Friday, December 21, 2012

The Other Great Gatsby


For what it’s worth, did not live in East Egg or West Egg, but he liked eggs for breakfast, thank you very much, particularly poached soft and served on lightly buttered toast with a little kosher salt and coarse ground pepper. And he did not much enjoy his first name, Gatsby, which was chosen by a librarian mother. He didn’t think it was very fair, or very funny, and he thought, quite frankly, that his given name was weighted with mawkish American tragedy, too heavy with classism, as set up for bad outcomes as a woman named Ophelia.

Furthermore, he developed a distaste for, in no special order, daisies, swimming pools, optometrists, brash women, and green-tinged lighting. Gatsby had become petulant over the years of carrying around his infamous name, and in any situations that required a can-do attitude, he never suggested that he couldn’t do, but he was certainly one that, when given the choice, wouldn’t do. He patently refused to aspire towards hyperbole. Too much pressure, he said. I hate “great,” he said; I prefer Pretty-Good Gatsby or Not-Bad Gatsby or even Fairly-Ineffectual-But-A-Decent-Sort-Of-Guy Gatsby.

It was with this attitude that he pursued goals planning to fall well short of greatness. It was this that let him warm the bench during high school basketball, and this that let him graduate college barely making cum laude, and it was this that made him take the bar exam a staggering five times, and this that let him grow bald behind a desk, researching copyright law, in the offices of Mickel, Stiverson, and Berry, where he never planned to make partner.

Thus Gatsby’s life coasted along on the flat, boring highway of existence until he hit a major axel-bending pothole at a conference for copyright law in Tucson where he met a woman with a name not related to flowers in any fashion: Stella. And much like her namesake, she was the star of the mediocre convention with its mediocre spinach dip and mediocre name badges.  Star in the sense that the men found her dorky-chic glasses fascinating. It helped, too, that she knew all about the exciting things happening in copyright law, and she had a pretty sweet figure, although her calves were a little thick. And of all the slightly paunched, slightly bald men circling her in an awkward, slo-mo kind of high-school dance, her favor fell on Gatsby, who tried to disappear into the foliage of the faux Ficus trees crowding the mock columns of the banquet hall.

Admittedly, he did radiate an odd sort of tension, something Clark Kent-like in his demeanor. But what could we expect from man whose name marked him for something epic even as he fought to be average? Stella picked up on this energy and picked up on Gatsby after liquoring him up on perquisite cheap wine from a major vendor. Gatsby tried to resist, he really did, but he could feel everything starting to break apart as he drunkenly gazed into her designer frames. It was like the Saran Wrap that held him in all these years was finally starting to give and he felt ready to flex.

And since we don’t want to turn this into a tawdry account of conventional sex, pardon the pun, he told me that afterwards she said, “Wow, I mean Gatsby, that was great,” and the hotel room suddenly seemed posh in his eyes, and after that he sort of exploded into a bouquet of greatness. That’s what he said, “bouquet of greatness.” Not long after that, he made partner and not long after that he bought the hotel. Anyway, that’s the story he told me, by the pool after dark, obviously a few scotches into the night. Me? Who am I? I’m just Nick, the front-desk guy.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Everyone Has Something to Say About Sandy Hook

Pardon me if I meekly clear my throat and offer this:

To begin with, I find it disturbing that users of social media are co-opting the events that occurred in the town of Sandy Hook. The onslaught of memes and graphics from people who have little claim to those events except for, assumably, a strong sense of communal grief and empathy has been overwhelming, but not in a good way. If you have a meaningful comment to post, please do. However, if you're sitting in front of your computer, arranging the photos of the slain children into a collage you're hoping to collect "likes" for, then stop. The only people who should be using those images are the families of those children. They do not belong to you. Although this has become a matter of public mourning, there has to be some respect for the private pain that these families are dealing with, and whatever we're feeling, it simply can't compare. So say your peace, and then leave it alone. We have no right to craft a thoughtful response to this event. There should be no manipulation of images, no waxing eloquent, no sentimentality that isn't earned.

Furthermore, do we really believe that this is either a gun control or a mental health issue? Have we become such a nation of binaries that we can't imagine how it might be some of both and maybe even something else besides? See, I think it's at least a gun control issue, a mental health issue, and a community issue. In terms of gun control, do we really think that we either can have guns or we can't have guns? As a bleeding-heart liberal gun-owner, I like to think that there are some smart and reasonable people out there who might be able to craft legislation that's fair to responsible gun owners. And I believe the slippery-slope argument is listed as a logical fallacy in my college textbook. Look it up.

And of course this is a mental health issue, too, as were most of the prior mass shootings. What can we do about this? Remove the stigma of diagnosing mental health issues. Fully acknowledge that mental illness is a real, often chemical, thing. Find ways to fund and support the individuals and families that contend with mental illness everyday. I'm sure other things, too. I'm confident that there are knowledgeable people out there with great ideas for enacting meaningful change, but we have to be willing to move forward into uncomfortable territory.

In terms of this idea of community, it seems like the more private and isolated we become as individuals and as families within our communities, the more likely something like this can foment. And yet the more we become exposed to events like this one, the more inclined we are to withdraw into our homes out of distrust for our neighbors. Catch-22. When I learned about this event, my first thought for Dexter was home-schooling. So, great. The more we distrust each other, the more we isolate, the more we isolate, the more out-of-touch we become with our fellow human-beings. One can imagine how it might become easy to miss the signs of great mental disturbance in such a scenario. Family life used to be more public. We used to know the family that lived next door and across the street. The more we know about the individuals that live around us, the more we can empathize and offer support to them before that support has to be packaged as grief.

All I can say is that it's absurd to suggest that these sort of tragedies are easily attributed to one thing.

And we should stop watching the news. It's just a heavy-hearted doomsayer. Instead we should fill our precious time with joyous art and long walks through our neighborhoods. I'm oversimplifying, I know, but such logical fallacies belong to idealists like me who still refuse to believe that, as a rule, other human beings shouldn't be trusted.






Friday, December 14, 2012

Encore of Pregnancy Limericks


Per a friend's request, here is an encore of my pregnancy limericks:

There was a young woman named Sonia
Who feasted on Cake and Lasagna
Her belly got big
As she supped like a pig
But she was pregnant, so folks said “Good on ya!”

Squeezing out my little baby’s head
Fills me with a sense of dread
Will I push mainland China
Through the hole in my vagina
Or is he Luxembourg instead?

There was a young wife from Ipswitch
Whose labor was a terrible bitch
The pain she couldn’t bare
When she felt her parts tear
Still she asked for the “daddy stitch!”

There was a little fetus named Scooter
Whose in utero pic couldn’t be cuter
In Vegas conceived
His parents perceived
His daddy must be a straight shooter!

There was a young lady from Leicester
Well into her third trimester
She cleaned with great feeling
Even scrubbed down the ceiling
Not a bird, but still quite a nester. 

My baby will soon be blessed
To feed from his mommy’s breast
My boobs a food source
As a matter of course
Milk and love to be expressed.                        

A knocked-up girl from Monroe
Sought fame which seemed apropos
Although not her plan
Once her labor began
She was the star of her own bloody show.

Labor stories are meant to scare
Though I’m pregnant with nary a care
My water may break
While I’m out having steak
But the chance is medium-rare.

A baby bump is very impressive
When circumference becomes quite excessive
To get around your gut
And clean up your butt
With T.P. you must be aggressive.

I prefer my skin smooth and bare
Sleek legs with no public hair
But I’m shaped like a keg
I can’t reach my legs
And I guess there’s a beaver down there?


Wednesday, December 5, 2012

When Your Child is Sick

Everyone is always saying, "Thank God It's Friday!" but you're not thanking God much for this particular Friday. On this Friday you pick your son up from preschool and notice that his body is a torch. You notice that he is sitting in a flushed, crumpled daze in the middle of the floor clutching a random sock, and when he sees you, he literally tips over and bangs his head against the cubbies. So you scoop him up in a panic and dash past the kind but overwhelmed preschool teacher who didn't notice how fiery your son was, how absolutely delirious he was.

You take him home, dose him with Tylenol, and pull him into your bed for a nap, his temperature wavering around one oh two. You suck your teeth, and sigh, and place your hand on his head over and over until you both fall asleep. What wakes you up is your son's full-blown febrile seizure as he flops around your husband's side of the bed. You call hoarsely, desperately, for your husband who rushes in and says, "Give him room, let him finish," because there is nothing else you can do but watch and wait and say, "Oh God, Oh God." Afterwards, in his postictal state, your son can only drool, and his eyes roll around as flat and blank as unstamped pennies.Your husband takes your son's rectal temperature. It's one oh four point three. Apparently, the Tylenol didn't work.

Speaking of God, when your son is sick, your prayers become pleading. You say, "This is my only boy, my only child" as if you're suggesting that God mess with somebody else's child, someone who has more than one child. Like it would somehow be less sad for a family with extra children if there was one fewer. And you revisit your Our Fathers and your Hail Marys-- the words part of your DNA, programmed into your brain by a Catholic youth-- in the hopes that God might respect how you've held on to those old chestnuts for when you really, really need them.

In the meantime, all around you, life goes on, and you're expected to be on, too. You have students who need you in the last days of the semester. You have your own grad school classes to finish. You have a reading to perform. You can still hear the healthy children at the park rattling the metal steering wheel on the jungle gym. Christmas lights are still being strung with great cheer across the neighborhood. Everywhere your ears turn, you hear people laugh, and you think, "What the fuck are you laughing at?" You of all people become, in these dark times, a real killjoy.

Because children change you. Even in what might be construed as carefree moments, you're still dragging a great weight around behind you like a giant, jangling pull-toy.

And you're left wondering what you've done wrong. You remember that your son didn't eat Friday morning, and he seemed a little warm, a little lethargic, so you gave him a preventative dose of Motrin thinking that if he felt punk, preschool would call and you'd rush home from teaching to grab him. You find yourself saying, "How did I fail?" and "What mistake did I make?" because raising a child doesn't really leave much room for miscalculation. You think about what parents of gravely ill children must think. How they must wonder if what went wrong with their child was something they put in him. Kind of how you wonder about your son's seizure disorder. You imagine the spiral staircase of your DNA strands with missing or broken stairs.

When your child is sick, you spend a great deal of time scouring the Internet looking for answers but are only left with more fears. You think, Kawasaki's? Leukemia?? Then you remember the woman you met while riding the Griffith Park train with your son. She was there with her granddaughter, and she told you how she no longer judges people on first sight. She tells you how her two-year-old grandson was judged as fat and ill-mannered when he was actually dying from Leukemia. Amazing what impromptu lessons you can learn from strangers: Don't judge. Her granddaughter, a silent, Spanish beauty, wore small gold hoops. She touched your hand with such seriousness. After all, her family's love is a weight made heavier by her brother's death even if she never knew him.

And so you carry around worst-case scenarios in your head and play them out to farfetched happy endings. And you spend four long days chasing your son's fever trying to prevent another seizure. You set the alarm every three hours and alternate Motrin and Tylenol. You watch him waver and burn on the couch. You let him suck his thumb with his comfort dog all day. You don't care. You let him watch the same Thomas the Tank Engine movie five times in a row. You're well past simple indulgence now. You think, whatever he needs, I'll give it. Wherever I have to go, I'll go there. Kidney? Here you go. I have another. Ends of the earth? Sure. Not very far, really. Heart? It was his the minute you birthed him, anyway.

When your child is sick and you end up in the emergency room for the second time in four days because your son can no longer walk, and you're convinced it's Guillane-Barre Syndrome, you think maybe you're going to finally lose your cool because you're so sick of your little boy being sick. You're so sick of feeling like some sadistic shrew of a fate is trying to take him away, and you tick off all the scary things that have already happened in the short three years he has been around.

But then (miraculously?) in the five hours of sitting around in the ER waiting for a room in the Peds Unit, he starts to perk up. He shuffles along like Tim Conway. He cracks preschool jokes. You choose to go home instead of checking in to the hospital because hospitals are for sick children. And in the end, it really was only a virus, just a very bad one. Like the flu, which has been known to kill. You can't take it too lightly. There's no place in your life for a cavalier attitude anymore. Your boy is tired now. You're just going to let him sleep the rest of it off.





     

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Punished by the Fates

So I wrote this poem today while Dexter was napping:

At Barnes and Noble



I’ve taken my son out in public with a cold, 
and at any given time his nose is crusty
or oozing or both. When he coughs 

without covering his preschool mouth,
you can hear something wet echoing
in the dank cave of his chest. Even his eyes
are red and boggy. We’re in the kids’ section 

where there’s a train table and other boys
who are learning how shitty it is to share.
I brought sanitizer and I meant to ice
my son’s hands, but I didn’t. I guess I looked 

around and kind of said the hell with it.
Which is not to say that I don’t cry
about lost children. It was just that we couldn’t 

stay home any longer. You know how a mosquito 
can find your ear as you’re finally falling 
backwards into sleep? You know how
that one house fly keeps buzzing and thwacking 

against the pane, but you can never find it? 
Preschoolers make noises like that.
Not the same tonally, but the same
annoyingly. Which is not to say that I’d want
to crush my son like a bug I really love,
only that I wanted him to stop making the sounds 

he makes when he’s trapped in the house.
And not that I would want any harm to befall
the preschoolers who keep trying to take the train 

he’s peacefully running along the track, but I’m
a little too worn down to worry about mere 

rhinovirus, and if some pint-sized bully
wants to snatch that engine from my boy’s
germy hands? Well, it’s not exactly
a pox upon him. 


And then when he woke up from his nap, he puked on me four times. The poem's morality is questionable, but it was meant to be a little confessional and a little funny. I think the fates are punishing me for taking such an irreverent tone. I think this retribution, in the fluid form of vomit, was meant to remind me to never take my son's health for granted. There are other things one can be glib about.  

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Another Alternate Narrative


The Other Glass Menagerie

            It was acquired outside of Barney’s on the Upper East Side during a mild winter as shoppers dipped in and out of stores to gather Christmas gifts. Each tiny, glass animal— costing no more than a few dollars— was wrapped in a Kleenex, and the lot of them were packaged up in the type of box usually reserved for gifting necklaces. The menagerie consisted of both obvious and more unusual specimens: a clear and orange dog; a white and clear monkey (clutching, of course, a yellow banana); a red and clear hedgehog; a blue steer with orange horns; an exceptionally small yellow rooster with an even smaller orange cockscomb; a very scrappy orange and red chicken; and an owl, in shades of purple, yellow, and white, who, who, who measured slightly smaller than a girl’s thumb and was the largest of the bunch. And true to stereotype, he claimed to be the wisest of the collection, although each animal had its occasional moments of deep insight.
            For example, after the journey in a carry-on, after crossing the great expanse of the country in an overhead compartment, and after taking their place on a desk under a lamp set up to pass light through their varying transparencies, the animals began to speculate as to why this woman-child, someone who should so clearly be in a more advanced stage of social development, chose them and placed them in such close proximity to the activities of her life instead of on some distant shelf to collect dust in all their Lilliputian crevices. On one of those days when the rain hastens afternoon into evening, they tried to puzzle it out:
The Monkey waved his banana around and surmised to the group that it must be because each of them represented a joke frozen in that moment just after the eruption of laughter. The owl said, no, I’m not funny-looking. Speak for yourself.
The steer suggested that it was because their woman-child ran away from her shaky childhood, and they all nodded as they recalled how long the flight was between her childhood home and adult home. Yes, that could be it, they said.
The very scrappy chicken said, yes, but lots of girls and women like little, cute things. In fact, a lot of Japanese pop culture fetishizes cute. The group went silent for a moment, and then the rooster said since when did you become an expert on Japanese pop culture? and the group laughed at the chicken who said, but wait… haven’t you noticed that her  boyfriend has anime eyes? And the chicken widened her beady eyes.
No, no, no said the owl. This woman-child is a poet and because of that she loves things that are small and perfect. This made them all swell a little with pride to think they represented exquisiteness. They held on to that answer for a while.
After a while they stopped trying to figure out their woman-child who would select one of them at random and absent-mindedly turn the animal slowly in her warm, dry hands as she sat in front of the computer screen and scattered words across pages. Sometimes you just have to accept the mysteries of life, said the hedgehog in one of his Buddhist moments.
            Whatever the reason, the menagerie came to cherish their person, and they would try to do nice things for her when she wasn’t looking. The dog had heard a story once about how a shoemaker had shoe elves to help him with his cobbling, and she told the group the story one night over hot tea served in millet husks.
We should do something like that, said the rooster, so they thought and thought about what they would do.
The steer said, look, our woman-child doesn’t do a very good job keeping her spaces clean. I mean, she obviously tries to arrange her life, but even after everything is put in its place, dirt builds up in the dark places.
The hedgehog said, is that a metaphor for her mind?
The owl said, hush. I’m supposed to be the wise one. Let’s try to clean up those dirty, dark places, so the group gathered dog hair from the carpet and fashioned it into brooms and dusters. They tore the corners off the tissue peeking out of its box and used them as rags. Every night for a week they worked until exhaustion, just as the morning’s Midas touch turned the desk’s wood to gold. The trouble, they noticed, was twofold: The nature of their size made it hard for them to cover much ground so that by the time they finished cleaning one dark place, the dust began to settle again in another. The second problem was that the very nature of dark places meant the woman-child avoided them, so she never noticed when they seemed cleaner and more light-filled. After several days of disappointment and what would be bone weariness if they had bones, the menagerie gave up on their elven endeavors and decided that maybe they should just focus on what they do best: charm with glassy dinkiness.
            It wasn’t long after this failed attempt at becoming more useful that the woman-child began cleaning everything off her desk. The menagerie became despondent, and they each worried quietly that it was because of their collective failure that they were now being wrapped in tissues with missing corners and placed into the same necklace box that they arrived in a few years’ prior. The animals tried to talk it through with each other, but the tissue just muffled their words, so they all fell silent and became deeply depressed. In the next few days they heard dull, distant sounds like stifled thunder, and they suffered great vertigo as their necklace box was placed sideways in another box. They were in terrible limbo…
            And starved for air and wistful fondling. But sometime after a week or so (Time dragged on with no sense of night or day. It just seemed like a week, says the glass dog who, common to fleshier dogs, doesn't really have a great sense of time anyway.) the menagerie trembled in its box with collective anticipation as it felt the necklace box become righted. It was one of those great, inverted moments of magical irony when the necklace box was opened because instead of a gasp coming from the outside of the box as it usually does when a necklace box is opened with any kind of gasping, in this case the gasp came from inside of the box.
            So once again after much unwrapping of tissues, in a similar kind of anticipation akin to déjà vu, the glass animals were placed on the same desk under the same lamp set up to pass light through their same varying transparencies. Everything was the same except the monkey who lost his banana in transit when it snapped off during some particularly vigorous moving. He didn’t mind though, not much really. Now he felt a little more serious, like maybe he would finally get some respect. Everything was the same except for the view from the sliding glass doors, which, incidentally, were also a new feature for dog, steer, owl, monkey, chicken, rooster, and hedgehog. They spent a great deal of time gazing out of those doors at the woods beyond, watching the seasonal wheel alternately strip or adorn the crowding trees with a kaleidoscope of leaves.  
            By and large, this is how it went. The menagerie would become accustomed to their place on the desk with the view it afforded. The woman-child would turn each of them in her fingers as she transcribed the words of her heart, feeding them into a machine. The dust would begin to build up in the dark corners. The animals would begin to worry, and then the move would happen: Tissues, necklace box inside a bigger box, vertigo, jostling, breathless waiting, same desk, same light, new view. It almost became a joke; it most certainly became the norm. Sometimes it would be city lights through the window; sometimes it would be palm trees through the window, sometimes it would be deserted neighborhood streets greyed out by the soft crayon of rainfall.
            One night the glass animals gathered around the ambient glow cast by the computer monitor’s screen saver, and they pensively sipped their tea from their millet husks. The quiet persisted for a little while until the chicken piped up:
            Why do you suppose we move around so much? He asked the other thoughtful animals.
            I’m not sure, said the dog, but I think our woman-child is kind of rootless like one of those clingy air plants.
            No, said the owl, because sometimes we stay someplace for a long time, so really she’s more like a succulent with a shallow root structure.
            Give me a break, said the monkey, she’s not a plant.
            Personally, I don’t mind the moving, said the chicken. I like the change of scenery.
            Me, too, said the rooster, and besides, we still get our desk and lamp. Nothing really changes for us.
            But what is she running away from? said the steer.
            And the animals fell quiet again for a little while. They blew on their hot tea and sipped it gingerly. After a while of this, the hedgehog, who was really quite soft-spoken, cleared his throat and offered this: Our woman-child keeps moving so that she can cast a golden spell over the memory of place, just as it is for us who achingly look back at every place we’ve been. The only way to appreciate the fulsomeness of the view is to move far enough away from it. I hold those first trees in my mind like a shimmer dying across the lake as the sun dipped down behind those first mountains we ever beheld. One thing I can tell you, though, is that we are a constant comfort for her hands that like to wander. We are like the moon that seems to steady the driver even as she moves forward in space and time. So get a grip, you guys. Don’t overanalyze.
            With that, the animals let out a slow, musical sigh, and they each smiled a small, secret smile. Even the owl, who, who, who was usually egotistical about his intellect, had to acknowledge the monk-like wisdom of the hedgehog.   

Saturday, October 6, 2012

The Other Girl With The Dragon Tattoo


School has forced me to curtail my posting, but here is a short story (my first in a decade) that I wrote for class:


The Other Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

She has two dragons, actually, and they’re nearly identical except for small details in the faces as well as variations in color. The dragons cover the better part of her upper arms with tails that tendril down to her elbows, the bulk of the bodies squat on her shoulders, and the leathery wings, half raised in flight, wrap towards her back. The faces lick at her collar bones. Both dragons are more tribal than Chinese, and the left dragon, turquoise and black, breathes fire towards the center of her chest; the right dragon, red and black, breathes a swirl of ice towards her chest so that her heart seems to be the aim of their elements. A place to erupt with steam. The faces, in all their tribal abstraction, are ciphers.

The other girl with the dragon tattoos passes the parlor where her art was made just as the sun dips down below the Mission, and strumming Bolero badly, a man with a classical guitar disappears into the darkness of the eyeglass storefront. She hears the high-pitched whine of a tattoo gun while smokers cry uncle and pace during their break. Droplets of blood rise where needles are making a castle out of skin. It’s a cover-up, a fixer-up, really. Underneath was art from another life, something like a blackbird with mushy lines, dead and gone, layered over with something solid, like how he feels about his life now. Like it will stand for generations. The stones are only half-wrought, though, and the parapets are just a glimmer in the eye of the artist. The man with the half-built tattoo thinks he’ll finally be the king of his own castle, which will drape with his family’s crest. Maybe the sky will wheel with sooty bats, and the artist will use a little white to catch a few with moonlight.

Across town a koi fish is being wiped clean and wrapped in plastic. It looks as if it’s leaping out of the water and lifting off the man’s thigh. Some trick with shadows the artist learned as an apprentice in Kyoto. So now the man is the man with the koi tattoo, and the fish is as long as a fish story. The man with the koi tattoo greases up his fish every night until the last of the scabbing sloughs off. The scales are layered in twenty shades of gold, and when he catches his leg in the mirror he leaps out of himself and for a moment gasps, breathless. Koi, he learned, represent luck and courage. When you consider sixty days and no other needles, he thought, they’re pretty, slippery symbols. That’s a lot of beauty in an unseen place, the woman who came home with him said. As they slept, her hand rested firmly on his cool flank as if she could keep him from slipping back under the murky water.

In the next week the castle was made complete, and it covered his whole chest. The artist raised the flag and dropped the tapestry with the family crest over the edge with what looked like an everlasting flutter. The man said render the drawbridge open; I don’t want a castle that says keep out. But give me the moat, he said. Every castle needs a moat, so the artist carved a moat into his skin in shades of moss and deep blue. The man’s small right nipple shone like a rose-colored moon through the windows of the tower. The man’s left nipple wanted nothing to do with its role as queen of Scotland, waiting to be hanged, so it hovered above the castle, hung with a ring. The man with the castle tattoo is now the castle’s king.

The man with the castle tattoo leaves the parlor where his art was made just as the sun dips down below the Mission, and strumming Bolero badly, a man with a classical guitar disappears into the darkness of the eyeglass storefront. The king wanders down the sidewalk, a little sore, a little like his chest had been scratched open by a cat, past the cheap sushi joint where a man with a koi tattoo pays his check, thanks the waiter with the Kanji tattoo, and wanders out into a night just getting socked in with fog. And they’re just a block apart now, the men with their fresh tattoos, and they both head to the same apartment building just up by Dolores Park, and they can both hear the subway train’s long, keening stop. And they’re both just jingling their keys against the change in their pockets as they walk towards the same foyer.

Meanwhile, the girl with the dragon tattoos is making her last latte while the diners linger over half-eaten crullers. She wipes the wand and slips it into the milk, which must be cool to rise into froth. And the wand in the milk sends up a column of steam in front of her face as if the dragons finally gave fire- and ice-breathing their all. As if her heart finally blew off its heat. The windows of the café would look out on the park, but condensation and the inside lamps dangling over each table make them wet, black mirrors.

When the last coffee lover leaves, the girl with the dragon tattoos wipes down the espresso machine, puts up the chairs, shuts off the lights. She locks the front door on the way out and walks off to her apartment building under street lights that make the fog green. Down the road she can hear the long keen of the J Church breaks; up the road she can see her foyer littered with yesterday’s circulars for Safeway.

Later that night, the man with the castle tattoo, the man with the koi tattoo, and the girl with the dragon tattoos all slept in the same position in their own unique beds: left sides, left hands slipped under cool pillows, left legs extended toward the ends of the beds, right hands curled under their chins, right knees pulled up at ninety degrees. Each of their unique ceiling fans turning in time. The night slipped over their sleep like a canary’s velvet cover. And in that moment of utter synch, the koi lifted off the man’s thigh, and the dragons churned in the foggy green sky until they found a castle to guard. Until they found a family crest to defend. The koi flopped across the worn wood floors until it found a moat to swim through, and the castle’s habitants looked into the murky water and found a little luck and some courage.