numb november broken bus believer

I felt worthless
Didn’t want to breathe
One day better more or less
At times still felt like I wanted to leave

This world, god this world
Sometimes it feels like it wasn’t meant for us
And I would wallow into thought and would imagine myself in the middle of the road
And there’s a bus

And it crashed and it crashed
And I fell and I fell
Underneath
Where there was rubble

Knee scraped in cement
Hardly a dent
But in my mind,
Unrelenting trouble

“Isolation is what might fix this,” they said
Be by yourself all alone
I said okay and then laughed in my head
Oh my thoughts, if only they had known

immigrant ambition

My mother’s ancient dreams sit heavy on my tongue
her guileless disposition
the way she moves about like a child
a credulous animated character
Her wistful smile at my burning passion for literature
Her childhood that ceases to exist
giving up on her ambition because he said so with an evil shrug
still desperately yearning for it decades later
and she staggers away
head bowed with woe
Caring for far too many men in her adolescence she seldom hears from in her dotage
In my dreams my mother is free
in my dreams my mother is unmarried
in my dreams I do not exist

The Door Isn’t Wide Enough

The door isn’t wide enough

I moved into this house long ago
The neighbors change every year
Through my two windows I see them clear
Each paints and polishes homes pristine
Each a different color
Vibrant reds, deep blues
A dizzying array of hues
my house is Dull

Their skies are sunny and serene
mine is filled with smoke
my fire roars all day and night
I never learned to put it out
so I sit and bake

my foundation is crumbling
everyday it shakes
it used to knock me over
I’m accustomed to it now

my curtains are unsightly
but they are the only ones I own
better than to let my neighbors see me

my two windows are foggy
the sunlight dissipates through them

if I could I’d leave
I wonder if my neighbors would grieve
But no matter how much I squeeze

The door isn’t wide enough

Sweetness

Oh, to be a gremlin child again.
Unruly and bright,
and hot to the touch.
Covered in grass stains and scrapes.
Hair unbrushed
with daisies in the knots.
With no concept of my own physicality.
Halfway up the tree in the front yard
and eating an apple around a missing tooth.
Getting scolded for ruining my Sunday best
which I wear to pray to a God I don’t believe in
for the sake of my mother.
To be unabashedly ugly.
To be unashamedly hungry.
To be healthy
and hearty
and lean
and covered in bruises
and filled to the brim with love
and sun-ripe peaches.
To feel time stretch forever,
only flying when I’m reading books
or tripping over my own untied shoelaces.
To love summer once more.
To love life.
Syrupy sweet,
and soft to the touch.

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Minor Inconveniences

You had fought hard to stay in the car, but here you are, sitting in the waiting room. Defeated.
You don’t understand why it’s universally expected that a person must outgrow their fear of the dentist. It didn’t matter that they hid the office inside a Craftsman’s home; the well-worn, hospitable exterior couldn’t make up for the waiting room’s artificial quality. The misshapen furniture and electric fireplace desperately desired to capture modernity but fell short of achieving the style due to the layout’s lack of connectivity. Instead, the space lacked any identity and it did nothing to ease your nerves.
You’ve only been here five minutes and you’re envisioning the walk back to your apartment. Ana is probably already back there now, since Chatterbox Dentistry isn’t more than four blocks from Forster Woods. Why you needed a Prius and an escort to get you here speaks volumes about your character.
You’re currently pretending to be invested in the content on your phone while trying to decipher what the receptionist is whispering to her colleague. You remind yourself that not everything is about you, yet when the two laugh, you can’t help but think it’s at your expense.
You feel eyes on you and begin to suspect they’re coming from the person sitting in the armchair across from you. He’s probably in on the joke.
Ana would second your observation if she was here, and would also likely credit the attention you were receiving to your “frumpy” appearance. She had begged you to wear anything besides your baggy gray sweats and the shirt with the frog wearing a cowboy hat, but your argument in favor of comfort miraculously won out.
Your stomach clenches, and you remember how Ana had talked you out of eating anything this morning. Her reasoning sounded ironic now, “What if you feel sick?”
Ana always suggests water before food for an empty stomach. From her ideal bodily proportions and effortless sex appeal, she embodied what you aspired to be, so the water dispenser near reception had never looked more appealing.
Your head slightly spins as you go to stand and walk over to the counter, but you’re determined to get a drink. You grab a paper cup and fill it to the brim before returning to your seat. When you drink it in one go, regret suddenly hits as the cramps turn into ferocious waves.
Your eyes try to shut out the excruciating white lights. Was the room always this small? Was it always this hot?
Your mouth salivates, and your body instinctively stumbles back to the water counter, where you recall seeing a trash can next to it.
You tremble as the sour taste of bile finds its way to your throat and, ultimately, into the can. Tears streak your face as a hand on your shoulder leads you outside to the parking lot, where they direct you to sit on the curb.
After a few refreshing breaths, you look up at the stranger. He politely introduces himself, “I’m Xavier.”
“Leah. Hey, I’m so sorry for what just happened. That was…embarrassing, to say the least.” His round glasses remind you of Ana, but his skin is a much richer brown than hers.
“Don’t be. Happens to everyone.” Your skepticism must show because he sits beside you and asks, “Are you sure you’re alright?”
You remind yourself that he’s a stranger you just met, but you end up oversharing anyway. You explain that your best friend was trying to be helpful but only made you more nervous and self-conscious about a simple teeth cleaning.
He huffs, “It sounds like you need a new best friend.”
You gasp, “I didn’t mean to make her sound so terrible. She’s great.” Seeing his dubious expression, you go on, “I’m serious. I mean, I’ve known her forever. God, I live with her!”
“I just think if people go out of their way to make your life miserable, why wouldn’t you find friends that didn’t?
But what if no one else will be my friend? You don’t say the last part out loud.
“I guess I shouldn’t miss my appointment.” He stands, then reaches his hand down to hoist you up. Once you’re standing, you realize you’re about the same height.
You’re not sure what compels you, but you say, “If I were to leave, I wouldn’t have anywhere to go.”
“Here, let me see your phone,” logically, you shouldn’t hand him your phone, but against your best judgment, you do. Thankfully, he hands it back and tells you that he just added his number to your contacts.
Xavier gives you a little wave and says he hopes to hear from you soon as he walks back into the house/dentist. You decide to ditch your appointment and contemplate the conversation on the ten-minute walk back to your apartment. You conclude that Xavier is right; you need to leave your toxic friend situation, but relying on the kindness of a stranger isn’t your only option, right?
You press the code into the keypad to let yourself through the massive entrance gate, but instead of turning right and walking up the staircase to the third floor of the gray building as you usually do, you turn left. You can’t help but notice everything you love about this complex, from the mismatched gray and orange buildings to the unnaturally green grass. It’s winter in Austin and all the grass should be dead, yet life prevails here. Somehow, you find yourself outside door 202 of the orange building. You know this is a terrible idea, but that doesn’t stop you from knocking.
You hear footsteps approaching, and when she opens the door, you know there’s no going back now.
“Petra, what are you doing here? Why aren’t you at work?”
“I had a dentist appointment,” as if that’s an adequate excuse for taking the whole day off.
“Oh,” is all she says.
Her calling you Petra was not a blunder but a mantle you craved when you couldn’t tolerate Ana, or even your reality for any longer. Everything about Dizzy is ethereal. Her skin, body, and long red hair make her look more like a fictional princess than your neighbor.
“Dizzy, you know why I’m here.” The intensity in her stare makes you break her gaze and trace the snaking, black tattoos on her arms until you admit, “I don’t know what to do. I think I hate Ana.”
She steps closer to you, now standing entirely outside the door. With her this close, all you can think about is how you’ve wanted to be this close to Dizzy since she introduced herself when you moved to Forster Woods three years ago. She leans her lips toward you but veers away from your own before coming close to your ear instead, “Leave Leah at the door, dear. I much prefer Petra.”
That’s when you do it. You shed Leah like a coat as you push Dizzy back into her apartment. Your new form, Petra, grabs Dizzy’s shirt between your fists, bringing your lips together. You hope the taste of mint and strawberry lingers forever as you begrudgingly force yourself to pull away from her.
When Dizzy begins to rant about the two of you running away together to Rome, you can picture it. Why couldn’t you forget your disappointing world and join Dizzy’s? Feeling like you might bubble over, you force yourself to sit; you’re grateful her couch is much more practical than the ones at Chatterbox. Dizzy follows you, and your lips meet for the second time. This time, you sacrifice some passion to softly sink into her hair and the crevices of her body. If this is what drowning feels like, maybe it’s not such a terrible way to…
“Dizzy, why’d you leave the door open?”
Dizzy leaps from your grasp as Gus forces you to the less colorful surface.
Gus stops when he notices Dizzy isn’t alone on the couch. “Oh, what brings you here, Leah.”
Dizzy jumps up to hug her boyfriend before giving him a peck on the cheek.
Gus’s muscular stature always makes you nervous, and this time is no different. “Well, I should get going then.”
“You never said why you came over.”
Dizzy begins to speak, saving you from coming up with an answer, “Leah needed some cheering up.”
“She’s a grown woman, Dizzy. She doesn’t need to be comforted like a child,” Gus whispers, frustrated.
You recognize that the only person at fault here is you. It was ignorant to believe Petra existed or that Dizzy would ever abandon Gus for you. Wherever Dizzy goes, Gus is bound to follow, leaving you feeling like an even worse person than you did before you showed up at her door.
They continue to argue over your presence, and your self-loathing expels you from the apartment.
You don’t want to see Ana, so you walk directionless. Flowers in every shade bloom through bark mulch and concoct a sweet, woodsy scent that calms you as it drifts throughout the complex.
You finally decide to make a call after walking in a circle around the complex for nearly thirty minutes.
“Hello?” You’re surprised that he actually answers.
“This is Leah from the dentist.”
“Oh, what’s going on, Leah?”
“I’m done. I need to leave now.”
“Okay. Can I pick you up in an hour?”
Wiping away tears, you don’t hesitate to answer, “Yes, that’ll work.”
You waste no time, heading straight to your apartment. When you charge through the unlocked door, you see Ana moving around the kitchen while the TV acts as background noise instead of entertainment. A copious amount of adrenaline and purpose spur you to announce, “I’m moving out,” before she can speak.
You both stay frozen until you break the standstill by crossing through the living room to take cover in your bedroom. Not long after locking the door, Ana starts demanding an explanation from outside. You take this as an opportunity to pack.
You’re relieved when you finish loading your suitcase with essentials and don’t hear screaming or cursing anymore, only a faint murmur coming from the TV.
You risk peeking out the door to check for Ana. When the main area appears void of life, you grab your suitcase and make a last-ditch effort for the front door. You don’t make it.
Standing in the hallway is a tall and somber figure. “Devin, I didn’t know you were coming over.” Devin, Ana’s cousin, likes to overstay his welcome and sleep on the couch for a week, draining as much joy as he can from your life. While the size difference between the two cousins is colossal, they share the same tan skin and raven black hair.
“You look restless, and what’s with the suitcase?”
Unable to concoct a creative excuse for your state, you admit, “I’m moving out.”
His eyes move around the apartment as he walks past you to the main room, “This is a nice place, and with this economy, I doubt you’ll find anything better.”
He sounded like Ana, “Just need a change of scenery.”
He turns around, “I think we both know this has nothing to do with the scenery.”
His tone went from playful to severe in a heartbeat. You take a protective stance, crossing your arms, and refuse to follow him out of the hallway. “How do you know what this is about?”
“Leah Leah Leah. Don’t you ever learn,” he shakes his head. “You know how many times you’ve threatened to drop us?”
By “us,” you presume he refers to himself and Ana, but maybe Dizzy, and Gus as well.
“Why can’t you just accept that there is no you without us.”
You struggle to find words, let alone a solid argument, and yell, “Because you’re ruining my life!”
He continues, unfazed, “A little dramatic, don’t you think? You make it sound like we have you trapped here. What? You need a prince to come and rescue you?”
You notice that he’s slowly inched his way towards you. Only about two feet separates you now. “You’ve always had a choice. Admit it, as much as you hate us, you know we’re what you deserve!”
Those words hit you the hardest. It’s not sadness you feel but an emptiness. You finally comprehend that you’re stuck here as long as you’re you. Forever.
Devin sighs, “The Xaviers of the world will come and go, but your minor inconveniences are forever. If I were you, I’d learn to live with us.” He walks away, and you stand there numb.
You don’t know how he knew about Xavier, but some things aren’t worth questioning.
The sun is setting, but it’s eerily warm outside as you walk to the entrance gate. Not even Forster Woods’s peaceful, luxurious atmosphere crafted by the smell of sea salt wafting from the pool and the sound of jovial canines at the dog park could grant you respite.
Xavier can’t get in without the code, so instead, his car has pulled around the loop. He must see you approaching because he rolls down the window.
There’s a selfish part of you that wishes he could at least pretend to be a little disappointed that you don’t carry a bag or appear to have any intention of opening the gate.
“I’m sorry,” you mutter from the other side of the black, iron bars. You’ve done this part so many times, but those are the only words you can ever come up with.
His tone is earnest when he says, “I’m sorry that I can’t save you, but we both know that’s something you have to do yourself.” He rolls up the window, and you force yourself to watch the car drive away until the headlights no longer flood the street before returning home.
When you reach the front door, you hear your once quiet apartment bursting with life. Upon entering, you first see Ana’s lithe body sprawled out on the couch, her excitement at your arrival is palpable. Then your attention turns to the banner on the wall above her head, that reads, Welcome Home! The cruel joke worsens when you notice Dizzy hanging on Gus near the kitchen counter. Her lips upturn slightly in what appears to be a smile. Someone must’ve asked you to join the party, or maybe you told everyone, “I’m going to bed,” completely unprompted.
When you finally get to your bedroom, hand gripping the door knob, you catch Devin out of the corner of your eye, pouring himself a drink in the kitchen. When he looks up to meet your eyes, he winks.
You slam your door shut behind you and sink your back against it. You’ve been here too many times to count, and you know sleep won’t come when the loud conversations outside will force you to relive your miserable day until the next morning. It’s either that or fall asleep, only to have the voices follow you into your dreams.
But tonight, in the endless tunnel of noise, you can still hear something Devin said: Xaviers come and go. That thought alone gives you all the hope you need to keep hanging on because, who knows, maybe someday, you’ll finally go too.

False The Prophet

Google docs version (italics included): https://docs.google.com/document/d/12BU4TaJYw05MvffAAgAAcbSdsa9k1dg448czxDFJx5A/edit
– False, The Prophet –
“When a bell rings, an angel gets its wings”
– It’s a Wonderful Life

Today had started out like any other. Isn’t that how tales always start? The schedule is the same. Wake up. Go to work. Come home. Do it all over again. Over and over and over until I die, and that’s how I thought my life would stay. But in a twisted sense? That’s exactly what happened.
————————-
Rain fell all through the night, smearing the view of the outside world from the window. As the drops tapped away at the roof I thought back to the rainy days long since past, not unlike like this one. A long time ago I would have told you that rain was some sort of God, crying out over the unfortunate state of the world. Now, I believe in science. Science is safe, secure, and easy to understand, at least compared to the idea of faith and another plane beyond our own. The idea of God is a childish fantasy best left behind, like the dirt and leaves running to the gutter with the fallen rain.
Getting up from my spot beside the window (The rain was calming, perhaps a bit too much) I went to the kitchenette to rummage through a mini fridge full of the same microwave lasagna I had been eating for a while. Pulling out one I knew should have been thrown out weeks ago, I barely glanced at the lifeless cartoon lasagna on the package before placing it in the microwave. Some lightning flashed outside as I yawned, watching the lasagna spin on the stained and unsavory glass dish. I should clean it sometime. I should clean a lot of things sometime. The warm glow of the microwave barely started to light the room before the work was done, package steaming slightly with the plastic cheese sizzling through the sound of rain.
It’s not too bad to be alone with my thoughts. Moving out might be the best thing that has happened to me this year. Not that there’s much better to compare it to. A younger me would have told you that after college, you just… get a job, and that’s that. But now? I wish I had connections to get me anywhere.
“I can’t keep living on a salary like this.” I mutter to no one in particular. Setting up my spot at the rickety old folding table, I take a slow bite of the lasagna. It’s slightly crunchy in places it shouldn’t be, but I keep chewing.
I hear a sound. At first, I don’t recognize it, as I’ve never heard it before. But I soon come to my senses and realize it’s the doorbell. With a quick glance at my plastic watch (it chafes against my skin but I know I can’t afford better.) I mumble again. “Who comes knocking this late at night?” Another flash of lightning. “With weather like this, no less.” I shuffled to my feet to get the door.
I don’t know what to expect. A distant family member. Someone looking to sell a vacuum. A friend looking for a place to crash… though I don’t have enough friends for that to happen, I still expect it more than what occurs.
A stranger, who stands easily a head taller than the doorframe, looms above me from my porch in a white robe that easily covers their entire being, their only other color is a red satin… scarf? What did my parents call it… a stole? I look up slowly to meet this person’s eyes, a sudden weight dropping to my stomach as I realize they have none. In place of eyes they have a white mask with small holes, no bigger than jacket buttons. The button holes have purple crayon scribbled around them in an unorganized manner. To make matters worse, the “eyes” are accompanied by a wide and crooked smile, as if scratched on last-minute by a young child. In fact, the whole mask gave off the idea of childish inexperience. But the yellowing edges of the mask showed age compared to the perfect white of their robe. I looked around at the rain, then back at the tall stranger. A lightning strike flashed as if to articulate a revelation.
They’re completely dry. “Excuse me–hate to be a bother, but do you have a moment to talk?”
The man (at least, they sounded like a man) was surprisingly soft-spoken, sounding very polite despite his imposing height and… odd fashion choice. Clearing my voice, I avoided eye contact. “I, uh… what?”
The purple crayon markings on the mask seemed to shift around as he spoke. Even looking at the button eyes caused a type of vertigo I couldn’t place. The man cleared his throat. “I asked if I could have a moment of your time? Just to talk, I promise.”
Despite the relative charm in his voice, his appearance clashed so severely that it threw off any chance he had at seeming friendly. Regardless, I tried to be friendly back. “Er… sorry, sir? But uh… it’s well into the night and I’m headed off to bed. I um… maybe next time?” But as I closed my door on the stranger, a brown boot stained red and black with age and travel caught the door. Once again, the stranger spoke in a friendlier tone than I could ever imagine. “Oh please, won’t you reconsider? I know it’s late, but this’ll only take a moment, I promise.”
I had a pretty good idea of what he wanted to say, but I asked anyway. “What do you even wanna talk about?” I kept the door as closed as his foot would allow. The stranger flinched before laughing slightly, peeking through the crack in the doorway. His arms were oddly stationary at his sides, as if they were broken off at the socket, hanging uselessly. The purple crayon shifted again, now going in the opposite direction. “Oh, silly me! I didn’t even tell you what I wished to talk about, of course you’re suspicious.” That, among other things. “Do you have some time to hear about the words of our one true God?”
There was something I couldn’t quite place with how he said ‘god’ that sent a shiver down my spine. Despite the discomfort, I tried my best to keep my voice steady. “I uh… I’m an atheist. I don’t really believe in that stuff. Not… Not anymore.”
The crooked smile etched upon his mask seemed to lessen by a fraction. But as if it had never happened, the smile returned, if a little forced the second time around. (How could I tell?) “If you’ll at least hear me out, I’m sure I can change your mind. Perhaps you just had a bad experience with your first religion. Mine is… different, to say the least.”
The chipper tone his voice had contained so far was starting to slip and strain, frustration beneath the surface begining to show. I could no longer control the fear I felt on my face and in my voice. “I-I really don’t need any of that, I’m uh… good as is. Now really, I should get back to my–”
A black tear started dripping slowly down his right eyehole, staining the mask as it traveled further and further down. His voice was now painfully sweet, seething in annoyance and displeasure. “Please, will you at least try and listen? It is very important that I get this message out–”
“I said no! Go away, please!”
It seemed “no” was the stranger’s breaking point. Another tear came out of his left eye, both eyes now dripping black. It wasn’t the tears that scared me though, it was his suddenly frozen posture, straight and as still as a statue, dripping ink like some sort of corrupted fountain. When he spoke again, it was barely a whisper, shaking and tense. “No…?”
The tears of tar started dripping faster, staining his white robes. “No?” he repeated, snapping one of his hands at a breakneck pace to crush the door with an elongated orange hand, texture brittle like clay, small bits breaking off and flaking to the ground. The door creaked under the pressure of his grip. “No?” he said again, as the pressure increased on the door. If even possible, he seemed to grow taller as he dug his dirty nails into the door, wood splitting from the effort. I was useless against the creature.
“No!” the creature growled out, voice becoming as distorted as his appearance, as if gargling on the very tar dripping from his eyes. As the door slammed against the wall, the hinges barely had time to groan before they snapped. (Just another thing to fix…) I get flung back with no choice but to watch as the creature hunches over to enter. Before I even know what’s happening I’m pinned against the kitchen cabinets, head pounding from the impact. My lungs try and fail to bring in air. The creature sounds like it’s struggling to maintain clear English as it speaks. “Every ti-me I try to help you-r insig-nificant ra-ce see the tru-th, you refuse! I off-er you a spo-ot among the enlight-ened, but no! You wi-sh to remain ig-norant forever!”
I’m still struggling to breathe as I choke out some final bitter words. “Maybe if you worked on your approach, it’d work bet–” The creature tightens its grip and I start seeing spots, whether from the tar dripping on my face or lack of oxygen, I can’t tell. The creature shakes its head in disappointment. “You-r peo-ple will nev-er experi-ence the true gl-ory of God.” The failing lungs were starting to reach my brain. “Fine by me…” I whisper out, as a last sort of jab of defiance before completely fading. The creature releases its grip barely, just enough for me to breathe again, the color returning to my face.
“Hu-man, expl-ain one thing t-o me, bef-ore you per-ish.” I don’t respond, but the creature asks anyway. “Why d-o you choo-se to re-main ignor-ant, wh-en the ans-wers are all s-o cle-ar in fro-nt of you?”
He’s right, in a way. This is clearly a supernatural figure, right in front of me, and yet, I still can’t take him on his word. I look out the window to the rain one last time before spitting out some of the chalky tar that had dripped on my face. “Because I don’t trust false prophets like you. Always shoving the idea of salvation in our faces like it can be bought or sold, as if simply apologizing is gonna make it all better.”
This false prophet wiped his face with his sleeve, the black tar now even more smeared than it was before, obscuring the smile and purple crayon of his face. The carved smile disappears entirely, replaced by an equally crooked frown as the small button eyes widen, the vertigo from earlier reaching a peak I didn’t know was even possible. Staring into the eyeholes, it’s impossible to look the other way. I could have sworn there were church bells among the screaming choir in my mind.
Quick, like the lightning in the storm, everything is gone. All aside from the abandoned lasagna. Cold and moldy, the only company is the bugs.

Adulting

I sit here in this classroom in complete and utter disbelief. How can someone as ingenious, charismatic, and diligent as me tie with Wesley Russo, a weak, scrawny, cowardly nobody? A bottom of the barrel underdog on the decathlon team for goodness sake. He is a complete loner, but somehow his valedictorian speech is equivalent to my work. In what world is what he has to say more important than my senior year wrap-up? I lost elbow grease while writing this speech. Wesley has nothing on me. I’m popular, idolized even, but I presume that’s no longer valued in the world, or rather Kinleigh High School English Department. Apparently now is the time to take pity on losers or put more formally those who can’t evolve. Wesley has been second to me since kindergarten; he placed second in all the elementary spelling bees, weightlifting contests, and even in class debates until today when we leveled.
Miss Kwenton tells us both to rethink and polish our speeches which will be judged again on Friday, and she suggested that one of us should even think about dropping out. I sigh and run my fingers through my tousled hair with frustration. Clearly I wasn’t discreet enough “something on your mind,” Wesley asks. I contemplate being passive and responding with “no” for roughly 5 seconds, instead I go off the handle saying “How is an oration about your Grandfather worthy of discussing on one of the single most significant days of our young adult lives?” My snarky yet valid counter earns me an eye roll from Wesley who averts his coppery eyes and sways to Miss Kwenton to say “I appreciate you making me aware of my competition. Are we done here?” She nods after picking up on his uneasiness. Miss Kwenton turns her head and meets my gaze, giving me a piercing look of judgment. “What?” I mutter unremorsefully, shrugging my shoulders. “It’s not like I lied. Nobody wants to hear him ramble, and I just can’t wrap my head around being overshadowed by him.” Miss Kwenton interjects. “It’s a shame to see one of my most promising students behave like such a child.”
After she leaves the room, I realize it would be pathetic to wallow in my sorrows and decide to head over to Vince’s Diner where I happen to do my best writing. I stroll in like I own the place, which I
practically do, since I close the place every night. A worker walks toward my booth and asks “What can I get for you, son?”
“Nothing I can buy from here,” I claim.
He looks puzzled. To my surprise the restaurant is empty, so he tucks his order pad in his shirt pocket, raises his eyebrows, sits down, and replies “Hmm, humor me” I told him… well everything we discussed my Type A personality, my fears, and I somehow managed to divulge my two massive current dilemmas being my rocky relationship with my father and how I’m tied for the graduation speech. He made a cackle in his gravelly tone, “You sound just like me at your age. I was the black sheep of my family, but managed to outgrow my family’s traditions.”
“That’s easier said than done. My dad went to Harvard Law, graduated at the top of his class, and gave a graduation speech that’s still multiplying in views on YouTube after going viral decades ago. How can I top that?”
“I never tried to beat my old man at his own game; I only tried to master mine. I might’ve lost some of his respect doing so, but that’s ok because I gained my own!”
“You said earlier you want to go to Harvard too, right?”
I give a shy nod. “Does that make me a sycophant?” I probe.
“No” he affirmed, “That would make you authentic, and being genuine is a lot better than putting
up a facade so you don’t disappoint others around you.”
“I see you in here every night writing up a storm and it’s clear there’s more to you and you’re not
some cliche, so be your own person. You don’t need your peers or your daddy to tell you that you’re exceptional, especially when you’re on a distinct path. You’re stressed about your future. I get it. I have a grandson who is the same way.” Our therapy session suddenly gets cut short by his nasty cough. I lean over to my side of the booth and ask him if he needs a sip of water. He shakes his head muttering that he is “fine” and collapses on the ground. I shout for help and begin dialing 911. The paramedics arrived in 6 sluggish minutes and he was rushed to the hospital.

Two weeks after that bizarre experience at the diner, I decided to listen to the man I vented to and finally worked up the nerve to confront my father. As we ate dinner my aura shifted. “Is everything ok with you son?” It was at that moment that I came clean.
“Dad, I don’t know if I can do it.”
“Look I know you’re probably nervous to give the speech but it’s a few minutes and it will be over before you know it. Just do the thing they say, picture everyone in their underwear.”
I chuckle, “No it’s not my nerves it’s just I doubt mine will be as memorable as yours was.”
“Who says it has to be. I pushed you to try because I knew you had the potential to get the opportunity I did, not so we could compete.”
“Oh so you don’t care if mine differs from yours?” “Would it be your speech if it was a reiteration of mine?”
Confronting my dad did not go as anticipated because there was no shouting or cursing. Maybe I was wrong; it was my tendencies that drew that conclusion. I know I put in work, but most importantly I know who I am. I do not need anyone else to tell me. A day later, I am told that Wesley won the speech. I immediately feel a weight taken off my shoulders.
I can faithfully say, come graduation day, I am content. Today, in my cap, and gown I feel at peace with everything as I walk to my seat to listen to Wesley share his revised speech. Looking over, I saw the gracious man from the diner, and I was suddenly comforted. I find myself sitting in disbelief once again after hearing Wesley’s initial remarks “To my Grandfather Vince…”
The End

The View Between Villages

My clothes are at the dry cleaners. I’m not sure why, but my entire wardrobe is at the dry cleaners. I’m excavating my now empty closet, and I’m going to be late to work in fifteen minutes. I don’t think I’ve ever been to a dry cleaner. A twenty-something intern isn’t exactly constitutive of someone who can afford something like that. A small folded stack of clothes sits at the back of my closet, on the middle cubby of a three-leveled shelf I didn’t realize existed until just now.

My late father’s well-worn black band sweatshirt from that one 70’s rock band he’d always sing along to on the radio. I hadn’t so much as looked at it since it arrived at my doorstep in a plastic bag. A pair of white shorts sits below. I reach out for them, and I hesitate for a moment when my fingertips brush the man-made softness of his sweatshirt, somehow releasing the last of his cologne locked into the fabric. I turn away from the clothes, catching a glimpse of my body in the mirror, where the clothes seem to have made their way onto me. The stretched out head hole of the crewneck falling off one of my shoulders, the sleeves going past my hands the same way that’d make him laugh when I stole it from him. I’m rubbing my thumb over the hole in the cuff of the sleeve. The same one I wore in at the hospital at his bedside. The ridged stitching is rough against my skin, just as rough as the memories feel as they seem to be spinning around me, a double helix faded at the flickering ceiling light of my closet.

They spin and spin, along with the room, until the universe decides to give me a break. Everything freezes around me, still shots of a bond suspended mid-air like the photographs of an undeveloped life. I see the now present gap in place of the closet doorway and I’m moving toward it, only to find myself in the kitchen. The shoe rack by the front door is empty and the clock on my microwave says three hours have passed somehow, and the minutes seem to go up by the millisecond. I stride across the room, too late to care about shoes anymore. The keys hanging on the wall are in my hand, and I’m through the door of my apartment. The rough, brown bristles of my double sided welcome mat digging into the bare soles of my feet, reading the word goodbye at me as I fumble with the keys that don’t seem to fit into my door lock anymore.

I don’t seem to care that much, now that I find myself halfway down my street, watching as the bright sunlight moves through the canopy of the trees lining the sidewalk. The warm breeze of the summer meets my back, perfectly complemented by the heat of the pale gray concrete underneath my feet. The street is empty, a strange lull in the usual company of the neighborhood in early June. Lemonade stands seem to be packed up, garden hoses wrapped and put away, bikes parked on their respective driveways. The only sign of life seems to be me, the trees, and a dark moving shape at the end of the street, fast approaching, seemingly speeding up. A strong breeze now pushing against my back, propelling me forwards. The dark shape has revealed itself to be a black dog, absorbing the fragmented sunlight as it approaches, staring me dead in the eyes.

Something around me feels different, but I can’t peel my eyes off the dog wandering down the street. The wind seems to swirl around me, the warm, nostalgic feeling from before now replaced with a sharp coldness, my father’s scent rushing past my nose once again as my heart thuds in my chest. The black dog strides past me on the street, head turned as if it is watching me, and a resounding chill passes over me with the newfound cloud cover above my head. Every hair on my body is standing up as I turn my own head now, catching a glimpse of the white car now hurling itself down the road as I finally set my eyes back onto the dog.

I find myself following him back down the street, until he pauses. Two paws over the ledge of the sidewalk, the dog stares at me as it crosses over into the street. My feet move without my brain, the black eyes of the dog keeping me in some sort of trance. In one breath, one foot hits the tar of the road. Then two. I’m following behind him, some sort of invisible tether connecting us, walking together until he stops. He’s sitting in the middle of the road, the two of us a still outline in the car’s fast approaching headlights. I’m using every ounce of strength to push him out of the way. He won’t move on. No amount of pushing or yelling gets him to. He doesn’t even leave at the prolonged warning of the horn. Nor does he leave when the bright light blinds us.

Pain. Exhaustion. My head is killing me, and there’s a ringing replaying in my head, a manifestation of the loud horn fluttering my eyes open. My face cringes and I shift slightly at the light hitting my eyes, sending a sharp but quick wave of pain through my body. Back pressed against the glass of a window, my legs are curled up in front of me, the skin exposed from my shorts brushing against the woven gray fabric of the two seats I’m laying across. There is a soft blanket outstretched over my legs, one that looks suspiciously identical to the baby blanket my mother had to pry out of my hands when she deemed I was too old for it, and the one I slept with every night after my dad passed. I stretch my legs outward across the chairs, like a cat lounging in front of their favorite window. I can feel the warmth of the sunlight coming in through the glass behind me, the golden warm tones of the sunset outside seemingly following me as we fly by it. I pull my knees towards my chest, resting my feet flat on the seat and I sit and listen to the rivets of the tracks as we pass over them for a moment, my head pressed back against the glass.

I let my fingertips trace the soft pink and blue hearts on the velvety fabric of the blanket, and eventually I find them running down the satiny trim around the sides to find the tag. I flip the blanket up to read the handwritten inscription I know better than the back of my hand, only for the usual three-word note to be replaced with a new one. It was still in my father’s handwriting, leaving only but one word this time. “Soon”. Soon? What the hell does that mean? I look around, frantically, as if I might somehow look up to see the wrinkles on his forehead I used to make fun of again before I toss the blanket off me, doing my best to stand up against the gentle movements of the train and shaky legs. I take a few steps forward, clinging to the tops of the row of chairs as I turn back and neatly begin folding the blanket on the chair, re-reading a word I hadn’t seen in that handwriting in so long. Forcing myself to stop ruminating, I turn in the empty train car, facing the windows on the opposing wall, and move closer to them.

Peering out, I see the vastness of the ocean, stretching from underneath and beyond the tracks of the train, as far as the eye can see. The waters are still, with calm, gentle waves that appear an almost dull gray shade, the only color coming from the rays of the sunset reflecting off the surface. A focal point, the waves meet the sky out towards the horizon, who knows how far away and blend together, a comforting union straight out of an oil painting.

I can feel the hard floor as I walk through the train car, eager to see what might be on the door at the end of the car. Muted cream with delicately ornate details in gold, I extend my hand outwards to the door, grasping the gilded knob and twisting what little I could before being met with the feeling of the locked door. I knocked and I called out, standing under the vent outpouring warm air and the nostalgic scent of vanilla, but was only met with the gentle hum of speed and machinery. Frustrated, I turn my back to the door, and begin to pace down the aisle of the train, before something stops me dead in my tracks.

Laughter. A wonderous, child-like laugh fills the car. I’m frozen, standing in the middle of the train, in front of the boarding doors, and laughter rings out in the once silent train car. I pick my head up, looking towards the speakers for some kind of answer, when what once was the sky and the ocean turn into a solid black. A soft glow emits from inside the train car itself, before the laughter sounds again, illuminating the sky outside with its cadence.

Looking out the large windows of the boarding doors, I watch as the environment transforms around me outside the train. Black turns to the dark navy blue walls and walnut floors of the kitchen in my childhood home. Sunrays come in through the bay window of the dining nook, where I see myself sitting, laughter alternating between my sister and I. The train is driving across the floor, fully encapsulated in the memory, past my dad as he walks pink and blue plastic bowls of spaghetti to the table. My sister is clapping her hands, excitedly bouncing up and down on the striped bench cushion beside me. I watch as my father sets the bowls down in front of us, the smile on his face pushing his wrinkles together as he dances around the kitchen to the same band on my sweatshirt now, giving us dinner and a show.

I’m frozen, half-way between both walls of the train, watching as we fly by and everything changes one again, to the green cover of the trees in our backyard, my voice echoing “higher” over and over, along with the creaks of metal as my father pushed me on the wooden swing set, and shrieks as I see him hide around the corner of our house, turning on the sprinklers as my sister and I stood over them in the heat of the summer. I watch as the sky darkens, and tiny bursts of golden-orange light float through the sky. A smoke column, from the red grill that sat on our patio arose, the potent smell of slightly-too charred hamburgers wafting through the air. Lemonade pitchers and bug nets adorn our slatted patio table, the four of us sitting around it in the dusk. They take off, and I’m not far behind them, in my father’s big sweatshirt and those always yellow jelly shoes, jumping through the grass, imprisoning any misfortune Junebug in my path, excitedly showing them off to my parents and sister behind me.

I feel the soft pitters of tears falling to my chest, darkening the fabric of the sweatshirt as I sit on the ground, feeling the woodgrain of the floor against my knees and feet. The train chugs along, now in the pale yellow, butterfly-adorned walls of my childhood bedroom. I’m tucked under my princess bedspread, my father’s face aglow in the light of my night light at the foot of my bed. I’m lying, wide-eyed as he’s telling me stories about the travels of his youth; retelling my favorite one, his trip to the Alps with his college roommates. I loved it so much, he’d framed a few of his film photos from his trip and gave them to me to put in my room. “Snowy white mountains,” he’d tell me, seemingly lost in the memory every time. “The most beautiful view of everything below, and you can go sledding, or you can make snow angels or we could have a snowball fight” he’d continue, leaning in as he talked and I giggled, imagining the snowy white mountain tops and the wet splotches on our coats from snowball impact. I listened to my younger self beg him to take her there, and him tell me he would, only if I fell asleep. I watched as I excitedly closed my eyes as he shut off the lights, too excited to fall asleep but imaginative enough to envision our future trip until I fell asleep.

My upper body swayed with the gentle movements of the train, my eyes unable to look away from the life replaying in front of me as my bedroom lit up once again, now a light teal blue and covered in posters of the mountains. I was sitting at my desk now, the built-in one my father had assembled in both my sister and I’s rooms once we started school. It was white once, but now the blue and red crayon scribbles of my youth laid underneath my middle-school pre-algebra homework. My father still sat at the foot of my bed, on my soccer-printed duvet, as he helped me figure out orders of operations and the social hierarchy of public school popularity. A blink of light flashes and we’re out on the front lawn, soccer goals set up on either side of us. We’re running back and forth, trying to fake each other out with a dribble. I sigh as he gets a goal and he cheers for mine, even if he let me make them.

I watch myself turn away from the goal, now dressed in the white and blue uniform of my high school’s soccer team, staring back at my father and family in the stands as my old teammates huddle behind me, flashy hardware in the middle. My dad’s there, holding a sign I deemed embarrassing at the time but now brings tears to my already damp eyes. I look on as the blue of my uniform became the blue of my prom dress, swishing at my feet as my father told me he reserved the right to my first dance. He pressed a pre-recorded track on our tiny digital keyboard, dancing me around the hardwood floors of our house on his toes like he did so long ago. The prom photos that haunted my mother’s Facebook flashed by in quick blinks, in sync with the flash of the camera in my mothers hand, capturing the moments in real time.

Hundreds of moments pass by as the train moves along. My father singing along to his favorite band in his red truck. Swimming in the neighborhood pool in the summer. My first car. The flowers my dad gave me after every event. The spot they take up in my freezer. My high school graduation. Packing my room up the summer of my senior year. The five-hour drive my family made with me to my college dorm, and the way my father and his college friend carried my mattress and ninety-percent of my boxes up those stairs. My father’s film photos on the wall. My parents sending me coffee money before every final. The shitty bar that confiscated all my friends and I’s fake IDs. Several times. Every call I made to my parents, and how my father promised a trip to the Alps once I graduated.

Things go dark for a longer moment this time, as the memory fades away and leaves me with the dim light of the train car, and the repetitive sounds of the train and my sniffly nose. Then I hear it. The ring in my ears that has haunted me for the past two years. The ringing of my old cell phone. The light from the screen fills the temporary void, as I watched it all over again. Two-fifty two in the morning, the screen read. Incoming call from mom, the pixels said. My stomach sank, and I laid back on the hard train floors, trying to do anything not to relive this moment. My ears began ringing again, a subconscious shield protecting against everything but my late-night scream of disbelief, the thud of my old phone hitting the carpeted floor, the muffled words of my ex-boyfriend through my heavy sobs. Even now, I could feel the same twist in my gut, the same burning in my lungs. My chest heaved in unison, the same way it did back then.

No more light appeared. The memories continued flooding around me, battering against the exterior of the train, just as dark a representation as my state of mind. The memories appeared as just as I hoped to forget them, in their excruciatingly detailed entirety, with an exception. A large black dog now remained at my side, play by play. He sat as I rubbed my thumb into the sleeve of my father’s sweatshirt, at his bedside, begging him to make it to the Alps with me. He sat as I stood on soggy ground, six feet above the person I loved most in the world. He walked on the stage with me at my college graduation, in front of me, as if he was dragging me along, straight to my mother’s somber eyes on the field afterwards, her own dog joining mine.

I eyed him, as my life continued to replay, watching as we followed each other, a twisted dance of sorts. I moved my own mattress. He laid on my chest. I took him on walks. He led me to treats. I put my father’s things in a box. He fetched them without reason. I watched, and I watched our dance, my toes being stepped on now, until there were no longer both of us. Just the black dog.

Everything else was white. I shook with the train and my own emotion, as I watched the dog run alongside the train, like a shadow in a headlight until I watched as the widows behind me flew past him, escaping my only companion. The speaker sounded yet again, but this time it was the voice of a man I’d never heard before. “Destination coming up soon. Please grab your personal items.” I pushed myself to a shaky stand. I traversed down the aisle, as I watched the scenery shift out the window. The solid white quickly escaped my view from the windows as I walked, being replaced with bright highlights and soft shadows of freshly fallen snow on the rocky ledge of the tracks. Standing in front of where I’d woken up I breathlessly looked out the window at the unraveling setting.

Snowy white mountain tops.

The most beautiful view of small slopes, the golden-pink sunset, trees, and ski towns, beginning to light up in the distance by their house lights.

The train began to slow as it approached a small building, crested with untouched snow and enveloped in dark, chocolatey brown wooden siding and a rocky foundation. I grabbed my blanket from below me, now sitting with a pair of red gloves and a dog-eared train ticket that hadn’t been there before. I quickly walked back up the aisle, to the double doors I’d spent the majority of the ride at. I ran my thumb over the puffed out words of the ticket. The Alps. The train finally lulled to a stop in front of the building, and with a soft ding the doors slid open. I bolted out, feet slamming against cold concrete, running through matching wood and rock archways, to the snowy parking lot lined with trees sat in front of me.

Where a car was waiting for me.

A red truck, blaring music I could recite the words to in my sleep, and a driver singing along with now-gray hair and forehead wrinkles.

Talia

(Author’s Note: All tense changes are intentional. Enjoy!)

“And how long ago did she pass?” asked Dr. Miller.
“Four years, two months, and seventeen days,” I answered immediately.
As the doctor began to scribble down the information into her notes, I took the opportunity to admire the office. Well, admire is a strong word—I would say study is more like it. The place was terribly eccentric, but I suppose you get what you pay for. It reminded me of a fortune teller’s tent at the fair more than anything, and I was not even sure the diploma hanging on the wall was real; it had the Brooklyn College seal but something about it was off.
She finished writing and caught my attention again. “That’s quite detailed,” she said.
“Hard to forget,” I replied. “She left the apartment at six fourteen a.m. I received the call at eight fifty-six a.m. When I arrived at the hospital, it was half past nine exactly. By the time I got there, she only survived for eight more minutes. The wound was horrible.”
Just the inkling of the memory made my throat ache. My knees felt weak even though I was sitting. I looked down at my hands, my feet, the outfit I chose to wear today. I felt my hair brush against the sides of my face, hyper aware of any proof of the existence of my body. I become anxious at the thought that I am still here, as if it should not be allowed to be true.
“I’d like to talk about something else,” I said.
“Alright,” the doctor obliged.
After some time, I felt less nervous—somehow the subject of my abusive father was much less daunting to me. When the session had finished, the doctor kept me from leaving only a moment more and again scribbled something down, this time on a small piece of paper she had torn from a different notepad. She placed it into my hand.
“I’m going to put you on medication to help you with your nerves for the time being,” she said. “Your insurance will cover most of it, and it’s not too expensive, anyhow.”
I thanked her and left.
The day after, in the evening, I made a trip to the pharmacy to pick up my first dose. I presented the little paper to the man behind the counter and he returned with a sizable brown bottle of some liquid, a receipt, and a pen.
“It’s not a pill?” I asked.
“No,” he answered. “Many places don’t even carry it—almost every patient that has to take it switches to something else because of the side effects, so it doesn’t sell.”
“What kind of side effects?”
“Hallucinations are the most common one that people report,” he replied.
“Some others have gotten addicted to it. No deaths yet, though.”
I heaved a sigh. “Well, I’m sure my body has endured worse,” I said, and signed the bottom of the receipt.
When I arrived back home, it was nearly eleven o’clock. I removed the bottle from its paper bag and studied the label on the back. On the cup attached to the bottle’s lid were the characters “40-mL” etched into the plastic.
“I haven’t taken liquid medicine since I was a kid,” I said aloud, but shrugged it off and swallowed. After it was in my system, I retired to my bedroom, and fell asleep with ease for the first time in four years, two months, and seventeen days.
I awoke some hours later with a bursting bladder, but when I returned from the bathroom, I nearly emptied it again.
A red-haired woman with pale skin, wearing only a bra and shorts, was snoring peacefully on the other side of the bed, her back toward me. I recognized her immediately.
“Talia?”
I stepped forward and sat back down on the mattress, switching on my lamp.
“I’m dreaming,” I thought. “It’s just a dream. I must be dreaming.”
But I placed my hand on her arm, and I felt her.
She stirred under my touch and turned to face me with squinted eyes. “Ana?”
“Talia?” I repeated. “How—?”
She turned to glance at the clock. “It’s four in the morning.”
“I—” I stared at her in awe. I could not put the pieces together quickly enough. “I’m dreaming,” I said aloud.
Wait a minute, my deceased wife was back from the dead and all I could think to do was talk to myself?
“Talia—you’re—you’re alive.”
“What do you mean ‘you’re alive?’ Of course I’m alive,” she chuckled. She sat up on her elbows.
I rubbed my eyes violently. I reached out for her again and she grabbed my hand, pulling me toward her, onto my side.
“What’s the matter with you? Did you have a nightmare or something?”
“I’d argue I’m having one right now.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?” she laughed. It reminded me of how badly I missed it, how I missed her smile.
“Talia, I don’t understand. You’ve been dead for four years.”
“I swear to god, if you got high without me—”
“No, I’m serious. I lost you. It was the worst fucking day of my life.”
She bent her brow in concern. “Honey, I don’t know what you’re talking about. I’m right here.”
I took a deep breath, looking at her closely, as if this were some elaborate trick, but then I remembered the medicine—and its alleged “side effects.”
“I’m sorry,” I said. “This is all so confusing.”
“Is there anything I can do to help?”
I swallowed. “Don’t go,” I told her.
She smiled. “I can do that.”
I was unsure whether I should believe her or not.
“Come here,” she said, taking my hand and tugging gently.
I laid my head down on her stomach, feeling the warmth of her skin against my face. I was starting to wonder if this really was the hallucination I thought it was, but I quickly decided I didn’t care—if this were some extremely vivid dream caused by that medicine and I was doomed to awaken the next morning to an empty bed, I would confront it then.
“You said I’ve been dead for four years,” she continued. “And I’ve known you long enough to be able to tell that you were serious. What did you mean?”
I swallowed. I almost felt a pang of anger at her for how she made me relive the day. “I meant exactly what I said. You’ve been dead for four years.”
“What happened to me?”
I breathed deeply. “Car wreck—a really violent one. But you survived, until they brought you to the emergency room. And you didn’t make it. Lost too much blood.” Tears soaked my cheeks. I did not try to stop them.
“But now I’m back,” she replied.
I nodded. “But now you’re back.” My voice was soaked. I reached up to touch her face to make sure I could still feel her.
I would have done anything and everything to live this moment. Now that I had found out all I had to do was drink some weird medicine, I felt that, because I did not go to the ends of the earth, through heaven and through hell to see her again, I didn’t deserve it.
“What should I do if I wake up tomorrow and you’re gone?” I asked.
Absent-mindedly, she ran her fingers through my hair. “Don’t let it eat you alive.”
I laughed humorlessly. “Too late.”

I had forgotten to set my alarm clock the night before. Can’t say I blame myself.
Even still, music drowned my ears, but not any kind I would use to wake myself up in the morning. It was trashy, pumping. It slowly became clearer, louder. I felt leather sleeves against my skin, the button of a pair of jeans digging into my stomach. I lifted my head from a table, my cheek sticking to the resin coating, my vision hazy.
A glass slammed onto the table and I was thrown into full consciousness. I took in my surroundings—a bar. No, not just any bar—a lesbian bar. Before I could wonder what on earth I was doing here, I heard Talia’s voice.
“How the hell did you fall asleep?” she teased. She was sitting on the table. “It’s, like, so goddamn loud in here.”
I blinked at her. “What day is it?” I asked automatically.
“Sunday,” she answered, giving me a confused look. “We’ve only been here an hour. Do I need to take you home already?”
“No, no, I’m alright,” I told her, but I guess I didn’t look like it, because her eyes showed concern. “But I don’t remember us going out. And on a Sunday? Don’t we have work in the morning?”
She rolled her eyes off to the side for a second, thinking. Then she shrugged and nudged the glass toward me. “We’ll be fine. Come on—drink up, let’s dance.”
I picked up the glass and she grabbed my arm immediately, pulling me onto my feet. I threw back the shot and said, “Well, I certainly didn’t marry you because you’re a good influence.”
“Very funny,” she returned, and dragged me toward the speakers.
The place was packed. On a Sunday?
Pink and green glow from the neon signs above the bar danced with us. A street light reflected the colors from a pride flag hanging in the window onto the floor under our feet. Talia stared down at them, trying to see if she could fit her entire sneaker within each of the very thin strips of color. Small amounts of liquid splashed out of the top of the bottle in her hand as she tried to dodge other dancers’ shadows that ducked in and out of the rainbow lines.
She began to mutter something about almost getting it, but she tripped over her own heel and stumbled forward. I caught her and her beer stained my undershirt. She craned her neck up to meet my gaze, grinning with all her teeth.
“You’re drunk,” I laughed.
“Thanks, you too,” she said.
I smiled at her antics, but then my expression quickly fell. “How are you drunk? You’ve barely had one beer.”
She scoffed as if I had just deeply offended her. “I’ve definitely had more than one beer.”
I stared at her. “I watched you. You’ve had one.”
“I literally have no idea what you’re talking about.” She grabbed my arm again. “Come here.”
She brought me over to a slightly larger table and shoved her bottle into my hand. Before I could stop her, she hoisted herself up onto the table and began to dance, mostly with her arms. Her movements were slow and whimsical and she was tragically off-beat, but I loved her anyway.
I softened, but then she reached down to tug my hand up toward her and I started. One of my boots made dramatic contact with the surface of the table and I was standing next to her before I could process the event. It had happened so quickly it felt like I had cut through time.
A few of the other patrons whistled and cheered at us. Heat crept up my neck and I wanted off at once, but then she stepped too close to the edge of the table and it buckled under our weight.
The heavy wood and Talia’s body landed with the same thud. I fell in that direction too, my elbow striking her rib cage, and she let out a groan. The bottle flew from my hand when I hit the ground and shattered loudly. Had she not been there to break my fall, the concrete floor might have knocked the wind out of me. I was surprised it hadn’t knocked the wind out of her.
She was laughing hysterically. I smiled along with her, purely by instinct, but my face was boiling red. I pushed myself up onto my elbows.
My hair was a mess. She reached up and tucked the unruly pieces behind my ear. I tried to grab her wrist, but instead she yanked me forward, down onto her kiss.
Everything melted. The heat disappeared from my face. I could breathe. Good god, I miss you.

I opened my eyes to our bedroom. I didn’t feel hungover in the slightest.
The space next to me was empty. Several panicked breaths climbed up my throat, but only one escaped before I swallowed the rest of them. My brow was drenched in sweat.
I shot a glance at the clock on the nightstand. “6:14 A.M.,” it read. A moment later, I heard the front door shut and the lock click. My heart dropped and shattered against my pelvis.
I scrambled out from under the sheets and made a beeline for the door. I hoped I wouldn’t get in trouble for running outside in my underwear.
My fingers made contact with the door knob and reality cut like a film scene. I was dressed and the fluorescent lights above blinded me. I was clutching the knob to a cherry-wood door. The number “523” in black letters stared me down.
I swallowed and reluctantly entered the room to the sound of soft beeping. The strong smell of industrial cleaner hit me fast and hard. Talia laid there in a hospital bed, a spider web of tubes hooked up to her. Her forehead and right eye were wrapped in bandages. Her nose leaked blood.
The beeping began to speed up. A nurse touched my shoulder and I nearly punched her in the face. Before she could speak, the monitor flat-lined.

I woke up screaming. Talia startled awake beside me and placed her hands on my shoulders. I sank into her embrace, not bothering to wonder if she was really there or not. All that mattered was that it felt like she was.
After several minutes, she finally got me to calm down. I pressed my forehead against hers. I ran my thumb across her cheekbone. Tears streamed down my face.
“Goddammit,” I sobbed. “What is happening?”
She twisted the fabric of my pajama shirt between her fingers. “It’s just a nightmare.”
“No, it isn’t. It’s real, I can feel you. I have my senses. It’s not…it’s—”
My gaze drifted past her and I saw the bottle of medicine on the nightstand behind her. My brow furrowed and I got up. I grabbed the bottle and threw it into the garbage bag in the kitchen. I listened to the glass shatter, the liquid stain the bottom of the bag, and watched it leak through the plastic onto the floor.
I returned to the bedroom to find that Talia was gone. The clock told me it was nine o’clock at night.
I heard keys jingle from the other side of the front door and automatically wandered toward the sound. A minute later, the door opened and she walked through it.
“Hi, honey. Sorry I’m so late—some guy came in at the last minute and ordered like ten drinks, and then I had to close,” she said. She kissed my cheek.
Something about her was different.
All other times I had seen her, she seemed murky and faded, her details fuzzy and incorrect. But now, I can see her as clearly as the daylight outside. When I reach forward to take her hand, I recognize textures of her touch that had not been there before. I can make out the waves in her hair. I can count every freckle across the bridge of her nose.
She’s solid. She smells like coffee. Her eyes are vibrant green instead of milky gray. She looks exactly the way she had on the very first day I met her.
“You are real,” I tell her.
She raises an eyebrow at me. “I would hope so,” she jokes.
I play with her fingers. The sun rises in the next thirty seconds. The light coming through the blinds bombards us. She turns to stare at it, her skin glowing with the paleness of the sudden morning.
“It’s Saturday,” she tells me. “And it’s so pretty out. You want to go find a trail or something?
I nod, and she brings me to the door. When she opens it, something about the outdoors behind her seems brighter than it did before, like the sun has more light to give all of a sudden.
Without thinking, I follow her outside. I hear the door shut behind me, and under the white sky, all I see is Talia.