Su Nadeau

The Passenger

The tractor, the copper of rust along its edge faded to a dull green, drove through New York City. At the wheel is a man whose fingers draped the shaft of a scythe leaned to his shoulder. The stop light blinked as the tractor slowed down, trembled along the road and bled over the dotted traffic lines. The tractor rode through the city.

A gas station flickered. Around the pumps, a young boy ran. Pumps jumped to a stop, the boy weaved between the cars and holstered the pumps. He exchanged cash with those through windows. What does the young boy see? Around his neck, the boy wore summer. A towel swung from his back pocket, pocked with grease. Between the garage door, an older man sat with an unlit cigar in his mouth. He would shout to the younger boy in a familial way.

The night was made hollow by city lights. At the wheel, the man drummed one finger to a tune he whistled. I strummed the banjo one note at a time, played slow enough so the man knew I loved him and the sour of his skin. When the man speaks, my whole body is tense. He tells me, the city was made for you and me. I hear him in my lungs and my tongue, fat with the anxious hope that this metropolis only existed for us. That, as the tractor traversed its streets it would erase those who lived there and that it would be painless until we were all who breathed. Until we could collapse into one another, until he pressed his yellow teeth to my skin, until I reeked—sour and alone, but with his arm around me.

There was a car at each pump, with more in wait. The pumps required a lever that wasn’t seen anywhere else in the city. They couldn’t be programmed with dollar amounts and with gas prices a twenty dollar bill didn’t get a tank that far. There were two islands with two pumps each on the back and front for a sum of eight. In the left pocket was a wad of cash to make change. Pumps clicked off and the boy leapt from one island to the next. Clicked off a pump and spun around to the car on the other side to deliver a small clipboard with receipt. Then clicked off the next pump and primed another. Was told to keep the change and went over on another pump. Money out of his pocket. The boy was a conductor, he played each pump and cars revolved around him. They clicked to his rhythm and the hose gyrated as oil flowed. Some waited at their pumps, but not one paid attention to the ballet of the boy who stayed in motion—who undid the gas cap, inserted the nozzle, and made change in the same turn.

Everything looked good tonight, but for Susannah. She was draped in the lap of the driver and it was she who cradled the scythe. The summer was thick around us and the tractor became too hot and was forced to stop. Susannah wore a dress that exposed her back, her spine bloomed from the cut of the dress, I took my banjo and went inside a shop for coffee. I sat and stayed under the glass and watched as she pressed her lips to the man and ran her fingers through his beard. I cupped my hands to the coffee and stayed until the stars came out. When the breeze blew cool I climbed the tractor and it was clear, Susannah was the passenger and everything was made for her and for him. Susannah put fingers to my back and greeted me, I drew my chin to my chest and plucked out a few notes.

Around lunch, the cars trickled in and got five dollars at a time. Only enough for the pump to gasp. The boy kept his grip on the pump and cast eyes to the pavement beyond the station. I’ve only got five, the driver said with elbows on the roof of the car. The boy nodded and knew well enough when five dollars came and went. Money was exchanged over the roof of the car. At the nearest stoplight was a tractor, the green and yellow nearly faded to the same color. A woman was at the wheel, a man sat on her lap and ran fingers through her hair. A separate man on the nose of the tractor with his head down, neck made red from the sun.

The boy was the passenger, his fingers and their grease pushed into the strands of her hair. Susannah said to him, let’s ride through this city tonight--I’ll show you what’s mine. There was only the smell of gasoline and Susannah and from under glass there was beauty in the night.

It’s New York City where the tractor puts wheels to concrete. At the driver’s seat the man is in coveralls and holding a scythe in one hand and the wheel in the other. Fingers draped across both and the gaze out over the street. Horns honk and cameras are pointed at the man, someone shouts to get out of the way. Lights illuminate in the same artificial, paranoid green of the tractor and it rumbles forward. Taxi cabs, bicycles, and pedestrians in orbit around the tractor. This close, nothing drowns out the hum of the engine. The tractor pulls to a stop at the next light and I am the passenger.

There are shouts, not at us, not at the tractor. Something down another street. A summer haze settles thick. I plucked at the banjo and ran fingers through my beard. As we rode the day turned to night and the stars came out bright and hollow. With the night, our tractor aged and rusted. The traffic before us stopped. New York City was desolate.

From apartment windows, silhouettes told stories of dinner, couches. Shadowed the actions of a domesticity I yearned for, but instead I stay atop the leather. I work at the banjo, but each pluck instead comes from the driver’s throat. He’s singing. The song ragged, dry, and cracked without melody. He sings something of Susannah. Under glass, the windows are so bright. This city was made for me. For you and me. Everything on this ride through the city is made for you and me.

Ahead there is a motorcade for which we must yield. Bright white and blue lights dot the street and flicker into existence. Susannah is the passenger. She rides through the city with a woman upon her lap. The sidewalk moves to get out of the tractor’s way. Susannah rides through the lobby. A song is sung and it’s voice brings whales back to the bay. A child cries out to Susannah, and says mother three times. Susannah presses her lips to the forehead of the other, who’s eyes never open. Four sets of fingers wrap around the steering wheel and pull it in all directions. The tractor is everywhere and the stars can do nothing to stop it.

Susannah is the passenger, Susannah wields the scythe and keeps it over her shoulder. She tells the woman, the stars are made for you me and the woman nods, never opening her eyes.

It is the passenger, Susannah’s passenger, who plays the banjo. Susannah sings again until the whales come ashore. Like points of a star, the whales dry out on each corner of Manhattan. The tractor makes a pilgrimage from whale to whale until they are decayed and become old bones. Susannah no longer sings. The child that called mother now has her own children. None of them are named for Susannah. They are named for the passenger.

The tractor no longer runs, but Susannah stays atop it and never lets go of the wheel. She is parked beside the whale. She tells the whale that all of this is not for nothing. Somewhere a tractor starts and Susannah feels it tremble.


Su Nadeau is fascinated by soups, bread, and humans. He is a special education teacher and MFA candidate at Columbia College Chicago. Su's work can be found in Entropy Magazine, Yalobusha Review, Green Mountain Review, and elsewhere. Follow him on twitter @SuNadeau.

 

Mandira Pattnaik

Two of us in a Body


Makati plunged into the Ganges in her bus --- seventeen-years-old, most of her life unlived.

Those days I used to resurrect people --- found them indulgent bodies which they entered surreptitiously and left at-will --- responsive to their residual yearnings. Family and friends doubted me, but I viewed them uncharitably; believing it’d be inequitable to discount suppressed desires amongst spirits.

It all begun with priest Chinmaya of the Anglican Church in Conoor. Three years ago. He’d visited me just two days after---the soil above him still soft. I helped him with all my skills, acquired by means of trial-and-error, because he’d found a Dutch backpacker at his own cemetery, who was leaving for Male in two days.  Priest Chinmaya’s dreams of breaking the shackles of the hamlet he’d never stepped outside of, took wings.

Next, my friend Anita got stabbed in the subway. Her wide eyes, open like a wooden doll, kept asking, why me? No answers. We --- Anita and I --- had to find an extension outside space and time, an existence that enabled her to inhabit her terrier, because, after her, her partner spent most of his time with it.

Coming to Makati, her elfin face was framed by short black hair. Watching her bloated body, I kept thinking what kind of life would she have led? Wishes drowned, moments washed away, like flavors from a tongue.

Not much different from me --- walking dead who pitied his existence! Oscillating between recognition of what I wanted and living another different life; who let pieces drain him, physically and emotionally, but couldn’t provoke buying editors to turn the first page!

Ahhh! Whose dreams aren’t just hopes hung on compromised consciousness?

Muddied trousers folded upto my knees, I spit the tobacco from my mouth, twirled my thin moustache and pondered. She needed my help to restore her. My head was bursting with possibilities! Moments sped like wild horses.

Crouching beside her, I held her hand. 

Malai eklaichadideu’ she said in one of the thousand or so Indian dialects.

I must’ve appeared baffled because she repeated---shriller and insistent,

‘Malai eklaichadideu’

I beckoned the tender-coconut seller, What does she say?’

He looked at me, aimed a train of cuss words. He was in a tearing hurry. At the rescue scene curious onlookers were swarming like maggots to a cadaver.

‘Malai eklaichadideu’, she said again, this time feebly. Alarmed I let go her hand. She immediately floated above, circling around in the void above the wreckage, and melting before I could blink.

Malai eklaichadideu, I learnt later, meant ‘Leave me alone’!

I didn’t leave her alone. Not that I could help it in any way--- a young man’s never sure of his ways.

The first of her messages came while sailing with a simpleton boatman on the Mekong, Laos on one bank and Thailand on the other; thanking me for helping her find her first abode. On an unhurried maiden adventure, she enjoyed playing a trick or two of the disappearing type on the people wearing straw hats squatting by the riverside.

Makati soon outgrew it, abandoning the boatman to plant herself on the Irish Munster Vales through a welcoming breeder on the stud farm. For a young woman, I reckon, jostling with warm bodies was exciting enough for the adventure to last close to a year.

Makati excelled in getting bodies fast. And trashing them faster, unsure of what exactly she wanted. One of those who lose interest before gaining any, she went wherever her crammed, curious mind ordered. I’d swear she rather enjoyed being without a body of her own than she’d ever have been in one.

At the bar one day, lamenting the lack of an income to my friend Lewis, I told him how proofreading for a small press and writing on the sly was beginning to dismantle me.

Lewis said, ‘Try London. Or Paris. Life’s there, my friend. Ghost writing---neat pay! Look at me. I’d think I’m not half as talented as you.’

I was considering it, talking to my ageing parents whom I didn’t want to leave, when Makati cried for help. Again.

Days earlier, she’d split herself into two --- inside the Monsieur! The French President! Taking a fancy to the Elysees Palace, she needed two of her own to keep up with his diverse and engaging lives. But three in the same body was rather a crowd. The voices in the President's head had decided to silence the body. He shot himself one morning. 

She hung aimlessly unsure whether to take the body-route again, as unsure as I, mulling whether to continue putting pen to paper.

One night, I took my chances.  Proposing to Makati was like entrapping her. I had wild visions of violent protests --- she clawing my face, making bloody scratches on my limbs. Instead, she coyly agreed to partner me.

That was like a burst of energy---she within me. Together, we. Spitting fire!

Makati squeezed narratives out of her colorful experiences, inundated me in flashes.

I commemorated our inviolable partnership by splitting myself into two; let one part embark on unfathomable adventures with Makati, living other people’s lives within their bodies.

The other was bent on the desk at home, fingers skimming over keyboard, weaving that yarn first-hand, and sending them out to editors faster than I’d ever done. Most wrote back positively.

Tonight, when I checked my inbox, flooded with snapshots sent from idyllic islands and Russian space stations, I found a mail from my editor: my adventure tale had gone into reprint within the first week.


Mandira Pattnaik writes poetry and fiction in India. Her work has appeared most recently in Brilliant Flash, Door Is A Jar, Cabinet of Heed, Spelk and Lunate . Fiction is forthcoming from Star 82, Heavy Feather Review and Gasher Journal.

Juliet Lauren

Diary Excerpts


June 5

I put my cigarette out on an ant one time and cried. I can’t kill myself. If I do I’ll spend the rest of my life in some tax-funded pool of fire or a state-run snake pit. My darling, I hate how I love her. I hate that our angelic nirvana that normal people call love keeps me alive even when my .357 whispers in my ear. In this Godless world, I am not her God. I’m not good enough for her and I’m probably not good enough for hell either. It’s funny until you’re left to kill yourself. I can’t help of thinking about the kids I will never give Azalea. And Charlie, and Vanessa laughing; brimming with life and how nice it would be to never see that again. The rats of Seattle will gnaw and have soft chewy bites at my freshly moldering flesh and cockroaches will dance and play in my eye sockets. When I’m dead I’ll still be giving to the world because my eyes will roll out of my head so the sewer slicked infested mammals and insects will have some soccer balls.

Bullets injected into my forehead will feel like Azalea’s soft sweetly placed kisses. And the only divine intervention I’ll believe in is bullet holes in the shape of a cross. I make pink offerings of flesh as some dark thing inside me boils. I’ll cut my thighs with rusty razors and I’ll only stop until I get visions of a life worth living in the blood. And when she gives me a handjob and asks about the scars I’ll say the faded white skin is stretch marks. My final lullaby will be police sirens and I will be so happy. I will be so happy. Red blue blue blue red red blue. White red blue blue. White red and blue. Blue red and white. Red red. Blue.

 

 

August 24th

She is the center of the universe, she smells like raspberries and rum. She gives me the gift of some kind of sore and sticky heaven. And I’ll hurt her because the angels told me to. Lust makes everything feel so warm. I leak nothing but love for her. Universal law and quiet coexistence. Valentines for Adderall girl. Heavenly spheres and cashmere colored scars. She’s the one sole angry urban goddess against a sea of ugly animal longing. My one embodiment of all ecstasy. My wonderful favorite. Lovesome, dirty, and divine. I hold her in my arms. She smells good. I swear gold and silver liquid thoroughly coat the raw lining of her esophagus because she only speaks in magic and money.

I’ve always wanted to love a gentle thing like her. She’s exquisitely adjusted into individuality. Loving her is all warmed toned desire. The sky is star-speckled and she pours another glass of wine as her cells divide and the bouquet of flowers in the kitchen wane from lack of sunlight. Unfortunately, the world’s mechanics don’t wait for anyone and I’ll make sure to be her favorite world every day from the birth of our children until her first signs of Alzheimer's. White blood cells fight the cancer in her cigarettes and her liver fails at digesting the concoction of liquors she forces to meet her lipstick lips to sliver past her wine-stained tongue and down her greedy throat. I think she’s lovely.

I don’t care about anything and I just want the voices to stop. Nothing shuts them up. They tell me what I am and what I’m not. They tell me what I can’t do. They tell me what the world is. They ooze pessimism like a fleshy wound. Darling, I’m drunk. Do you remember the couch we shared on New Years? How the cold made our cheeks burn? How you clung onto me under a beer smelling quilt like I was a Hallelujah?

I cannot behave. I wanted to have a wasteland mind ever since I had a loose concept of dystopian reality. I have secrets and you have secrets and your tattoos are just for you and that kills me. I wish it’d shut up, the heaviness is really not leaving me alone tonight. Alcohol is fighting for more of my time and attention. It’s just another day that wants to be stolen. My darling, my god, I wish you had a hobby besides sitting in your underwear on the porch collecting weed crumbs. I wish you had a hobby besides people watching and being sad. Besides trying on different eye-shadow combinations at 4’oclock in the morning and obsessing over Elvis. I wish we had the money and you had the direction to smoke your way through school but the gods don’t always bless us with the qualities we need now, do they?

 

 

July 22nd

There was Emily. Who was this teeny tiny little blonde who was artsy with an edge. We met in our community college art history class and bonded over Impressionism and bondage. She had the personality of honey and hot sauce. Fierce and fiery one moment and dainty and overtly sugary the next. All the metal in her face and ears made me nauseous with affection. And she made me sad because there were parts of her that were lost and couldn’t be found and the parts that were there didn’t fit with me. Then there was Riley who was an illiterate vegan Buddhist punk and she loved heroin more than she loved me. And we never liked each other we just lived together because it was convenient to have sex accessible to both of us 24 hours a day. I finally broke up with her because she carved another dude’s name into her ankle. Then there is Azalea who is my elegant junkie dream girl. I’d marry her on a Tuesday.

I hear violins and sweet-tasting piano. Her carmine silk dresses and the indigo violet blush of burst blood vessels when I stain her neck with my love. Her mind reflects her constantly tangled gold and silver jewelry; valuable but twisted. I live in her world now; of crumpled up dollar bills and earring backings piercing me in bed. Vomit and hairspray and chocolate stained poetry books. She's an odd one, smelling like lavender, microwaved coffee, and sex. She tastes like clean colors and clenched fists. Beauty art and fire infection. I’m safe with her fast life and furious love.

She’s always looking out of place in a public space with her knobby knees and god-like glare in her eyes. I always make sure to watch her in my peripheral vision. At bars or house parties when she’s nursing a sweaty beer bottle into her system, bored, and rolling her eyes when a stranger steps in too close. She knows they’ll never love her like I do. I know about the gleaming silky stretchmarks gliding along her hips that are the color of unripe raspberries and have kissed each one. I don’t think there’s a single centimeter of her body I haven’t kissed. The backs of her calves, the insides of her elbows, her eye-shadow covered eyelids. She’s dangerous rushing through life, greedily searching existence for the next thrill to the extent of her falling asleep with shoes on. I know her. I know when she’s hopelessly tired she still pushes to feel the best, look the best, think the best, talk the best, be the best. Be this enlightened urban angel among a sea of slithering human desire. She doesn’t want anything. The girl never wants. I always want. I’m sloppy with longing. Azalea just wants a bed, coffee in the morning, wine at night, and occasionally for me to read Yeats to her. She has no God. She has no rotting passion. She doesn’t long for material things because of cosmic nihilism and because she saw what wanting did to her parents. Her dad wanted fame and instead, he got stale recognition and alcoholism. Her mom wanted her dad and a nice body but instead, she got anorexia and alcoholism. She doesn’t strive because her parents lost it to trying. Maybe I will buy her a cat?

I’m sickened by her sweetness. Did I mention that I love her hopelessly? Her cherry rose lipsticks and the faint baby blue sky-way of veins gracing her inner arms. She’ll stand, stare into the distance, and won’t say what’s on her mind. I watch and long for the day where that type of understanding sinks into her heart. The day where she won’t feel a sting of regret when she speaks because everyone is oblivious to the importance uttered from her lips.

And I don’t mind her waking me up early in the morning when the counter-tops are spread over in sugar and the windowpanes are split and shattered in sunlight. Eggs might be burning; depends on her mood. She’ll be wearing sleep clothes and her long hair would be tousled from a dreamless sleep and just as eagerly as she brings caffeine to her lips she’ll stand on her toes to pull me in for a kiss. Her eyes glow with longing and innocence. Caramel sauce and coffee cream flavored kisses. She gives me the gift of how life is supposed to be.


Juliet Lauren is a nineteen year old emerging writer. Her work can be found in Gold Wake Live, SkyIsland Journal, High Shelf Press, Anti Heroin Chic, and is forthcoming in Kissing Dynamite. You can follow her general antics on instagram at jadore.mon.amour and view her reading poems a bit too licentious for Youtube under her name Juliet Lauren. She dreams daily of being a full time novelist and thrives off of espresso and melodrama. 

Audrey T. Carroll

Inevitable

Everyone is born with three prophecies, but not everybody knows what their prophecies are. Most often, it is because parents want to protect their children. As you may already suspect, at least one of the prophecies predicts how a person dies, or at least that is the rule of thumb. But, sometimes, a person doesn’t know their prophecies because they don’t want to know, or they only know some of them, or they know their prophecies deep in their subconscious but have buried it in a place that doesn’t make them want to walk into the ocean and give into the despair of it all.

Take George Pernikis, for instance: George is middle-management in a company that makes a product he’s never been clear about. It is uninteresting work, yelling at the lesser employees and filling in numbers on paperwork that has no obvious meaning, but George has never thought to ask someone what it is that their company does. He has never been curious about the world around him. Once George has had two Budweisers, he will tell anyone unfortunate enough to stand near him his theory of the prophecies. He, for one, is entirely too reasonable to believe in such childish fantasies. Has anyone ever really read the prophecies? he asks. No, his unfortunate companion will tell him. They are not written; they are known. Then George will wave a proud and pompous finger in the air, spilling some beer on the ground. You see? he’ll say, triumphant. You see? Things are not simply known. They must be studied, documented. Have you known anyone to trace the origins of these silly little notions? Here, he’ll let out a full, honking belly-laugh that will cause a lull in the room at the party as everyone else stares at George and his unfortunate companion; the companion’s face will, inevitably, go red and George’s, inevitably, will not, because George is not one to wonder about the world around him. The unfortunate companion might suggest Gravity is known. To which George, now red in the face, might reply, It was not known until it was a theory. The unfortunate companion might reply But it still existed. It does not need to be theorized to be truth. George might laugh, falsely, attempting to turn the boat of a conversation around. He might clap the unfortunate companion on the shoulder, explaining The theory of gravity is clear. Up, down. It’s neat. It’s simple. When has a prophecy ever been anything but cryptic? And the astute observer, an unfortunate companion who is really paying attention, might notice the sheen of sweat along George’s hairline, the way that his voice is so insistent, the way that prophecy seems to have gotten under his skin in a way that he would deny to an early grave. And the most astute of observers might notice that this was what George feared; don’t we all? But it was as though a prophecy had revealed an early grave to George in no uncertain terms. George might search, then, for another beer, and a different unfortunate companion to gloat to.

Or you might consider the case of Henrietta Fisher: Henrietta could only remember half of each of her prophecies, which is worse than knowing a full prophecy. Her parents died when she was young, and Henrietta was raised by a grandmother who didn’t know what had been predicted for Henrietta’s life. At this time, Henrietta wanted to be a scientist and study the swamps of Florida. She was very curious about the world around herself. The first prophecy, Henrietta knew, had to do with the death of her parents; prophecy number two warned of the betrayal of a beloved, and prophecy number three was about where orange kisses pine, something including gravity determinate. (George Pernikis in North London was not wrong about the cryptic nature of the prophecies, his other views aside. It’s difficult to know a meaning if you don’t have the key.) As Henrietta became a teenager, when it would be natural for her to spend more time out of the home, she spent less, eventually leaving school altogether before ever graduating. She would wake in the night, screaming so loud that her grandmother needed to shake her out of her panicked trance on more than one occasion. Henrietta would avoid any word from her prophecies, as though this sort of superstitious tiptoeing would do anything to change a sealed fate. Still, Henrietta would find a way to not use Pine Street, and she never visited Pine Valley even though it had been her departed mother’s favorite place. She did not travel through Orange County, by any means necessary, and if a book she was reading had been opened to a page with the word “gravity” on it, still she would immediately take the book to the library as a donation. And so Henrietta lived her life in this way, treading lightly of any sign of fate. She was fearful, but she was not a nun, and by her twenty-sixth birthday she bore a child. The child’s father never took responsibility, but Henrietta’s grandmother thought that this child would be a savior for its mother, that finally Henrietta might not be frightened of every shadow or sound. And it did work, for a time. Henrietta had no nightmares once her son was born, and she doted on him always. Sometimes, she would even leave the house for walks with him. Henrietta ignored the way that her child’s prophecies came like faint whispers. Within the first year of the child’s life, Henrietta’s grandmother’s final prophecy came to pass, and because her grandmother never spoke of prophecy because her granddaughter feared them so, grandmother and granddaughter did not realize that theirs was the same final prophecy. Henrietta’s grandmother had fallen asleep with a cigarette on her nightstand, still lit; no one woke up in time to survive.

Or perhaps you’d prefer to think instead of the prophecies of Rosa Zambrano: it was prophesized that she would live a happy childhood with a big family, which came to pass; it was prophesized that she would start a business that would be meaningful to herself and her community, which came to pass; and, finally, it was prophesized that she would go with peace, surrounded with love, which, in its own time, came to pass.

Some people are simply born under brighter, luckier stars, others born without any starlight at all, but most are somewhere in between. At any rate, everyone prefers the happy stories; they keep us from walking into the ocean. Everyone tries to manipulate their prophecies into happy ones, even when it comes to death, timely or otherwise.

But here’s the truest part of all: you don’t care about George or Henrietta or Rosa. Actually, what you have been wondering this whole time is what your prophecies might be. Well come, then. Gaze into the buried finality of your past, graze your fingertips along the inevitabilities of your present. Take a deep breath and listen closely to the whispers, to the way that your fate is written in everything around you, everything that holds you in one place, that bars you from another.

But first, ask yourself honestly: is your future something you truly want to know?

Most try to escape their fate, manipulate their fate, make a prophecy come quicker or slower. I’ve never seen it done, and I am the speaker of the prophecies. I’ve seen artists become politicians to defy my words, and I’ve seen healers become warriors and rebels become removed from the world; it is as though they do not understand that their societies set them on these paths at nearly the same time that their prophecies were spoken. Their fate still comes to pass as it was always meant to. You can try, if you’d like, to defy me, spite me. Many have. See, now, if you can escape the confines of your era, of the conditions of your birth, the pressures around you to conform.

I’ll wait. It would be nice to be surprised.


Audrey T. Carroll is the author of Queen of Pentacles (Choose the Sword Press, 2016). Her work has been published or is forthcoming in peculiar, Glass Poetry, Vagabond City, So to Speak, and others. She received her BA in Creative Writing from Susquehanna University and her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Central Arkansas. She is a bisexual and disabled/chronically ill writer who serves as a Diversity & Inclusion Editor for the Journal of Creative Writing Studies. She can be found at http://audreytcarrollwrites.weebly.com and @AudreyTCarroll on Twitter.