Couplets suck

I tried writing you a couplet

It didn’t go too well

So I’ll just tell you

That maybe

I love you

Couplets aren’t really my thing

I doubt you really care

Whether or not

I like you

Whatever

I thought a couplet might’ve been easier

Telling you might’ve been

Easy, maybe, too

Wouldn’t hurt

To try?

Couplet or not, matters not, in the end

What happened, happened

I won’t ever, really

See you any

More, so

Bye.

Here’s the couplet I never wrote for you

Here’s all the things I’ve never said

Here’s all the things that

I wish would’ve

Happened.

I love you? Maybe?

Disturbing…much?

A Parody of a Parody: What Actually Happened At Semi-Formal

At semi-formal, there was a lot of grinding, and, inevitably, a lot of killing. Of course, no one knew of their eventual fates and the one person who did was nice enough not to tell them anything. As it happened, she wasn’t even at the party but rather somewhere else (Chinatown), partaking in a tedious game (of Hearts), with a handful of old friends (who shall not be named.)

Garreth O’Brien was on a mission. The responsibility of his task weighed heavily upon him as he shifted uneasily between freshmen grinding on the dance floor. The three pound Colt pistol resting in the pocket of his suit jacket reminded him of his purpose, and he stopped gawking at the perfectly round shape of Lee’s posterior as he spoke to Emma. Eventually, he thought to himself, he’s going to have to pull the trigger. Eventually.

Several minutes later, he found himself in the men’s bathroom hovering over a sink, hands cold, clammy and shaking. He looked at himself sternly, his disheveled hair that he never bothered to comb, his curiously small face, the way his facial features seemed to scrunch together when he examined himself in bathroom mirrors, and broke out into a long fit of laughter. Unable to sustain his fit of laughter standing, he crumpled to the floor like a used paper towel. Finally regaining his composure, and resolve to carry out his sacred mission, he picked himself up off the floor and went back out into the dark and cavernous club. The song, “Lets Get it Started in Here” by P!INK was playing.

Garreth O’Brien liked surprises. He was rather pleased when he found out, after much experimentation and observation, that he was in fact a boy and that he wasn’t in fact homosexual. Though, the latter observation is heavily disputed by many prominent scientists in many prominent scientific publications, he’s learned to live with it. He was also rather pleased by the copious amount of hentai available on the internet, and for free as well! The trouble he’s been saved, Mia Fey’s jiggling, wet and cum-covered tits were just a click away. Sometimes he reasoned that it was better being a boy, and some other times he reasoned that running out of tissues made life difficult.

However, Garreth O’Brien was rather displeased by the scene that greeted him when he arrived back on the dance floor. His childhood friend, Lee, and his high school fantasy, Emma, were locked in an odd embrace, doing something he’s only heard of and never seen, this so called grinding move. He was intrigued for a brief moment, the way Emma rubbed herself against Lee and their expressions of ecstasy. Then, he felt the comforting pat of his Colt .45 and remembered his holy mission.

“You! You! You whore!” He stammered, choking back tears as he drew the weapon. He felt powerful, for the first time in his short life, for the first time in his vegan life, he felt power. Absolute and divine power in the form of a pistol, in his very hands, he was God and he’ll be damned if anyone was going to try to stop him from pulling that trigger, he’ll be damned if either of them was going to live through tonight. His vengeance shall be felt.

There was nothing but silence. The music screeched to a halt. Lee and Emma jumped from each other, the whole of the club turned to Garreth, forming a circle around him and his two victims.

“She’s the whore! Take her! Take her!” In an act of desperation, Lee grabbed Emma as a human shield, “I never had sex with your mother! I swear to God! I never touched her! Or, your dog!”

“Eww! You fucked a dog!” Someone from the crowded shouted.

“Silence, infidel!” Garreth turned immediately to the voice and fired, with surprisingly accuracy, a .45 ACP between her eyes. The victim, a random girl not even from the high school in question, fell down dead, her blood staining the dance floor red. Garreth immediately returned to Lee and Emma.

“How could you?” Emma screeched, burying her head in her hands, “I thought you loved me!”

“But I do, I swear to God, I do!” Lee tried comforting her, taking her by the shoulders and pulling her into his arms.

“You had intercourse with a dog!” She wailed, weeping into Lee’s shoulder, ruining, much to his disgust, his dress shirt. He patted her awkwardly on the head, and was briefly reminded of his exchange with Garreth’s dog. It’s nice soft fur, its round, button eyes, the way it tugged at his shirt, screeching and wailing and crying. Wait, he stopped himself mentally, that’s not a part of the fantasy.

“Damnit, Emma,” he said, “Why do you have to ruin everything?”

She responded in generous sobs and sniffles. “You ruined everything! You ruined everything!”

“What did I do!?” He shouted, wrenching her from his body and looking her straight in the eyes. Emma’s moans and sniffles stopped as she returned the look. The emotional tension inflated like a hot air balloon straining as its anchorage. He broke from the gaze and added, “Besides fuck a dog…”

“I hate you!” Emma’s crying renewed, like an overdue library book, a grating sound to Garreth’s ears.

“Silence!” Garreth’s pip squeak voice boomed, “Silence, you fools! Cease your useless jabbering! Tonight, I shall deliver God’s wrath upon you!”

“Since when the hell were your religious, Garreth!?” Lee screamed back.

Caught off guard, Garreth lowered his weapon in consideration of the question. He would regret this decision deeply, but, for the moment, he was quite absorbed in thought as he tried to remember the exact moment that God came to him and gave him this holy quest. That sort of thing, their precious epiphany, is remarkably important to newly converted religious folk, people who’ve only recently found God’s light.

Taking advantage of this, Lee draws his massive katana and lunges at Garreth, who manages to duck just in time to escape certain death. Lee’s blade severing several strands of Garreth’s disheveled brown hair.

“I always knew you were Japanese!” Garreth shouted as he rolled under a table, that, moments later, came crashing down under the force of Lee’s attack. “I always knew!”

“Sayonara, bitch!” Lee swung again, popping several buttons on Garreth’s shirt. All the while Emma wept in the corner as freshmen and sophomores alike ran, screaming and helpless, from the club turned battlefield.

“That’s my line, bitch!” A new voice entered the gray. Charles Chan, appeared in the doorway Matrix style (the shades, the trench coat and all), in all his epic, Chinese glory, cocking an AK-47, with a broadsword strapped to his back and Ruozhou Ye behind him.

Emma looked up, eyes glazed with tears and upon seeing his figure in front of her, screamed, “Charles! Oh, Charles! Save me! Save me!”

“Don’t worry, babe. There’s a lot of me to go ‘round.” Charles replied with a devilish grin.

“Yeah!” Ruouzhou added, “Yo momma! That’s right! Yo momma!”

In the meanwhile, Kaitlyn Kwan and Andrew Chow were both curiously missing from the soon to be bloody massacre, unlike the author who had her reasons.

In another meanwhile, Evan Chen, not so curiously missing from the party, was stuck in traffic in Queens.

“Say hello to my little friend!” Charles suddenly switched the AK-47 for an M16 with a M203 grenade launcher, obviously channeling Al Pacino, channeling Tony Montana.

Before he could pull the trigger, Ruozhou interjected, puzzled, “But I said hello already.”

“No! Not you!” Charles turned to him, and in a hushed whisper, reprimanded, “What happens in the bedroom stays in the bedroom!”

“Oh,” Ruozhou nodded in understanding.

“Right, now, where was I? Oh, yes,” Charles took aim with his M16, “Say hello to my little friend!” and pulled the trigger, firing round after round, grenade after grenade into the club. Both Lee and Garreth ran for cover behind the bar. Bottles and bottles of liquor shattered above them, showering them in liquid and glass.

“Fuck!” Lee yelled loudly, curling up into a ball as if in pain.

“Are you hit?” Garreth yelled back, a pang of corner in his voice.

“No,” Lee reverted to normalcy, “Felt like it was a necessary time–”

Garreth, suddenly remembering his mission and why he was tasked with the murder of his friend, took the opportunity to waste the annoying fucker, as he reasoned, and popped several rounds into his skull. He took a moment to watch as Lee’s eyes rolled to the back of his head and the blood ooze slowly from the three holes in his forehead, as it mixed with the liquor and the glass behind the bar.

He leaned forward in a very deliberate motion, straddling the dead boy’s waist. The word ‘necrophilia’ flashed in his mind, but he began to grind his hips against Lee’s regardless, he began to unbuckle Lee’s pants regardless. The word ‘sadomasochism’ flashed in his mind as he began firing round after round into Lee’s dead body regardless, he began licking at the boy’s wounds, covering himself in his blood. Garreth could contain his sexual desire no longer, abandoning his God in wanton lust, thrusting in and out of Lee’s (need I remind, you, dead) ass. In his last act of pure sadomasochism, as he reached his climax, between moans and screams, he jammed the barrel of his .45 between his lips, imagining as if it were Lee shooting his salty seed into his mouth, and pulled the trigger. Garreth O’Brien, one time holy crusader, inevitable homosexual, vegan, killed himself in a crime of passion.

“Yo momma!” Ruozhou shouted, dual wielding two Desert Eagles, as he leapt over the bar. He stopped short, looked at the bodies below him and fainted.

“My little friend’s out of ammo,” Charles said, panting, with Emma clinging to his leg. The M16 clattered to the floor, surrounded entirely by empty bullet shells. As he started walking, he realized that there was, in fact, something clinging to his leg. Upon realizing who it was, he began to shake vigorously in an effort to rid his leg of the extra weight. He sent Emma flying a few feet back. By this time, she was reduced to a cacophony of tears, sobs and whimpers. Somehow, Charles found her weakened and pathetic state pleasing to his libido. He walked over to her, examined her slowly from behind his aviators, her limp form under her ruined dress, the blood splatters, her tear mixing with her make up streaked her cheeks. Grabbing her by the chin, he lifted her small body off the floor. Everyone was taller than Emma so he had no trouble holding her. “Hm,” after much consideration, he decided, “You’ll do.”

Charles gestured for her to follow as he stepped over broken glass, making his way to the bar. With a raised eyebrow, he poke Ruozhou’s unconscious body with the barrel of his AK-47. “What the hell!?” He shouted after peering over the bar, leaping several feet in the air and away from the bar.

“What? What?” Emma asked eagerly, clinging to Charles’ arm.

“That’s just, that’s just,” Charles was at a lost for words. Never in his life has he seen anything as, “wrong! That’s just wrong!”

“What’s wrong? What’s wrong?”

“That!”

“That? That?”

“Can you stop saying everything twice?!”

“Twice! Twice!”

“What the hell is wrong with you? Did you,” he was gesticulating wildly, “Did you fry a circuit or something?”

“Circuit! Circuit!”

“Oh, for the love of God, shut the fuck up!”

“Shut the fuck up! Shut the fuck up.”

“Fucking hell. Don’t make me do this.”

“Fucking hell! Fucking hell!”

“That’s it.”

“It! It!”

The shot echoed through the lonely dance club. Emma’s tear streaked eyes pulsated, widening and then dimming as she fell, slowly and painfully, to the ground like a dog being put out of its misery.

“Goddamn. Now I need to find another bitch for the night.” He muttered with a roll of his eyes, flicking the safety on the AK-47 and flinging Ruozhou’s dead body over his shoulder. He looked around the club one last time, the mess of bodies behind the bar, Emma’s shrunken form on the floor, the pool of blood gathering by her head, mixing in with her hair. He felt remorse, a slight bit of remorse and no more.

Glass crunched under his boots as he made his way to the door. He felt like Orpheus, but he did not turn back.

Epilogue

Charles Chan bumped into Evan Chen who was driving in from Queens in a HUMVEE. After getting rid of a severe traffic jam on the Queensboro Bridge by single handedly blowing up the bridge, he took the Midtown Tunnel into Manhattan. They dumped Ruozhou in the back seat and drove to Mexico, picking up Andrew Chow and Kaitlyn Kwan on the way.

No one ever knew what really happened the night of the semi-formal. There was no explanation for the death of Lee and Garreth O’Brien, or Emma Really-Long-Last-Name, or the random girl who was just a victim of circumstance and a natural disgust of bestiality.

Nowadays, the story’s passed around as a sort of urban legend among the underclassmen. It was a real hush hush sort of thing after it was discovered that Garreth O’Brien was an Islamic terrorist and that Lee was a North Korean, not Japanese, spy. On a side note, Emma Really-Long-Last-Name was revealed to be an undercover agent from a joint NSA, CIA, FBI project codenamed B.T.H. Water damage from the crying fried her internal hardware resulting in a speech malfunction that resulted in her death. B.T.H. II is said to be under development.

The author lost the game of Hearts tragically, but does not regret her decision to skip out on semi-formal.

My weekend…

10, I say, really
Weve already  intruded too much on hospitality right???
They really mind? I slept on his couch!!! You know, like, it doesn’t seem like they really really reallllllllyyy mind
Thirty minutes ain’t gonna kill nobody
Except me
You know
I’ll draw that shit for you right now
While you’re here
And I’m here
And I have your brilliant mind
Its not that, think about it, I havent seen mydad  in over 24 hrs! hes gonna be mad pissed!!!!
When you got CalTech
You ain’t gonna see your day for a litttllleeee bit more than just 24 hours, alright?
that’s college, this is eltons house on Sunday night
That, for one, can be very wrong
For another, I’m sure it’ll be alright
You’re a big boy despite the very oxymoron of my statement, or, god that’s grammatically incorrect, LOOOL
Point being, what do you need to do?
History, test makeup test
Math hw
Chem test
Drafting
Genetics, ms fong is coming
Ms. Fong is coming, lol
If we do leave, grab a bite to leave? Slightly hungry now…
Can’t impose upon these people for more food
What do you need to have done?
Yopu had food what, an hour ago? Read the genetics, meke a outline
Hist is study
Drafting…….
Chem is bubble the answers
Bubble your answers, lol
I want fried rice and gelato
I didn’t have those, what, an hour ago? Lol
I HAVE CRAVINGS CHILD
Hold
Who did you do???? Why are you having pregnancy cravings??????
Gelato and fried rice? Cmon, you can hold it off. Please?
Noooo, lol
It’s just gelato,
Little Italy, LITTLE ITALY is like…right there
Fine, we can go to LI. But help me think of an explanation for my parents
Lol
Ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
Mmmmmmmmm
Uh, gelato is distracting?
A smile and a thumbs up, like so

Oh, I’ve got less than a week left…

I hear my heart gently breaking. I hear the soft creaking of floor boards as my weight crosses a dark, moonlit room. I hear the whisper of my fantasies carried on a breeze. I hear your name roll of my lips, like poison I drink from my own mind, the vile creator of my torment. There is no one but you on my mind, there is anyone but you on my mind, I can think of nothing, not even for an infinitesimal second can I bring myself to think of anyone else but you. Just you, in all of your imperfect glory, in all of your imperfect existence and in all of your perfect being that I’ve crafted, a cocoon of my own mental fantasy and needs, constructed from nothing but pure lust and thought. I find myself enthralled by my version of your existence. It feeds my hunger, satiates my longing, and quenches my thirst for an everlasting emotional torrent of pain. I crave this need and need this craving. So, tell me something, tell me something, tell me something. At what point should I stop. At what point can I let the tears fall, let you go, cut the string, forget everything. At what point should I stop? At what point should I forget about all of this, forget and renounce this morbid life of love, forget and renounce all of this rich and vapid feeling, all of this emotion, all of this so called, all of this, all of this mess. When can I bury myself in this grave, because I’ve dug deep enough, I’ve dug deep enough. At what point, I beg, I plead, I ask, I need an answer, an answer and a goodbye. Cut the string for me, slit my throat, just don’t leave, just don’t leave. I hear my heart gently breaking. I hear you slowly stepping on the pieces of what’s left. I hear the soft, dying moan of what used to be me. I hear the shrill cry, the agony of a dying man, a dying ideal. I hear everything, I hear all of this, all of this, all of this superfluous noise. Yet, all I need, all I need, all I need is to just hear you.

What is it that makes me so digress?

And now, now that I’m alone, can I cry? I can cry just a little bit to myself? It’s not really even about you anymore. It’s about me. It’s always been about me. But sometimes, I like to think that it’s about you, but no, that’s a terrible.

Where are from, where are going, why are you here, why am I here, why do I need this so much, why do I need this so much, why do I need this like I need a drug, like I need a shot of Novocain?

I love you.

Can I even say that to you with a straight face? Can I even say that to anyone with a straight face and a straight meaning? Do those words mean anything more to me than just words? A symbolic representation of something that I’ll never feel, so elusive, so fickle, so fiendish and ghastly and horrid as love, something so bad, so wicked, yet I crave for, I crave for like I do life. Life. Life is horrid. Life is the feeling bubbling from chest, the feeling about to break from my ribcage like a wild animal, rip through flesh and bone and tear my soul to pieces, claws, claws, claws through this visage, this façade, this charade, this falsity I call myself and find me, find me in the center of everything, a tiny, tiny cowardly existence in the center of everything that is not myself and is, at the same time.

I feel like dying for you, not out of obligation, but out of curiosity and the need for experience. There is a tingling in my arms, my hands, and my mind is filled to the brim with just you. I see you and hear you and feel you and it’s all just you, a three letter word that means so much more. You, you, you, you, everything from words, letters, moments, sounds, just you, the pure simplicity of the world comes to in the form of a man, a man who means less to me as he is than as he is in my mind. If I never sat next to you, if I never met you, my life would not be any different. You’d simply be spared my presence.

Congratulate

Its international tell someone you like them month, according to Facebook. I hate Facebook.

I’ll find you in just a few moments. I’ll look for you in a few seconds. You’re always in the back of my mind, and try, and I try not to look in your direction, but my eyes find their way to you anyway. I try, try so hard to forget that I have but a few fleeting moments with you left. I try, try so hard to forget everything that I’ve said and done, everything about you. But, as much as I love the pleasure of pain, I’m unable to wipe this, these memories of you. As hard as I try, as often as I try, my eyes trace that unbearable three paces to your feet, my heart follows that awful longing to your face and I wonder, wonder how I’ll live without you, without your words, without your smile, without the moment of awkwardness I share with you, without you in general, general relativity.

I think

I’m going to be okay.

I really

hope that I’m going to be okay.

I actually

know that I’m not.

Are you

okay?

The promise of tomorrow is the promise of my broken heart.

More time with or without you is the promise of my broken heart.

I saw the Raconteurs today. One, two, two, words: Motherfucking awesome. ‘Nuff said.

God, that was some good fucking shit, good fucking shit.

Thumb caught in his belt buckle and a smile across his lips, he saunters slowly in her direction. It’s a quiet smile, a quiet moment and it’s a slow progression.

There are so many shades of black. I’ll say what’s on my mind. Mind numbing fear? Ear ringing noise? Heart breaking love?

Shades of Black

“Just jump.”

In. Out. In. Out. Slowly, slowly, it’ll come to her. Her breath is her metronome, the tartan track is her instrument, a stretch of maroon striped with white like the ivories of a piano, the strings of a guitar, the valves of a trumpet; it’s an instrument she knows well, her spikes dig lightly into the track. The sky is still, the light blue of summer hangs like a shirt left out to dry on the line. A bird cuts across her vision like a razor, ripples the stillness.

***

“On your six, don’t look. He’s walking this way.” High school romances, if there are such things, are the worst. She’s nudged in the ribs as she carries her precariously stacked plate of cafeteria food. She almost drops it out of surprise, and a little bit out of anxiety.

Lunchroom, seventh period, (unknowing) love of her life enters left. Perseus Holt, like a sickeningly wonderful nightmare, like a thunderstorm on a sunny day, like squeal of a dying animal, passes by guarded on both sides by his friends. Chatting, laughing, his presence, for even the brief moment that she feels a slight breeze from his passing, completely numbs her mind. Her friend, a bouncing bundle of fiery red curls, jabs her again and says, “God, Elysia don’t turn so red.”

They sit near a window. She shakes a packet of ketchup and rips it open, pouring the condiment over her fries. In a moment, she’ll look for him. In a moment, she’ll scan the crowded cafeteria, scan the sea of people for his light blond hair, his black (he looks good in black, he only wears black, and once a yellow shirt with the most absurd picture of a kangaroo) shirt, his slightly hunched form over some table, scan the room for his voice, catch a word or two. Only in a moment, only in a moment but she daren’t any earlier. This sacred treaty with herself she dares not break.

“How was the math test?” Katherine peels back the plastic tab of a fruit cup gingerly, trying not to spill the juice. Licking her thumb, she breaks the plastic wrappings of her utensil set against the table. “Heard it was pretty bad.”

“Awful,” Elysia replies, amber irises following Perseus’ path across the lunchroom before flickering back to Katherine, “How was your,” her voice acquires a playful edge as she picks up one of her ketchup slathered fries, “English skit?”

Katherine sighs slowly, rolling her eyes, “Alright, so, I told you about Johnny Woo?” She begins, feeling rather tedious about the retelling of her unfortunate English skit. Elysia nods, sucking her lips under her teeth, trying to suppress a laugh in anticipation of the story as Katherine continues, “Right, so we tell this kid, bring in his copy of the book, and guess what? He forgets, he forgets! So he makes up everything!” Emphasis on the two words, her hands grabbing at her hair, “he doesn’t just ask for another copy of the book, he could’ve just borrowed a book, he totally could’ve. Instead he deems himself this great,” hands waving, as if trying to pull words from the air like magicians do rabbits, “this great, great impromptu Shakespearean playwright and just makes up the rest of Hamlet!”

Elysia watches, but barely listens, her friend’s rant, her little fits of insubstantial anger are hilarious. Out of the corner of her eye, beyond Katherine’s wild gestures and flurry of words, beyond Johnny Woo’s inherent inability to understand what poetic meter is, she sees the Perseus. Strolling across the linoleum floor of the cafeteria, he brushes by a table of freshman girls who watch his every motion just as she does, and all cluster together after he moves on, the oyster shell of their clique closing as they whisper in a vicious frenzy among themselves. He approaches a vending machine, and she’s reminded by her own mental narration of the scene of some animal documentary she’s seen on TV.

The boy slots his quarters into the machine, she notes the slight pause, and enters the code for a can of Coke. Tucking his wallet back into his back pocket, he bends down to grab the refreshment. As he turns, a sudden hiss accompanies the opening of the can. Before he presses the chilled lip of the metal to his own lips, his light grey (or, where they blue? She couldn’t really decide, she never really got the chance, either) meets hers.

She ran over a deer once, on the highway, when she wasn’t a too particularly experienced driver (she still isn’t). Right before impact, like some sort of infernal judgment from her own invisible, sorely personally God, her own higher power burned the image of the poor doe, the white of its eyes, the muted gaze of fear, into her mind. She imagines, at this moment, that’s exactly what she looks like to him, a deer in headlights, but there’s nothing to run her over.

“I gotta go.” She says rather suddenly, cutting off Katherine.

“Really?” Her friends asks, checking her digital watch, one of those large, shock resistant, mud resistant, water resistant things that Elysia refers to as life resistant, 12:53 stares back at her, “It’s early.”

Elysia slings her backpack over her shoulders, places all of her random wrappers and napkins and her half-empty (or, half-full?) milk cartoon onto her Styrofoam plate. Katherine watches all of this curiously, following her rather flustered friend’s movement and sighs with an understanding nod and smile as she turns around to see the back of Perseus Holt, can of soda in hand, walking away.

“I don’t know why you worry so much,” Katherine remarks, eating her own fries, “I’ve been telling you this for, like, an entire year. Just the way he looks at you, the way you look at him, you have to see it for yourself sometimes. You two are like a pair of forlorn lovers separated by the vastness of the lunchroom. All you have to do is, one of these days, just go over and talk to him.”

“Don’t talk so loud!” Elysia squeaks shrilly, alarmed by the openness with which Katherine blathers about everything, she feels like a caged mouse, “people are looking at us!”

“Correction, people are looking at you,” Katherine nonchalantly waves a fry in her direction. She leans back in her plastic lunchroom chair, tipping it back so that it rested on the hind legs, giving her a perfect, albeit upside down, view of Perseus Holt staring at her beet red friend. “So is he.”

Elysia suppresses the need to just scream, to just yell till she looses her voice and to stop remembering everything, everything little glance, every little look, every one of these little moments, everything about him just drives her crazy, everything he does, he says, everything he doesn’t do and doesn’t say. “I’m going to the library.”

“You really should just go to him!” Katherine calls after her and retreats to her plate of food with a grin.

***

The sun, a livid, glaring white forces her to squint as she stares down the track. She wonders if he’s here, sitting with his group of friends, somewhere in the bleachers, under the same hot and oppressive sun, watching her. She cringes at that last thought, the same old anxiety in her stomach mixes with this morning’s breakfast, mixes with her rainbow of feelings for him, mixes with a certain dread and anxiety of an imperfect jump, a blender, a whirlpool of all the things weighing her down, draining into the emptiness of her self.

In. Out. In. Out.

***

She settles in a quiet corner in the back of the library, hidden well amongst shelves of ancient books with browning pages and worn covers, with marble inlays and gold etchings, torn copies of Scientific America that no one reads, catalogs of journals untouched and undisturbed for decades, with the soft whisper of central air condition playing gently in her ear. She settles, like the ocean after the quakes of a ship pass, like dust displaced by sudden movement,

Should I, after tea and cakes and ices,

Have the strength to force this moment to its crisis?

I give up trying to channel my repressed emotions, I’m going back to writing like a normal human being.

The clinking of silverware and muffled footsteps wake her. The apartment is tiny and his noise becomes her noise. With a groan she gropes in the darkness for the digital clock and almost blinds herself with the green, electronic buzz of 2:03 blaring in her eyes. She tosses the clock back where she found it, sits up, blinks several times, looks around at the dark emptiness of the bedroom, follows a pair of car headlights as it throws rectangular patches of amber light up on the ceiling and thumps against her pillows and sheets in mild annoyance.

“Honey!” She calls out.

The response comes in the form of silverware against tiled floor and her husband’s little cries of surprise and fluster. The kitchen lights turn on.

“Are you okay?” She calls out again.

“Just,” her husband’s voices starts, “Good god! I mean, I’m fine, just fine, just fine. I just dropped some, some, uh, pot roast on the, the, uh, dog.”

“Oh, alright, come back to bed when you’re done. Don’t forget-” She turns over in the sheets, ready to enjoy the rest of her four hours of sleep when she realizes that, “You dropped the what on the what!?”

Riza and Roy Mustang, married five years, go through everyday as if it were their first.

Do I have the strength to force the moment to its crisis? God, I wish I did, every once in a while, I wish I were a lot braver than I actually am. I wish that I had a little less shame than I actually did, a little less face, and a lot more faith, a little less of everything and a little more of everything and every three or four, every five and six, a copy of my chemistry textbook so I won’t fail my test tomorrow. A copy of my life textbook so I won’t I fail my life tomorrow. A copy of my life, actually, just so I can laugh at myself later. Laugh at my little insecurities and little, and just everything.

I try really hard to avoid it. I try really hard to stop thinking about it. I try really hard to remember to try really hard to stop thinking, just stop thinking and maybe it’ll go away, maybe this feeling, this ache, this dull, dull ache, like falling on a hot, sticky sidewalk and scraping your knees sort of ache, would just go away, but it won’t, it doesn’t. And when he, the source of all my supposed misery, the supposed receiver of all of my romantic transgressions and occasional lustful fantasy, when he leaves, he leaves only more misery, in another form, another shape. There are only so many shades of black, but each is worse than the one before and each kills me more, and each is darker than the next, and in this case, need I, dare I, face the next? Need I seek the tragedy of a life that I haven’t lived? Need this be the end of my high school career, or half of it anyway, in tears and agony and some sort of heartbreaking confession on the last day of school. One that he won’t have time to digest and one that, pretty much, will be sorely mocked and forgotten, yet took almost all the courage I ever will have to make? Is this really all my life will ever, ever, ever amount to? A dull ache, a slight remembrance of what it all used to be like? And we just sit there, and I just sit there, and mourn the loss of a time, a simpler time in my life where I needn’t think for myself, where my allocation of time factored not into the way my life turned out, where numbers on paper, where tests and the rest of my life had no real, no substantial, play in any of my thoughts, mere shades and shadows and impending doom that the live in the moment type of people, like myself, just seriously ignored. Really? I only want to ask one question, direct one question at God, if given the chance, “Really?” And if he answers, “Really.” Then, I die happy.

People in your life are like seasons. My headphones are electromagnets. Of course, I learned that wonderful tidbit of information in class (next to him, oh, but of course), only today did I realize that, oh, yes, my headphones are fucking electromagnets. Fucking hell, that was amazing, the practicality of a class like physics smacked me in the head today and I thought about, again, of what it’d be like to be a physicist. To make absolutely no money whatsoever but to be continuously dumfounded and amazing by things like, “Christ, my headphones are repelling each other.”

I mean, what else am I supposed to devote my energy to, besides the obvious, besides the not so obvious, and the fact that my headphones repel each other. It’s cool, it’s insanely cool and I can’t get over it. It’s like the first time I tasted candy, I don’t even remember how cool that must’ve been. I don’t remember the first half of my childhood (the second part makes me think the first isn’t really worth remembering, so I don’t think I’m missing on much), but really, life is a nifty experience. To be or not to be? I’m going to fucking be. Underline that shit green, or whatever. Yeah, I’m going, how does that quote run, something about slings and arrows, or whatever. Yeah, hit me, hit me, bitches. Sure, whatever. I’m not really fond of Shakespeare. I just don’t really like him. Maybe it’s because I never really picked him up and read him, but, I’m not really fond of him. Dare I say it, I’m more of a modernist when it comes to my literary diet. Eventually, though, eventually, I want to put myself through classical literature. Train myself in ancient Greek, or something. It’d be awesome. Spectacular. Read not in my native language, read in the native language of the other half of me and write poetry and make allusions to myths and works, and John Milton, because I find that man to be seriously inspirational.

I’m going to fail that chem. Test.

That physics test.

That mandarin test.

That math test.

Forget about that paper.

I’m not gonna write anything, ever, ever again.

It was a terrible paper.

She’s going to be disappointed.

I hope to god she is, but I really hope to god she isn’t.

I’m gonna hand in one, with corrections, or whatever.

I feel like I should.

I should.

Life of a musician? How is that any different, except I sing about my god awful problems? How’s that any different than what I do now, except I put that all to music? How’s it any different!

Death must hate the human race. Poor man and his tedious job, he really must hate the human race.

3:53, not really sleeping again. Writer’s block of some sort, or just tired?

I’m like a trash can holding all the information.

I might go take a shower now. What is it, 4:40? Alright.

After I listen to this song two more times and my review sheet decides to print.

I’m gonna draw up my mandarin review sheet, tomorrow. Retrieve my bloody textbook, tomorrow. Think about stuff, tomorrow. And count the days, tomorrow, to the end of school, in my head, during that seemingly random…thing they have planned for us. That, orientation is not the right word, presentation is too casual, gathering is just strange (Magic, ha) and I’m stuck going to summer prep school. I’ve been in SAT but I’m in it again, with calc on the side. Hooray for the Asian parent. I want to apply to be a TA next year, my god.

Prom, semi-formal, SAT II, team dinner, Sex and the City? At least I’ll see Miles again, come next year, Villiger, States, Grands (maybe?) and wherever else. No, the other one’s not coming back on alumni day.

4:44, that’s an awful number, time…time reading, or whatever. It’s quite unlucky in Chinese.

He lives inside his headphones and he barely pays attention to anything, which, ultimately, might be the reason why he bumps into trash cans, streetlights, people, walls, pretty much everything. He ignores just about everything and turns up those giant round things, like parasitic clams clinging to his ears, all the way and air guitars every once in a while. People usually do this in the shower, or, when no one’s around, but that’s just the way he is.

One can’t really blame him, the way the world is, I suppose it’s dull for a guy like him. No one really even knows his name until he bumps into you, which is how we met. It’s a real surprise he can hear anything anyone else says, or that he listens to what other people, humans, have to say.

Headphones, kids, never wear headphones. Never associated with people who live entirely in headphones, it’s better to just keep walking, or not say anything. Of course, in my situation, saying something was inevitable, but really, stick to the normal side of things.

“My god, I’m terribly sorry,” I said rather hastily, I was carrying a large bucket of paintbrushes of varying sizes, running down a silent hallway halfway through fifth period, trying to appease my eccentric art teacher when, he, this kid with these giant, bulging headphones, turns a corner with his eyes closed, fingers mimicking, what I found out later to be Jimi Hendrix’s Purple Haze, some sort of a guitar solo and runs into me. Everything goes flying, me, my bucket of paintbrushes, the kid and his headphones.

What do you call these things? Introductory physics has its perks, namely the cute kid that sits next to me, so forgive me if I can’t classify the collision as elastic or inelastic. I start picking up the random pieces of, at the time, I thought to be my eternal damnation. Ms. What’s Her Name is going to have the largest fit ever, when she finds that her perfect (actually, these brushes were terribly shoddy anyway, public schools, what can you do?) paintbrushes were, for a lack of better words, not anymore.

“Uh,” he stood there, rubbing his head, headphones around his neck, apparently they came flying off when he fell, less damage done there, “Uh.”

“Uh!?” I almost screamed at him, I must’ve looked ridiculous. Back then, I used to wear these god awful plastic, red rimmed glasses and used to put my hair up in a bun, clipped in the back with one of those street fair shop artsy hairclips. I don’t remember exactly what I was wearing that day but it feels like a black tee with some band or another across the front, it’s not like I wake up in the morning and actually care what I dig out of my closet, which, by the way, looks a lot like a war zone. But, back then, I used to have a thing for cargos and oversized t-shirts, XXL for no good reason. It came out a lot harsher than expected, but I was pretty irritated, like a bad flu of an angry virus and we stood there, after that awkward exchange of “Uh’s!” just looking at each other.

“Uh.”

I snorted. He laughed. And we spent another good five minutes just laughing. (What’s his name, Oscar Wilde, was it? Had a quote that ran along the lines of something like laughter might not be the beginning of a good friendship, but it’s certainly a good ending to one. He, of course, is a lot more articulate than I am when it comes to these epigram things, so, I’ll leave it up to you to actually go find the quote. I’m not even sure how this is truly relevant to my story or headphone kid, that’s what I call him, even though I know his real name, but, it was a worthy side note. Hence, the parenthesis.)

“Holt. Perseus Holt.” Introduced himself James Bond style. I returned the favor.

“Jones. Lillith Jones.” If you typed our names into Microsoft Word, which is the only I communicate nowadays, over keyboard. Writing is overrated and my handwriting is illegible anyway, technology really saves my ass every now and then, and SparkNotes. Right, but if you type both our names into Word, they’re both underlined red. I like the way Word underlines things, it alerts me to all of my little faults, spelling mistakes and incorrect use of grammar and what not.

“Beautiful.” He replied, out of nowhere and with a deep tone of admiration. I stopped, half bending down, half getting up and looked at him with a raised eyebrow.

“Say what?” I’m rather obtuse, I don’t think politeness is even a word in my dictionary. I say what’s on my mind, and sure, someday, someone will hate me for it, and I’ll get shot, that’s what they all tell me, but it’s not like I really mind that either. Better shot for calling someone out for what they are, better shot for saying what’s on my mind, than living a life of so called politeness, or mental repression.

I really don’t mind what you call me, anything but sugar pie or cuddles. He has a tendency to call me both, mind you, not out of affection. Never, ever, divulge too much of your pet peeves to anyone, or your annoyances, or, god forbid, your secrets. That sorta thing tends to fuck you over in the long run like no tomorrow. He calls me sugar pie on a daily basis. Sometimes I wished I didn’t break those wonderful headphones of his, or he might not have been around to hear me tell him all that stuff.

“Your name is beautiful.” He elaborated.

“Thank you,” I remarked slowly with an odd sense of appreciation on one hand, and on another, a strange sense of strangeness, for a lack of better words. “Your name is, uh,” I was digging for words here, harder than a mole digs his hole, “rather heroic.” I felt like an idiot. I barely remember who Perseus is except for the guy who rescued that chick, what’s her name? Andromeda? Like the star system, like the TV show.

“Wanna go out with me?”

Alright, I like surprises, but this was just weird. Not only was I seriously late for fifth period art, not only will I be killed by Ms. What’s Her Name when I return to fifth period art with all of her brushes messed up and in some sort of incoherent mess, but what the hell is this kid talking about?

“What!?” That came out louder than expected.

“Will you go out with me, Lillith Jones?” He repeated with a grin across his sheepish face and ran a hand through his hair. For the first time, I noticed he had this amazing strawberry blond hair and a set of pale, pale eyes that felt like ice cubes, for a lack of imagination.

“But why!?” Still exasperated over everything, I looked up seriously, from behind my red rimmed glasses, and kept looking.

“By the merit of your name,” was his reply and I just kept looking, and felt my mouth part slightly.

“Really?” I settled my weight onto my left leg, clutching a paintbrush I brought one of my fists to my hip and gave him another look.

“Really really,” he was awfully serious and the grin was replaced by a stern look of absolute determination. He was really animated for a guy who lived completely in a pair of headphones, who lived completely in music. Facial expressions, his eyes, the way he carries himself, totally unexpected. Never knew he existed until right about now, either.

“Convince me.” I challenged. I wanted to see what this kid had going, I mean, at this point, it was just really, really strange. Kid, headphones, paintbrushes, a date, late for class. God-motherfucking-damn.

No sooner had the words left mouth did I feel his hand grab mine and in this elaborate movement, one of those spin-twirl things they whip out at you in dance competitions, will all those people in their little dresses and shoes and costumes, he spun me around in the hall into his arms, I heard the paintbrush I was just carrying clattered against the linoleum floor (when did I even let go of it?), he dipped me back in his arm, I was certain he was going to bite me, like something from a cheap horror movie, on the neck. Then, his lips met mine and I almost screamed if not for the strange wonder I felt when I tasted, and don’t think I’m crazy, what felt like a sunrise on his lips, like the wonder of a crisp, red sunrise across the city. Totally fucking weird encounter, weird kiss, in the hallway. Fuck fifth period.

“Convinced?” He asked, looking at me as he cradled me in his arm, his strawberry hair falling into my eyes, grazing the slightly grimy lenses of my glasses. I couldn’t speak for a moment and just looked at him. I must’ve looked even more ridiculous, half wannabe tomboy, face (most likely) red as hell, in a large, extra, extra large AC/DC t-shirt from her father’s better days, with a curious expression of shock on her face. “Good.”

With that, he walked me down the hallway, away from my mess of paintbrushes, down the three flights of stairs, the north staircase, if I remember correctly and just right out the front door of the school, despite the curious glances of the security guards and whatever else’s that prevent kids from just waltzing right out of school. Mind you, we actually just waltzed right out of that building.

Perseus Holt. One serious fucking character right there.

“Oh, and my headphones are broken.”

“Uh!”

Paintball Tomorroowww

So, well, here we are now, again, and there he is, online, and well, we’ve had our ten minutes of awkward conversation. And, come to think of it, all of my obssession and love just sorta evaporates, like a bad dream, or something, when I talk to him. It’s rather strange to say the least.

And, now, the more I think about him and the more I stare at that stupid screen name, it’s all coming back, I really think I just do this to myself. I don’t even know why I like him anymore. It’s all in my head, I’m gonna go back to playing Packrat.

Now, now, he, he is a different but all too familiar story.

CAN YOU GO BACK TO JUST BEING THE KID THAT SITS NEXT TO ME IN PHYSICS? NOT THE LOVE OF MY LIFE, GOD FORBID!? CAN I JUST GET SOME FUCKING PEACE AND QUIET WITHOUT WORRYING ABOUT THE DAMNED CONSQUENCES OF MY UNREQUITED LOVE BORDERLINING OBSSESSION?

Thank you.

Seeya, Ricky, lol. God, I hate everything.

God….

All I really want is just him. And that’s about it. That’s about it. And the more I write and the more I think, the worst it gets and the worst it seems.

Of course I miss him. What else do I think about nowadays? Not missing him? Oh, you give me too much credit. I miss him like hell. I want to stop thinking about him. But it’s ridiculously difficult.

Truth to tell, he had no idea where he was going. There was something dangerously alluring to a city at night, with amber lights, silent streets and swish of cars on the highway. The mannequins, decked in spring fashion, were his company.

“So, uh,” he started, plucking a grape from the empty branches sitting in the bowl, “how was your day?”
“Marvelous, yours?” She replied without looking up, her fingers settled gently on the ivory keys and with delicacy and slowness she started playing, as if she were testing the water. The music escaped from the piano, a prisoner set free, echoing across the hall, the sunlit pooled like an angel’s hair on the marble floor.
“A little less than marvelous, I have to say,” he ate another grape, “somewhere between tragic and depressing.”
“Miserable?”
He weighed the word in his mind and after some deliberation said, “Yeah,” he nodded to himself, “yeah, miserable.”
“I’m terribly sorry for your misfortune.” He watched her fingers fluttered between keys.
“Sarcasm noted,” he rested one elbow on the piano and looked at her with a playful curiosity and slight grimace of pain, “it really shouldn’t surprise you how my days are, the way you treat me.”
“I’m not surprised, Mr. Frost,” she replied, a string of notes flowed from the instrument, she paused, fingers on the keys and looked up at him for the first time, “I’m delighted.” And she pounded down on her next chord.
“Lillith, you’re too pretty to be so terrible.” He got up and strolled over to the window. A plump, red bird landed on a branch, its beady eyes turning to meet his.
“Flattery won’t get you anywhere.”
The bird jerked forward and spread its wings, soaring towards the sun and for a brief moment, Frost was reminded of Icarus. The branch wavered. He turned and looked at her, the way her chocolate curls rested on her shoulders, in the crook of her collarbone, he returned to the piano, but this time put his arms around her neck. The music continued.
“But this will,” he whispered, his breath tickling her ears.
“Try harder, Mr. Frost.” She replied, matching his decibel.
His hands found their way to her breasts, her nipples were stiffening from his mere touch. He massaged them gently, a small moan escaping from her lips as she missed note. His lips found their way to her neck, small nips and kisses made her quiver, leading to her lips. He gently tipped her head towards his. She strained to key playing, as he kissed her, the music stopped.
She spun around on her bench to face him, a hand in his golden hair,  his busy hand moved further down her body, down her stomach, towards her legs.
“Impatient, aren’t we?” She mumbled, as he broke the kiss and moves to one of her astute nipples. He grunted in response, one hand up her skirt already, he gently palmed her through her underwear, feeling her wetness.
“You’re one to talk,” he grinned, looking up at her.

Lab (why the hell can’t I stop thinking about him?)

William Frost died on a Monday.
He slammed his index finger in car door that morning and spent the next ten minutes, as he crossed the company parking lot in hurried steps, furiously shaking his hand, biting his lower lip to ease the pain, and mentally cursing his own stupidity.
He stepped into the elevator following the flow of bodies and found himself jammed between a short, plump woman and a man with horn rimed glasses and amazingly high cheekbones. There was a burning sensation between the first and second knuckle of his finger, his car door, he assumed. The lift rose steadily, silently through the building, ascending thirty some odd floors in a matter of seconds, shoulders and briefcases nudged past him as the silver doors slid open with a hum.
Alone he was in the elevator after the exodus of people with another woman whom he had never met before and certainly would have liked to meet again.
William Frost was not a talkative man, but when the occasion called, he tried very hard.
“Hi.”
At first she did not notice him, dismissing the murmured and barely audible greeting.
He was about to try again, but decided against it seeing how his first attempt failed. Long, brown hair that curled slightly resting in the crook of her back, a glossy sheen of blood red across her lips, emerald green eyes staring, unblinking, at the floor numbers as they were illuminated, the curve of her perfectly formed breasts under her snow white blouse-
“My name is William!” He almost yelled. She whipped around, her hair flying, green eyes outlined black, wide in surprise.
“Hi,” she started. Her voice bubbled like champagne and wispy cigarette smoke in a dingy parlor, sweetness with a bitter edge, a dirty martini, something aged and jaded in the way her irises settled on him and bore right through him, like a ruthless predator as the cork popped and her lips formed his name, “William.”
A deer in headlights, he stopped, the elevator stopped, a sharp ring announcing their arrival. His mouth felt dry as it hung half open, words waiting to be said, to roll off the tip of his tongue suddenly caught again in the cage of his teeth.
Her stilettos clicked as she stepped off, giving him a playful, teasing look over her shoulder, “Goodbye, William.” The particular smoothness of her hips etched itself in his mind as she walked away. He stepped forward, hand reaching, then the elevator doors closed, sandwiching his hand, his injured finger, between two sheets of metal.
He spent ten more minutes in pain, mindlessly daydreaming of her. He didn’t even have her name.
According to the police report, three hours after his miraculous chance encounter in the elevator, William Frost, age twenty-nine, pitched himself out of his fifty-fourth floor office window.

PHYSICS LAB

I love him when I don’t see because I think I miss. I think I love sometimes and sometimes I’m not so sure and oh god, this movie, her little monologue out front. I’m dying in pain because I love and I doubt, I doubt that he loves, I don’t even think he gives a damn, or half as much as I do about him and I’m scared to ask and all that nice noise and I’m going tod ie and die and die and eventually I’ll tell him but I’m not sure when because I don’t want him to know that’s just so strange and I think I’ll end this sentence now.

I love him and I think I do. I think I do. I know I do, or not. I need, or maybe just want, do I need him? Can I say that out loud or will I die after I admit that little unimportant factoid that no one, not even myself, ever, ever, ever needs to know? What the hell am I supposed to do?!

Emo people make it hard to write lovesick poetry. And yes, I do write lovesick poetry because every once in a while I think of you, and then you aren’t there anymore, and that’s when the emotional discontent, as I’d like to call it, kicks in.

I hate everything, grades, life, him, you, that, and like, two pennies and a television.

There’s still a little bit of me, hopefully no one will find

He really should’ve been working. But sometimes he just couldn’t concentrate on his graphs and data and files and figures and he ends up on the internet. The little pixilated mouse cursor hovering in the middle of his shiny liquid crystal display drifted closer and closer to a forbidden link. He clicked. His nineteen-inch monitor sprang to life. He was safe and secure behind his door. And he finds what he needs.

Snow falls on the city silently, a brazenly cold angel of death resting in the dull, gray curves of metal and concrete. In the morning, he wakes to a soft, mute world and stares placidly out his window as he breath fogs over circular patches of glass. His quick and sudden handiwork, all of it on a whim, his silent mistress, waiting for him to find, below him the white coils around blocks like a serpent.

His fingers are cold despite the gloves. His mind is numb despite the aspirin. His breath materializes in the frigid air and he imagines his soul escaping him. Park bench with chipping green paint and rusting brown nails, faintly blinking stars and a cup of cold coffee from some corner deli for company, a fizzing, broken streetlight arching overhead sheds a halo of light on his small epicenter of the world. There’s a strange taste on his palate, and for a moment he tries to eat air.

I talked to him on online and then I freaked out and died.

I’m in total and complete denial. Honestly, I don’t know what that feeling is, please stop. For sure, it can’t be love. I don’t know what love is and I’ll be damned if I ever, ever, find out. I’m quite sure I don’t. I don’t know, I don’t know, I don’t know! Damnit, of course I know I just don’t have the (guts) need to say it. So much work, so little time, my poor grades. I’m going to die. Curses.

No, really, no, really. I mean, god, that was so good, that was so, so, so, so, so good. Tokyo Godfathers, fucking brilliant. Fucking brilliant.

I like him, I don’t, I don’t know! Goddamnit, goddamnit, do I actually have some sort of disorder I’m really good at suppressing. I don’t sleep anymore, or, I sleep during the day, is that some sort of a problem? I need to get my labs done. I’m not getting any of it done. Hold.

Right, so, yeah. What do I have to do…

Math, where is that anyway?

Physics, let’s break this down…ahaha…

Labs

Resub (where the hell is your test?! Ugh!)

Free resub work (there are always the answers online, goddamn my conscience)

Right, so aside from that…

English essay (where the hell is THAT slip of paper, now?)

Really, I think I’m going insane. Or at least I want to, so I have an excuse for the sorry way my sad, dear little life turned out. I mean, if I do get hit by a truck, all the better! I’d have a seriously entertaining excuse and a reason to hate (or, love, depending on the situation) Someone’s guts!

I hate everything about everything, but in a nice way.

I don’t want to die, not really, but it’d be nice

A lot of things are nice but really aren’t.

Utterly despicable, that’s what it is.

The way she looked at him, there was something to all of it, he just didn’t know what. The way she tilted her head back ever so slightly to look at him across the room, over the rim of her spectacles, there was something, something so small and so fragile and so tormenting about it all; he wanted to cry. He retreated to his work, but his synapses fired like machineguns, his mind in total frenzy, fireworks going off in his head. He couldn’t read words. The letters, the numbers, the little charts and graphs, the newsprint became a stage for an alphabet troupe that paraded across his vision. Dancing, chanting, the little bastards, a violent part of him suddenly interrupted, he wanted to nip them with tweezers off the page, watching them squirm as he dropped them into vats of acid, watching them die, their little pip squeak voices drowned out by his maniacal laughter. And, as sudden as his splurge of violence and insanity came, it left and he left looking at her, over the edge of his paper, over the large blocky headlines at her, looking at him over the rim of her glasses. He really didn’t understand anymore, why he’s so inept and so scared and so alone. He knew the feeling quite well, of a dark empty room, of your own breathing, of nothing, no one but yourself, coming into your own hand and hearing you own raspy breath against the bed sheets and somehow you feel less and less fulfilled each time. He didn’t even know her name. Still, he maintained that there was something to all of it and he couldn’t shake it, like the guy at the pizzeria, that short little kid without a nametag, like how he’d shake the sugar over the pastries and it’d stick, it’d stick alright. She stuck, stuck like a stamp after you lick it and you have that strange, damn strange, taste of paste and whatever else in your mouth. People can taste the difference? Skittles on your postage stamp, is that what it is? She gave him disturbing chills reminiscent of licking stamps? Is he really that sick and odd, or is it the skittles bit? Perhaps, hopefully, most definitely (not) it’s the skittles bit. She was his rainbow in a world without color. That’s so cheesy, but is that really what that is? As simple, as simple and as wonderful as that, rainbows and color and the world, his world, over the newspaper and her world, over her glasses, colliding in some monstrous wreckage of an accidental glance. He’s dreaming a ludicrous dream and god, he doesn’t want to wake up. Sometimes he has to and that’s the sad part, he wants to cling so desperately to everything because he has that fear, that fear of loosing everything, all in one day. It’ll never happen, but, you know, he’s scared. He stared back and she stared back and then she looked away. Does she know he’s staring, does she know what he’s thinking? A mind reader? Can she see inside his fucked up little head? Poking in there with her mesmerizing eyes, examining, maybe even laughing at his little fantasies and worries and oh, how her eyes, her eyes, her eyes carried that flickering look, what was it? What was it that pained him so, that momentary glance, that chance just waiting, what was it? It’s still there, but it’s gone. It’s like an empty egg shell with the little bits of egg white still sitting in the bottom. Is that all there is? God, sometimes, sometimes he wished he were blind. And then he’d take it back, quickly, very quickly. All of it, he’d take all of it back. Crumple it up, in a tiny, tiny, tiny (densely packed) ball of everything and pitch it, like he’s in the major leagues, and hopes to god someone hits it far, far, far, far away. But he can’t bat and pitch at the same time, can he? So, he’s dishing out his shit to someone else all over again. No one wants more shit than they already have and his shit is just demented. She looked up again, but not at him. Was he reading too much into that? That little something was perhaps a trick, his own imagination, sick with desperation and need created that mellifluous moment of pure ecstasy in his head. He has a disorder, he’s sure of it. And then he bends back down into economics and his paper and the little dancing letters and how he’d kill them and he’s back in there again, with all that crap. It’s all written right there as the letters rearranged themselves. Track and field star in high school, not really. Failure at life star in high school, probably, because everyone’s a star athlete in high school and they don’t grow up to mean much. What happened anyway? Too many little glances from women he never had a chance with.

Goddamn.