Lauren Artiles

FIVE: Wild Dogs by Lauren Artiles

You’re going to a new place, by car. It’s your car but Brady is driving because his is in the shop, as usual, and you like being able to sit in the passenger seat and watch his face travel through its full range of ‘concentrating’ expressions. You are on your way to the party of a mutual friend that neither of you know very well. She brags a lot about her house, which is in a tiny desert town. You both are curious and bored enough to travel an hour to see it. There are two balconies, is something she loves to tell people. The redundant luxury of this has become a thing between you and Brady, who both live in dingy apartments with many roommates. Sometimes you will be hanging out quietly, in his apartment or yours, and he will say Two Balconies! in an old rich lady voice. This sets you off laughing for minutes. Tonight at the party, your plan is to stand on the top balcony and toss a small object down for him to catch; although the mutual friend is roughly your age, you feel very strongly that her bathroom will be full of decorative soaps shaped like shells and animals, perfect ammunition for throwing.

At the last gas station before the turn-off, you are sitting in your own passenger seat. The shift in perspective makes your body seem alien to itself. You’re eating cherry Pop Rocks and watching the sun sink behind a 7-11 across the street. It is the same nasty pink as the candy moving on your tongue. You wonder what kind of chemicals go into making a sky look like that. If you made a joke about Red Dye #40 chemtrails, Brady might laugh, but in the lesser way where sound comes from the front of his mouth only. You consider making it anyway, when he gets back from the bathroom. He is taking a long time, as usual. Things you can do while waiting are: pick at the persistent scab on your knee, start filling up the tank even though it is not your turn to pay for gas, lick the inside of the paper Pop Rocks pouch clean. Warm stillness is settling over everything and making you sleepy, so you get out of the car and crack all of your joints. You dislike the soft, self-righteous voice nagging about money in the back of your head. As you walk, the pavement under your feet is slightly spongy. Orange light pours in like sap between the cars and buildings. You think about tar pits and amber globes, feeling like a large prehistoric bug or tiny prehistoric mammal. When you slide your debit card into the slot at the pump, the graphic for ‘waiting’ is the face of an analog watch. Fossils of the future, today, you whisper. This joke is just for yourself and you don’t even smile about it.

The day is scaling back around the edges of the small lot. In a minute, the stuporous heat will fall out of the air. This close to the desert, there is no real evening: just the yellow afternoon and then night rolling down like a garage door, swift and final. You almost get your sweater out of the backseat, but you’re sort of paralyzed every time you fill up your tank. Once your mother said something about women being statistically more likely to start fires at the gas pump because they keep getting in and out of their cars, building up static electricity. According to her, this is because they, we, don’t want to smell like gasoline. This seems like the provenance of bad chain emails, but it has leeched onto you at some base superstitious level, which, if you’re being honest, is the only level you live on. Something about the suggestion that your own implied frivolity could kill you makes it extra terrible, beyond the dying in a fire part. You resist the urge to shudder and kick a rock across the pavement instead. It skids off in the direction of the 7-11 and the sky full of freaky pink smears. In the parking lot over there—this whole part of the world seems to be one large parking lot, punctuated by road—there is something hunched and four-legged circling around a cement planter. You have a hard time telling exactly what it is from so far away, but assume it is a dog; no feral things would come so close to people, you think, or at least you hope. Briefly you imagine that it’s lost. Maybe it’s one of those archetypal mutts, with the best traits of all its ancestors and one ear cocked at an angle that makes it look fully carefree. You could call it something like Rowdy or Meatloaf or Macho Man Randy Savage, a chill name for a chill dog that would somehow transfer its laidback and slobbery attitude to you by osmosis. Nevermind that your lease explicitly forbids pets and you couldn’t afford to take care of a whole other living thing, really, anyway. Plus who would walk it during the day. Plus what if it didn’t love you, like it would tolerate you but deep down you’d both know it would rather be living with anyone else. You are beginning to consider walking closer anyway, just to get a better look, when Brady appears at your side and startles you. You scream, embarrassingly enough, a little.

‘Whoa, sorry!’ He takes a step back, nearly tripping over concrete but righting himself quickly. Despite his snaky limbs, he has a great sense of balance. He is grinning and wearing a straw safari hat slung around his neck. ‘It was on sale!’ he tells you gleefully. He is carrying a two-gallon jug of water because he does not trust the desert. Earlier he tried to convince you to put a knife in your glove compartment, just in case.

You say, ‘You look like Crocodile Dundee,’ and he laughs, the real way

that comes bubbling up from somewhere deep.

‘How far is the house from here?’ he asks.

‘Not very. Maybe an hour.’

‘That’s far!’

‘Yeah, but not in the grand scheme of things. We can speed, we’ll be in the middle of nowhere.’

The gas pump shuts off; you hang the nozzle back on its hook and wipe your hands on your shirt. You squint across the street, trying to find the outline of dog in the purple dark, but you can’t see anything. You climb back into the car and Brady pulls out of the lot, away to where the bruisy sky is rapidly dimming. Because you are not driving, you can afford to be distracted. You open up the browser on your phone. Lately you have been into reading online how-to guides with dumb names. How to Be Goth: it is helpful to choose a theme and to cultivate an ‘attitude.’ How to Be Okay with Having a Communist Friend: don’t talk about capitalism, don’t take it personally. Before you went to Brady’s place, you were reading How to Become a Ghost. It’s funny to you that the only step isn’t ‘die.’ There is a lot of pre-planning involved, like throwing a dinner party or booking a vacation. The amount of thought experiments required seems daunting. Astral projection is discussed at length. You try to project the idea of offering gas money into Brady’s head but he is busy fiddling with the sound system. You concentrate very hard on touching his arm with your phantom hands but he doesn’t even flinch.

*

Brady can sing with his lips almost closed. If it was anyone else, this would creep you out, like people who never smile all the way or who breathe wetly on public transit; since it is part of him, you feel the same surge of protective affection as you do for all the other parts. You’re listening to Patsy Cline through a tape deck adapter plugged into your phone. Every time the car hits a bump, which is often, some electronic hiccup makes Patsy slur verses together. The landscape jumps and starts like this too; there are streets of low, identical houses studded with shopping plazas and trails of neon, and then you make a sharp right into a gulf of nothing. The road dips below the horizon of visible lights and you start smelling horse pee through the open windows. This is when Brady starts singing along to all the words he knows. Half silence, half have you ever been lonely. You grow attuned to his fear by degrees. Does he have context for this kind of darkness? You think he’s mostly lived in cities but there are large gaps between things that he tells you. You want to ask him something but have no idea how to phrase it, which is how most of your car rides together end up. Neither do you know how to tell him something, unsolicited. For the first couple miles, there is a lot of silence and Patsy. What you want to say is that where you grew up, there were almost no streetlights; you remember an anxiety setting in around seven or eight, on long drives, that something could reach out from the black space under the car seat and grab your ankles. You had no image of the hands or claws, but a very real idea of what they could feel like. This makes you itchy even in the present and you have to fight the urge to pull your knees up to your chest.

There are a surprising number of passing cars. Each one seems to flick its high beams at you as it passes. ‘Are they doing that on purpose?’ you ask.

He says, ‘I think it’s just them hitting the bumps. It sets the lights off.’

‘You know what my worst thing about driving alone at night is? It’s really dumb—’

‘How dumb? Like werewolf dumb?’

‘No, that’s my mom’s! She says she won’t drive cloth top cars cause she’s afraid of something ripping the fabric open. Mine is that story where the girl is driving alone and there’s a truck flashing its lights at her, and she’s afraid that the driver is one of those serial killer truckers, do you know this one?’

‘Yeah, but tell me anyway.’

‘She pulls over into a gas station or something so she can get help, and the trucker pulls in behind her and climbs out of the cab, and she’s freaking out and he tells her to step out of the car and it turns out that there’s been a guy in her backseat with a knife this whole time.’

‘I feel like the way I heard it, there was a midget in the backseat. An escaped mental patient midget, actually. I don’t know why that makes it worse but it does.’

‘That’s fucked up. Like in an essentialist way.’

‘But it’s terrifying.’

‘I know.’ You think about telling him that you have to check the backseat and the trunk with the tiny flashlight on your key ring, every time you get in the car. You also, when driving alone at night, make sure to sing extra loudly, with extra feeling; you hope that this would make you human and relatable to a captive audience of potential backseat murderers. This is more sad than charming and you don’t say anything more. The road keeps bending on around abutments of rock that carry white tubes through the mountains, draped at rubbery angles.

‘That’s where the water comes from,’ he says.

‘Or through, I guess. It comes from Colorado, right?’

‘I think so.’

‘Imagine pipes stretching all the way back there. You could ride them here like slides.’

He nods, but his eyes are on the yellow lines spooling out ahead of you. When he hits the brakes to ease around the curves, the taillights bathe the bushes and blacktop in soft reds. You are privately waiting to see the glow reflected back from animal eyes; this is your other thing about night driving, what you refuse to name aloud in case it is true. The thing you always imagine is like a person-sized dog, with shaggy fur and almost fingers where there should be stubby paws. It would start running alongside the car on all fours and then give up all pretense and just run, two-legged, impossibly tall. You never know what happens after it stands up because your imagination won’t go there. You have made fun of your mother for her werewolf fears because they come strictly from movies; your personal night monster is close to hers, but different enough to matter. Famous werewolves are generally sad about their condition, or at least minimally conflicted. This thing is all intentional: dog enough to love the act of biting, human enough to know better and just not care. In your scenario, it can see all the inadequacies of your heart and that’s why it chooses you to chase; it knows that you would rather be a dog in an open field than anything else.

I go out walking, after midnight, out in the moonlight, Brady sings through his teeth. You can’t see them but you know what they look like, small and straight like baby fenceposts. He says he’s never had braces; you have no reason to think he would lie, but it is hard for you to believe teeth could work themselves out so effortlessly.

*

You ask, ‘You know what the actual worst legend is, though?’

‘The dangling boyfriend?’

‘No! That one is the worst worst, like the least scary.’

‘Dude, sewer alligators are the least scary.’

‘Yeah, but that kind of thing isn’t supposed to be unless you’re five, right? The worst one is this one my neighbor told me in middle school and it legitimately kept me up for like a week.’

‘Babysitter clown statue?’

‘NO. Ok. There’s this girl, and she’s, what, twelve, and she doesn’t have a lot of friends, but she has this dog—imagine it’s a golden retriever or something, like standard movie dog—and it’s her favorite thing in the entire world. And she also has a lot of trouble sleeping—’

‘Wow, they really laid this backstory on thick.’

‘No it’s better this way, trust me. She has a lot of trouble sleeping, so the dog stays in her room with her. And she’ll wake up in the middle of the night from bad dreams, and she has this ritual where she sticks her hand down where the dog is, under the bed, and he licks her hand until she falls back asleep. This is how it goes for practically their whole lives, ok?’

‘Okay—‘

‘So there’s this one particular night where it’s storming outside—‘

‘Wait, what’s the dog’s name?’

‘Shut up, I don’t know.’

‘I mean I just figured, with all the rest of the detail—’

‘Okay, it’s…Pepper.’

‘Huh.’

Anyway, it’s really noisy and scary outside, and it takes the girl forever to get to bed. She’s just lying there for a while, and the dog—‘

‘Pepper—‘

Pepper is licking her hand, and she finally relaxes enough to fall asleep. Then she wakes up like, two hours later, maybe a branch is scratching at the window or something. She hears the faucet in the bathroom down the hall dripping and it’s kind of irritating but she’s comfortable and she’s like, I’ll deal with it. So she reaches down and lets Pepper lick her hand, and eventually she falls back asleep. And this whole deal happens one more time, and now it’s really late, and the dripping is just getting louder. She tries to go back to sleep and she can’t, so she decides to get up and turn the sink off, and she lets Pepper lick her hand again before she goes, for comfort. And she’s walking to the bathroom, and she pushes open the door, and there’s the dog, with its throat slit, hanging from the shower curtain rod. And in the dog’s blood, on the mirror, it says HUMANS CAN LICK TOO.’

Brady makes a puke face as he pulls the car around a tight corner. ‘Thaaat’s disgusting!’

‘I told you it was the worst one.’ You lean back in your seat, feeling smug. You are generally a bad storyteller, one of those people who is always going back halfway through to clarify things. This is the only story you can tell in proper order, with maximum effectiveness, to the point where you genuinely freak yourself out like you are ten all over again. You rub your sweaty palms on your jeans. 

Brady’s nose is still wrinkled up in disgust. ‘Why would anyone make that up?’

‘Because people are profoundly gross.’

‘Ahhh, but the guy would’ve had to be watching her for so long to know—‘

‘I told you!’

The mile markers jump up in white flashes as you pass. You are climbing far up in the mountains now; the air coming through the windows turns sound into a tunnel that you have to half-shout over if you want to be heard. Your ears pop, one at a time, and you watch Brady crack his jaw, so you know his are popping too. It feels good to be held together in a shape, moving fast and feeling roughly the same sensations. How to Be in a Car with Someone you Maybe Love: pay attention to their small movements, tell them stories. You wait for him to trade you one of his personal fears, but he is just alternating between making gross-out grimaces and squinting beyond the pools of your headlights. His safari guy hat is hanging off the back of the seat and his hair is messed, swept crazily up at a right angle towards the front.

By now you have made it through two and a half Patsy Cline albums, more than you thought the drive would last for. You wish you knew about anything as much as Patsy knows about loneliness. Her whole voice sounds like an empty bed. ‘How much further is it?’ Brady asks. You check the GPS but there’s no reception; on the display, your car is a small blue pin stuck in a wide swath of green.

‘We can’t have missed any turns, this is the only road.’

‘It feels like we’ve been on it for an hour already.’ According to the clock it’s been half an hour, but he’s not wrong either. In the desert, time is draggy and elastic. There is no one else on the road now and it’s easy to pretend that your car is calling the world around it into focus, like in video games where you can wander freely. Each hill looks like every other hill, scrubby and covered with half-burnt trees. Your faces and hands are greenish in the dashboard light. Anytime you’re thinkin’ bout me, Brady sings. This song might have happened already. The beat is an easy two-step, plodding like horse hooves, but you feel sped up and crawly in your skin. Up ahead, there’s a spot where one of the water pipes hangs low over the road, creating a kind of gate between the steep cliffs. You think about the weight of all that liquid coursing overhead, how you can’t hear it echoing through the thick white plastic. You lean against the window and the speed rattles the bones in your head.

‘Did she say anything about landmarks?’

‘Not really. She said there would be an, um, shooting range? And then a gas station right by her street.’

‘I don’t think we’ve passed any buildings yet, though.’

‘No, nothing. Ugh. I hope there’s still food when we get there.’

‘Maybe there’s different courses. On the different balconies.’

‘Appetizers at the top—‘

‘Wait, do you see that?’

There is something moving up on the pipe, but you are still too far away for it to be more than a slightly darker smudge on the landscape.

‘What?’

You point up and to the right. ‘Over there.’

‘Oh!! I think so?’

You are both craning your necks to see and Brady hits a deep groove in the pavement; as the car lurches forward, the brights switch on and catch a pair ofneon pupils suspended in the hurtling dark. A coyote or dog, using the pipe as a bridge. Brady flings his arm across your chest reflexively. You’re skidding across the bumps in the median and into the rocks on the other side of the road; he elbows you hard in the chin, trying to get both hands on the wheel in time to steer away. You spit a mist of warm, sour blood, ridiculously pink. 

You have anticipated moments like this a lot, nearly every time you are driving or trying to cross the street: what happens to the body when it is thrown free from its own command. It is almost nothing like you expected. Your thoughts go something like: wanting to call your mother, wanting to be outside yourself watching the moment of impact, remembering you did not eat dinner, remembering that you did not take off your chipped nail polish before you left, like you had planned. Then they go flat and condense into a quiet oh!, which you may or may not say aloud. You are surprised that the speed at which things are happening feels exactly accurate, and that you can still hear music, and that it is your least favorite song, the one about foolin’ around.

FOUR: Drowners by Lauren Artiles

 

1.

 

in a dirty lake downtown

they’re holding auditions for the 

best dead girl of the century

and I am the forty first one in line,

not wearing the right blue dress,

my hair is working itself up into intestinal knots

when it should be trailing behind me 

like airplane banners at the beach

 

I am concerned about parts of me

floating incorrectly when tested against

the milky water

 

is the thing with witches that they float,

or what?

what I lack in precision of recall

I make up for in my love

of other specificities—

undoing certain knots,

wetting thread with my tongue,

pressing hot keys into one eye,

then the other

 

this places me high in the ‘aspirations’ round

but the questions start getting more difficult

and some bodies around me are 

casting hazy white light as the dark comes up,

which mine will not do

no matter how hard I hit

in any different spot

to find the switch that turns me on

 

2.

 

what do you know

about female violence

when it goes from the inside out

and not the other way around?

 

--a glove made of teeth will cut any hand to fit.

 

3.

 

the line between clean and dirty

looks a lot like the shore of a lake in

the northwestern pines,

and me riding it, 

some cool blue body you think you recognize

from a portrait in my parent’s living room

 

the line between dead and alive is not a line at all;

it is a series of holes, concentric circles,

a motel shower drain at the edge of the universe

that my light is slipping through like syrup

 

the line between you and me is 

the thin skin of my still open eye

and my drain hole pupil

on my side I am looking back

hello

 

4.

 

at the dead girl contest the judges ask,

how much can you hold in your breath

how serene can your face go without any muscles

and could flower petals adhere to your skin

without glue, a lot of them,

a whole wreath really

 

some girls are being rolled in skeins of plastic and

others are being dropped from medium heights

to see how they drape when they land

 

some are good, bonelessly elegant

some bend at furious angles and those 

get only a handshake and a clean sheet

to cover themselves in

 

I am being pushed closer to the edge of the lake

really it’s just a big pond and

there are chip bags stuck in the grate of the fountain 

I am thirty eighth in line,

hoping to win the gift certificate at least

it doesn’t matter where it’s for

 

5.

 

what do you know about the dead girl’s agency?

 

--Lord, we know what we are,

but know not what 

we may be.

 

6.

 

the moss at the lake bottom is so soft

like deer or boys must feel in human hands

 

I watch them from behind the knots of trees;

they drink and dip their feet in by the bank,

the sharp dark hooves and the dirty toenails,

the pink tongues darting in and out of mouths

which make sounds that are lush and harsh and warm

 

the flowers in my hair are barely flowers;

just filaments of something that was flesh

my eyes work so much better underwater

to have seen what I have seen, see what I see

 

I pull up curds of wet earth and I dream

of riding all the deer into the woods,

of twisting all the boys’ hair into antlers,

which parts of each would be the best to eat

 

 

 

 

THREE: Late Nite by Lauren Artiles


coughing in pink sheets and watching
daytime tv clips at 4 am:
Tyra Banks interviews a vampire named Don, 
who is psychic, also celibate, 
who says he has transcended
those urges

we could all learn a lot from Don, 
who has a human body, yes
but doesn’t let it stop him 

I am learning a lot like, 
I’ll never be a sanguinarian— 
repeat that, red tongued, several times— 
like a lost zodiac category, 
like the bonus vocab word of
an eighth grade goth girl, 
sanguinarian, imagine, 
I can’t even locate with my thumb
where the big vein blinks
against that spot
in my ungraceful neck

and those urges

those urges

oh about that

Don wants people to take him
seriously, he wants Tyra to stop
doing the sign of the cross on camera
each time he speaks

I want to focus hard on growing, 
through my forehead, 
two perfect and formidable
astral fangs

to be seen, greedily
like, fistfuls of halloween candy stuffed
in the mouth and gagged on

do I mean seen or devoured and
is there a difference, when you do it right

TWO: Scary House by Lauren Artiles

 

The house is at the end of your street. The house is on the side of a road you came upon by accident. The house is nestled like a tumor between the crags of two mountains. The house belongs to the old man that eats kids, that’s what Skyler told you, so you can’t go get your softball from the yard or else. The house belonged to a beautiful young couple, but then they died in a car crash and the next people to move in... well, you heard what happened with the knives. The house has belonged to no one for years, so why does a light turn on in the attic every night? The house belonged to someone else but now it belongs to you; it was so affordable, and you are not superstitious; you inherited it from a twice-removed aunt; you are a –sitter or a –watcher, assigned to take care.

If you are a teenager in the house, you look 35. If you are a child in this house, it will manifest a friend for you to play with. If you are an adult male, your lack of faith in the house and chance of death are positively correlated; doubled if you have an improbably good job and an attachment to gadgets; tripled if you have complex facial hair. If you are a dog, you will be assigned an empty corner to stare at. If you are a baby in the house, you are probably already a ghost, sorry. 

The house comes in two models, IKEA and Rococo.

The house mostly wants to tease you. Sometimes, it really wants to fuck you and that’s terrifying, but doesn’t it also make you feel a little special—to be chosen, wanted? The whole house loves you! Every room’s in accord, every brick and windowpane. For you, pipes burst and walls seep red sap. The house is willing to dismantle itself in part or in whole, for you. Tell me you haven’t always wanted to ask that of a lover. Humans have clumsy hands and a tendency to wander. The house has roots. You can come back tomorrow, and it will be standing, still, in the spot where you left it. The house waits for you. Always patient. The house is tender. It will learn how to speak your name, in the voices of all your most favorite people.

You can destroy the house and it still won’t give up on you. When the wormy ground opens up to suck it back in, it will try as hard as it can to bring you along. The house is generous. In its place, it leaves an empty lot: a wound you can visit again and again. You can come as a pilgrim, with a small and honest tribute, or as a tourist, with a camera whose pictures will kindly warn you ahead of time about future disasters. If you bring it stones or wood, the house will spawn itself back and it swears it’ll be better this time, baby. The house just wants to tell you some stuff, what it knows about stains that never come clean. You act like you don’t want to learn, but only because that’s part of your job. The house is not offended. Your job is to turn the house on. It needs a person to set it in motion and you need a place to live. Perfect reciprocity! The house is at the end of your street. You are already knocking on the door.

ONE: Extended Stay Motel by Lauren Artiles

Seth has been living in the motel for almost three months now. He refers to it as “his apartment” and insists that people take off their shoes before coming inside, even though the carpet is rough and pre-stained. The stains are blackish crud puddles, oozing out from under the bed, the dresser, the TV stand. The carpet is maroon and blue. Colors that are supposed to make you think about conference rooms or airport terminals, places where important things happen. Sometimes Seth imagines buying a black light at the Spencers under the back stairs in the mall, to examine the extent of the stains—for every one he can see, there must be fifty that he can’t—but he doesn’t really mean it. He’s only been in there once and hated it, the super-crude slogans on everything, all the weed leaves and dildos. There was even a dildo shaped like a weed leaf, looking like a punishment instead of a sex toy. Who would buy that? Even as a gag gift? He picked it up, baffled. In a second a teen employee was at his side, asking can I help you, Sir. The Sir came out snide, indicating Seth’s out-of-place-ness: his neat button-down, his relative adulthood. The kid had those metal tunnels punched through his earlobes. Seth could see the rainbow lights from the novelty lamp display glowing through the holes. The kid looked at Seth, bored and waiting. His nametag read Gary and he was wearing a t-shirt that said Just Do Me, with the Nike swish. In public places Seth was supposed to be really friendly and give a two-minute spiel about his group, the One Best Way, accompanied by a brochure printed on grainy cardstock. On the cover are two healthy-looking white people, a girl and a boy, holding hands and poised to jump off the top of a waterfall. The brochure outlines Eight Steps and Benefits of the Way; it’s like church and self-improvement all rolled into one, it’s the best. The speech is supposed to start, Are you feeling like you might need a greater direction in your life? but Seth’s brain hitched up, it always does when he’s nervous. He tried to say something like Gary are you feeling but blurted out, Garfield direction? So he just pressed the folded paper into Gary’s left hand and speed-walked away as fast as possible without the added shame of actually running. Past the Coffee Bean, past the desert plant kiosk, past, past, past. When he got to the parking garage he could not remember what level he’d left the Chevy on. Great. He’d already failed his friends as an Ambassador, and now he’d lost their car, too. He stood just inside the entrance, pacing back and forth, totally empty. It was August and the air smelled like warm trash. There was a dull alarm tone that sounded whenever cars pulled out, to warn pedestrians. He knew this but he still cringed every time it went off. 

 

Once and only once, when Seth was in middle school, he had convinced his dad to let him go to the Sears shopping plaza with Kevin Ulman and Dave Krause. They were older kids who got off the bus three stops before him; they loved Papa Roach and that game ‘Look at my Butthole,’ where you make the ‘OK’ sign with your hand and hold it down by your side, then punch people in the arm when they look at it. Seth’s dad was not into ‘hanging out,’ as ‘hanging out’ does not ‘build character,’ but he was also not into his son being a ‘loser,’ which means no friends, no prospects, and worst of all, no chances to prove your character. You were either a ‘loser’ or you ‘had character,’ a simple dividing line which very few individuals got to cross. Good examples of ‘character’ included Seth’s dad himself, Gerald Ford, occasionally Paul Newman and once Jimmy Stewart. Kevin Ulman and Dave Krause were most definitely ‘losers,’ a fact which Seth’s dad took particular glee in detailing on the brutal half-hour ride home after Kevin and Dave had abandoned Seth in the bathroom next to FYE. Actually it was less abandoned than locked in a stall. They wanted him to pocket a bracelet in his baggy cargo shorts, which Seth remembers with perfect clarity: a chain with a butterfly charm, an Eiffel tower, a tiny silver comb. Kevin said it was his girlfriend’s birthday but he couldn’t like, afford to buy her anything so could he help him out, man, just this one time? Seth tortured out some rough calculations: stealing = bad, but helping = good. Sitting on the bus alone, behind the driver in the “bitch seat,” or next to Henry who stuck his head in his shirt to smell his armpit = all bad. Sitting with Kevin and Dave, sharing their headphones and having them explain various erotic terminology so people wouldn’t make fun of him when he didn’t know what a chode was = good. But trumping all equations was the idea, just the spectral outline of the idea, of his dad having to pick him up at the police station, which in his head was an amalgam of several TV show sets and the mildewy locker room at the Y. And then, what would come after the picking up? No way, Jose. Seth panicked and threw the cheap red un-velvet box under a table of folded polo shirts. A big mistake. In the car, he’d taken comfort in the fact that enough time had passed, between the initial dunking in the toilet and his eventual release by a janitor, for his hair to dry so his dad couldn’t tell said dunking had taken place. They were right to leave you there, you should have called the cops on them, fought them, you were a wuss back there, not a stitch of character at all, not a stitch.

 

Little Seth would barely recognize Older Seth who, with eighteen additional years and two additional feet of height, is acne-free and blandly handsome. He is transformed by rightness, by his new purpose, which is most definitely character building. He occupies some middle range of attractiveness between movie star and one of those guys in infomercials who are always knocking things over, before the product comes in to transform their worlds from black-and-white mishaps into full-color successes. This attractiveness is obscured in part by his wire glasses and itchy white shirts but mostly by his anxiety, so thick he worries it’s almost a physical characteristic itself. Like he reeks of it, like it serves the same instructive purpose that bright colors do on certain frogs and caterpillars: an advertisement for poison inside.

 

Looking for the Chevy, he was so sweaty he might as well have just been drowning in the toilet all over again, choking on water that tastes like sweaty balls and industrial soap. Are you a loser, Seth? Are you a loser? Are you, loser, you are, are you, until the right combination of lot number manifested in his mind—D6—and he actually cried from relief. It came in a voice different than his own, or his dad’s. In the Way they talk a lot about the moment that you know: that you click on, like a light switch, and you finally Believe. Seth is proud that he can pinpoint his exactly. He’d been scared that it would never happen, that he would be the only one left behind, singing along at Service in a mealymouthed way where everyone could tell he wasn’t really Feeling it. He bets Kevin Ulman and Dave Krause have never clicked on in their whole crappy—cruddy—lives. Too bad for them. Sometimes God is too busy to hear small requests but occasionally, Seth is learning, He pulls through, and that makes all the other times worth it.

 

The point about the carpet, though? Seth doesn’t want to give it more attention than is due. When he stares at it for too long without blinking, Seth can see patterns working themselves out of the maroon bumps. Mouths and towers and once, a snake with seven heads. Then he shuts his eyes and rubs them hard, to dislodge the afterimages. This happens more often than Seth would like, because the TV doesn’t get very good reception and he only brought one book that his Friends gave him right before he moved in. He tries to avoid reading it whenever possible. The book is about the One Best Way, but not watered down like it is in the brochures. It’s only for Ambassadors, upper-level members of the Way. Which Seth is: upper level. VIP. It’s bound in some kind of leather, real luxury, that feels spongy and hot in Seth’s hands. It is full of obscure language, its pages cramped with spindly text. Seth is grateful that his friends think he’s so smart, smart enough to appreciate a gift like that. Seth’s ok. Seth is fine! Seth is already so much better than he used to be. He’s about ninety miles from the town where he met his friends, closer to the state’s northern border. He doesn’t miss his home. Out here the pine trees are a lot more densely packed. The ratio of woods to people is much higher, and so is the ratio of snakes to people. Features of this town include the aforementioned mall, medium-sized, a length of frigid and rocky beach, this small motel, and a large, dormant volcano.

 

Seth knows his room is not really an apartment, but the combination of temporary lodging and semi-permanent language feels right to him. When he was little someone read him a story about how, long ago, in a country that was maybe China, people used to call their dying family members by the wrong names. This way Death would get confused as to who it was supposed to be collecting, and leave. He realizes that this story presupposes a lot; mostly that Death is either very stupid or very easily discouraged. He believes, however, in a way that has progressed from fully joking to only slightly, that motel logic works on a similar plane. So Seth’s dad passed right before he moved in. Seth’s dad didn’t take his blood pressure medication, because he believed dependence on anything other than one’s own willpower was the hallmark of losers everywhere. So what? Seth is not stupid, he’s young, and he’s in relatively good shape. He just likes to be prepared. If he thinks about this for too long, some part of his guts dislodges a quarter of an inch. Seth pictures his insides like the vending machine that stands sentry at the end of the motel’s long row of peeling green doors. Every feeling is poised behind a big metal coil, ready to be shaken loose. To keep a proper balance maintained, Seth makes a big point to laugh about the temporariness of his living arrangements when his friends come over. Welcome to my apartment, everybody! His friends all laugh with him, shaking their heads like, Oh, Seth. Seth privately thinks of himself as the funniest one in the group. Also the most thoughtful one. He knows he’s not supposed to rank people like that, that everyone is valuable in their own Way, but old habits are hard to break. On account of his thoughtfulness, he provides his friends with fresh socks, when they come, even if they’re already wearing their own. He buys the socks at the Walmart down the road from his motel every Tuesday. His friends don’t come see him nearly often enough to necessitate this but he wants to make sure that he is seen buying socks every week. He tries to go at the same time every Tuesday, if possible, so roughly the same people will be working there. He does not bring his brochures to Walmart, because he is a regular customer. On the first day Seth arrived in Mount Alma, his friend Paul explained this no-repeats tactic to him as don’t shit where you eat. They were going over the Rules in the Wendy’s parking lot by the motel. It was raining like always, so they sat in the Chevy while they talked and ate French fries out of their laps. Seth was startled by the sudden profanity, but Paul just laughed. It’s okay, amongst friends. Which we are! Friends! Paul has a contagious laugh, bubbly and warm, and Seth caught on after a minute. Okay, I won’t SHIT where I EAT, he said back, with extra emphasis. Paul clapped him on the back, still laughing. It was a great moment, safe in the car, a couple of buddies having lunch. Then Paul’s voice dropped and he said, But don’t let Uncle Jory catch you talking like that, right?

 

At first Seth just needed to set a dependable schedule for himself but now he thinks of these shopping trips as a sort of contingency plan, for what, for just in case. The plan is that, if he doesn’t show up on Tuesday at 9:30 pm to buy socks, the cashier in Aisle 11 (yellow bangs and a tattoo under her collarbones that says no regrets) might turn to the cashier in Aisle 12 and say, ‘Hey, the sock guy didn’t come in today’. The cashier in Aisle 12 (mossy-looking sideburns) will say, ‘I hope he’s okay.’ If he doesn’t show up the week after that, maybe they will tell someone who has the ability to look for him, or look into him, re: his personal safety and well-being. It’s the neighborly thing to do. Seth is not positive about the actual mechanics of this search, although he has tried, on a couple painfully slow nights, to make a flowchart of how decisions might be made re: people inquiring after him. He used the pad of yellowed paper that the motel has provided. Seth is not good at art and he’s extremely embarrassed by these attempts, one time going so far as to try burning one in the metal wastebasket of the bathroom that is nominally his. It left a rolling scorch mark on the wall of the shower, where he had thrown the wastebasket to put it out, and that’s an important reason for staying. He will stay until he figures out some way to fix it. The hard white plastic is brown and bubbled; is that something you can sand down, or what? He doesn’t know and that’s bad. What’s worse is that while the shower was slightly on fire, the smoke alarm in his room didn’t even go off. Afterwards when he had calmed down enough, he stood on the back of the desk chair and pulled the plastic circle off the ceiling, to check the batteries. There were none.

 

 

 

 

Lauren Artiles mostly writes and usually exists, currently in Boston. Her work has appeared in New Fraktur Journal and Esque Mag. She prefers Frankensteins to Draculas and worries too frequently about breaking her glasses post-apocalypse like that episode of The Twilight Zone.