

Sex was, for the most part, a hugely profitable business. After accounting for customary operating overhead such as rent, talent labor, equipment, security, wholesale product purchases, bribes, permits, insurance, and other expenses, there was a tidy sum to be made.

Anders’ particular genius was an unmatched ability to amplify his sex industry client’s ROI and net income to, no pun intended, obscene levels. He was no mere rainmaker. He was the rainmaker. Any ordinary, run-of-the-mill, shithole cum-dump, would, with his guidance, practically print money…and do so within a few months. Moreover, his unique combination of business acumen and genetically enhanced verbal persuasion abilities gave him an overall close rate of ninety-seven percent. Promises of profits, backed by empirical data, convinced most to happily sign a contract. Promises of violence, backed by an excruciatingly painful demonstration, usually convinced everyone else who expressed reservations to change their minds.

Anyone that fell into the holdout three percent category was usually out of business within a week. Two at the most. Always. How Anders dealt with those who refused was determined solely by their behavior. For example, ideologues that were otherwise polite merely had their buildings incinerated. The rude or combative were usually beaten to an unrecognizable pulp.

“Hey, cupcake,” Anders said and slid the menu back across the counter. The mod-freak’s limited cognitive abilities weren’t able to cope with two competing stimuli. Item one: being called a cupcake demanded a physical response. Item two: the sliding menu needed to be caught before it slid off the counter. Since he couldn’t decide which action to perform…he did neither. The menu slid off the counter and hit the floor as he stood there with a vacant expression on his face. The mod-freak, Anders thought to himself, really should have spent a few bucks on autonomic reflex enhancements.  

“My name. Is. Jones,” the mod-freak was so amped up on exogenous testosterone that his frontal lobes had been rendered all but inert. Wonder how long it will take him to snap?

“Charmed, I’m sure, Mr. Jones.” Anders replied, and then activated the majority of his mods by unobtrusively tapping the fingers on his left hand against his thumb in a specific sequence. He loosened his tie. “I am Gregor Anders.”

“You wanna fuck or not, An-der-son?”

“Anders contains two syllables, Mr. Jones. Not three. That aside, you’re not my type.” Anders smiled and continued. “Did you know that many bedbugs and other bloodsucking parasites I’ve encountered throughout my travels share your cognomen?”

“Um…”

Anders flexed his hands a few times to verify that all of his mods were now active. “You’re boring me, Mr. Jones. Where’s the owner of this establishment?”

“The. Owner?” Jones asked. He was confused enough by this point to have forgotten about attacking Anders or picking the menu up from the floor.

“Yes. The owner. The boss. The individual that foolishly hands you a paycheck every other week.”

“Um…I earn…”

“Rubbish. Between your absurd visage and stench of cheap cologne, you dissuade at least half of the potential clients who wander into this establishment. Indeed, you may as well work for a competing business since you convince so many would be patrons to get their knobs polished elsewhere to satiate their carnal desires.”

“You’re dead, pal,” Jones said and vaulted over the counter.

Anders sidestepped Jones’ attack and delivered a vicious roundhouse kick that connected squarely at the base of Jones’ skull.

Jones’ forward momentum carried him three meters where he crashed into a wall. Beads of sweat popped out on his forehead. His muscles rippled and flexed, but he couldn’t move. Anders’ perfectly placed kick had overloaded the mod-freak’s exoskeleton interface.

“That’s better. Does your supervisor have a name, Mr. Jones?”

“What…you do to me?”

“Manners maketh the man, Mr. Jones. Now, please answer my question. Do you know the name of the owner of this establishment?”

“Um… yes.”

Pause. 

Anders looked at Jones and smiled. Five seconds later, a door on the left side of the lobby flew open and banged against the wall. Two intoxicated male customers exited, made it a few steps, and fell face first onto the floor.

“Jones!” A stunningly beautiful, and very naked, female yelled from the doorway. “Both of them got a nut twice. Charge ‘em extra, honey. Feel me?”

Jones looked at her, still immobile. “Um…”

The door closed.

“Um…”

Anders snapped his fingers, cleared his throat audibly, lit a cigarette, and blew the smoke in Jones’s direction.

“Smoking is not…”

“Shhhh! I’m immune, Mr. Jones, and it helps me feel at one with the universe. Now…focus!” Anders said with a dismissive wave of his hand. “The person that hands you a paycheck every other week. Despite your profound neurological deficiencies, surely you remember that person’s name, no?”

“Um…” Jones shifted his gaze from Anders, the entrance / exit door, the door recently occupied by the naked employee, and the men on the floor. Several times. Anders finished his cigarette, ground it into the carpet, and waited patiently.

“Um…” Jones finally said after almost three minutes had elapsed.

Probably needed to be sure that the unconscious men on the floor weren’t going to leave without paying an additional fee, Anders thought. Or maybe he’s still trying to figure out why his penis would forever remain flaccid. Could he be late for his meeting of ‘The Society for the Intensification of Cruelty to Animals?’

“Mr. Stevens?”

Hallelujah!

“I knew you had it in you!” Anders said. He walked up to Jones, examined his mods with a practiced eye for a moment, and then slapped him hard enough to rip a seven-centimeter laceration the skin on his blue face. “You’re on a roll now, my blue friend. That’s what happens if you piss me off, Mr. Jones. I wouldn’t recommend doing it again.

“Just answer one more question and I’ll let you go. Be sure to extract an additional fee from your unconscious guests as your first task. Afterwards, you can peruse the latest body-mod advert. Surely there’s something there that can further enhance your already prodigious biceps. Oooo!” He snapped his fingers. “I’ve got an even better idea. How’s about be-bopping outside to play ‘Hide and Go Fuck Yourself’ in the park! Bloody brilliant, I tell you. Imagine all the fun that awaits you!

“Now, tell me…where may I find Mr. Stevens? Reach deep into the hormone-addled mess that has become of your mind, answer my question, and you can run along and play. Or whip the living shit out of your skippy. The universe awaits, Mr. Jones!”

Pause.

“Um…office?” Jones replied and managed to point a single finger at the door on the right side of the lobby. An engraved sign at eye level read: OFFICE – PRIVATE – BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.

“Outfuckingstanding, Mr. Jones! Most human beings that are afflicted with a mere fraction of your intellectual impairments are little more than drooling, mammalian vegetables. You’ve overcome incalculable odds, answered my question, and managed to do it in less then ten minutes. To think, you have the brawn of a gorilla, the IQ of a fruit fly, and nonetheless persevered! Not only am I now fully erect due to my hitherto unprecedented state of rapturous delight at your accomplishment; children will sing songs about this event for generations to come!

“Sadly, our stimulating conversation must now take its rightful place in the annals of communicative history. In fact,” Anders paused, lit another cigarette, and straightened his tie, “your lumbering verbal ineptitude, down to the very last ‘um,’ has been so jaw-droppingly inane that it’s been irrevocably etched into my medulla oblongata. I daresay that only the most virulent, gustative-specific toxins could replicate the acute neurologic trauma I’ve endured via your monosyllabic utterances. Goddamn, what a rush!

“With a heavy heart and a cast-iron boner, I must attend to other pressing matters. Yes. It is critical that Mr. Stevens and I have our meeting without further delay. Lastly, I would be remiss did I not call to your attention one final detail. The aforementioned conference, this ‘meeting of the minds’ between the esteemed Mr. Stevens and myself, will include complex financial concepts. Words with more than two syllables will flow like an orgasmic fountain with the intensity of a ten-years celibate sailor. As such, your ominous and odiferous presence will not be required.”   

“Um…”

“No, no, no. I can find it myself. Please don’t worry.” Anders buttoned his suit jacket, stepped over the unconscious men, and walked past Jones to the office door. “By the way,” Anders said. He opened the door, dropped his cigarette, and ground it into the carpet, “tell the woman who graced us with her presence earlier three things, yes? Can you remember these three, simple, but earth-shatteringly profound messages, cupcake?”

“Um…”

“Atta boy! First, I like her style. Second, she’s got the nicest tits I’ve seen in the last nine months. Third, and most important, after Mr. Stevens and I sign a contract or I paint the walls of his office with his blood, I shall return. At that time, I’d be delighted to blow a gargantuan load down her pipes.” Anders winked at Jones and opened the door. “It’s not like my fucking hard-on is going to take care of itself, no?”

 

 

Edward Yoho recently earned his MFA in Writing from Lindenwood University. According to his spirit guide and favorite professor, the title of his thesis, Science Fiction, Sarcasm, and Other Profane Oddities accurately reflects his writing aesthetic. He's also eternally grateful for his wife's forgiveness. Indeed, he only spent a week on the couch after purchasing a midlife crisis Chevrolet Camaro without discussing it with her first. 

Done with Crazy by L.D. Zane

Look at him. He comes in here on almost a daily basis for breakfast, takes the same seat, in the same booth, and places the same order. He always faces the door—he says it’s a lingering habit from Vietnam. And I always wait on him. He’s a good tipper and not demanding; he minds his own business. All he wants is to eat, read a book, literary journal, or some short stories in peace—maybe even scribble notes for a story he wants to write. And now this happens.

Suzanne and Janice are sisters and some-time lunch customers. They love drama, and are not quiet about it. Today they made their breakfast debut. We were busy, and the hostess had no choice but to sit them in the booth directly in front of Ian, with Suzanne facing him. Seeing this, I thought, He is not going to be happy. I hope this doesn’t affect my tip.

Much to my surprise, Ian didn’t seem to mind. He just went about his routine. I refilled his coffee and was about to take the ladies’ orders, but they had already started with their drama du jour. I knew better than to interrupt; I just brought them their usual coffee and water for starters. They didn’t acknowledge me.

“What’s the problem with Kyle this time, Suzanne?” asked Janice.

“Same as always. He’s so anal. God forbid I move one thing out of place, I get the rolling eyes and “why can’t you be more careful” look.

Sounds like Ian. He gives me the same look if I don’t deposit his plates at precisely the correct spot on his table, or refill his coffee when it reaches the prescribed level in his cup. But I don’t take it personally.

“Why do you get so upset, Suzanne? You’ve been seeing him for over a year, and it’s not like you haven’t noticed this before. I mean, isn’t that one of the reasons you two don’t live together?”

Suzanne broke into tears. Not uncommon with either one, but more so with Suzanne. Janice played the role of big sister and handed Suzanne her napkin. “What’s the real problem, Suzy?”

Suzanne answered between sniffles, “He asked me for the key to his apartment—said it’s not working for him anymore.”

“And what caused that?” Janice asked matter-of-factly. “Something else must have happened for him to take such a dramatic step.” She knew Suzanne.

“Well…I wasn’t happy with his eye rolling incident last Friday, but didn’t say anything. He asked me Saturday morning, before I left for work, if everything was okay.”

“And you said what?”

“I told him nothing was wrong. But I sensed Kyle wasn’t buying it, because he remained silent. So to convince him, I said I would be over Sunday morning and we would meet our friends for breakfast. He seemed good with that response. We kissed and I left for work.”

“And did you see him Sunday?”

“No. I texted him Sunday morning and said I had to clean the cat boxes and do some vacuuming around my place.”

“YOU’RE SHITTING ME,” Janice said, and quickly covered her mouth. The owner came over and asked Janice to keep her voice down, especially if she was going to use profanity, as there were children seated near them—not to mention Ian, who slammed shut the book he was reading. He was clearly annoyed.

Janice apologized and continued in a lower voice, but not low enough. My sole counter customer was a good eight feet away, and he was able to follow the conversation.

“How did he respond?” Janice asked.

“He immediately called me and asked if that meant I wasn’t coming over at all that day. I told him I would try, but didn’t think it would happen.”

“And he said what?”

“He said he would go to breakfast without me, and that he was sure he could find something to do for the balance of the day, and hung up. Just hung up, without waiting for a response!”

"And then what happened?”

“I texted him back about twenty minutes later and said I would finish up changing the kitty litter, take a quick shower, and come over. Kyle wasted no time in texting me saying he had already made plans to meet up with other friends after breakfast, and wouldn’t be available for the rest of the day. Can you believe it, Janice?”

“Yes, I can. And you can’t blame him for that, sis. After all, you did blow him off. But how did you respond?”

There was dead silence which—to me, the other customers within earshot, and most especially Ian—was a relief.

Suzanne raised her head, and in a dismissive tone stated, “I sent him a text.”

“And what did you say in this text?” Janice asked apprehensively.

All of us held our breath. I even saw Ian look up ever so slightly.

“Fuck you!”

Janice about choked on her coffee. The counter customer put a napkin to his mouth to catch the food he was spitting up, and Ian dropped his fork, closed his eyes, and bowed his head shaking it back and forth. I had to walk away. I can only imagine what Ian was thinking. He had been through a number of breakups. In fact, I’ve lost track of how many women had sat across from him. But that was then, and this is now. I’m sure the conversation he was hearing was nothing he hadn’t heard before. He had been on both ends of that discussion.

“Christ, Suzy. No wonder he asked for the key back. Wouldn’t you?”

Suzanne didn’t respond directly to Janice’s question. That didn’t surprise me. “Well…I called several times Monday to apologize, but he wouldn’t pick up and didn’t respond to my voicemails. I sent him a text that night and asked if this meant ‘keep in touch.’”

Janice waved me over to ask for more napkins.    

“And how did he respond?”

“The next day he sent me the text asking for the key.”

I suppose that was the “keep in touch.”

“I called again, and asked him to call me at work. He sent another text saying no more conversation was necessary, and that I should mail the key back that day—and he emphasized ‘today.’”

“And did you…mail the key back?”

“Yes. I figured there was no sense prolonging the inevitable.”Janice nodded in agreement. She asked, “Does he now have the key?”

“Yes, and he sent a text thanking me.”

Janice hesitated asking the next question, but asked it anyway: “You didn’t make a copy… did you, Suzy?”

Suzanne fired back, “No. I’m not a fucking stalker,” and reached for the pile of napkins I had placed at the end of their table. There was a pause as she cried into the napkin and blew her nose. She continued, “Why can’t I keep a guy, Janice?”

My counter customer mouthed to me, “I can’t believe she just asked that question.”

“I’m forty, and have never been engaged, let alone married. I mean, you and Scott are happy.”

“Yeah, we are. But remember, he’s number three.”

Ian had been there, but only once… and that lasted thirty years.

Janice excused herself to use the restroom. I’m not sure if she really needed to use it. Perhaps all of this was too much even for her.

Ian was finished as well. As he was collecting his belongings, he happened to look up and crossed Suzanne’s gaze. She stopped drying her eyes, glared and asked indignantly, “What are you looking at?”

Knowing Ian could be quite sarcastic, I’m sure he wanted to respond with “Nothing,” but restrained himself. I was relieved. Thank you, Ian. Instead, he just stammered, “I’m sorry. I’m…” Then stopped. Guess I’ll never know what he was going to say. Perhaps he didn’t either.

Suzanne gave him an unforgiving stare, which Ian ignored. He had been there before, too.

I manned the cash register, and Ian paid his check. All he said was, “Trisha, I am so…done… with crazy.” His quiet, resolute tone reassured me. I nodded.

He left me a bigger-than-usual tip.

THE END

 

 

 

L.D. Zane served seven years in the Navy, which included a combat tour in Vietnam on river boats, and five years aboard nuclear-powered, Fast Attack submarines. At 65, his life is quieter now. He lives in a small town in southeastern Pennsylvania, and is a member of The Bold Writers. His short stories have been published in, among others: Red Fez, Indiana Voice Journal, Remarkable Doorways Online Literary Magazine, The Writing Disorder, The Furious Gazelle, Slippery Elm, The Rain, Party, & Disaster Society, Drunk Monkeys, Pour Vida Zine, and here, in Potluck Mag. His website is: ldzaneauthor.com.