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On my last day, I carry boxes of my things with me to the car as I head out the door to work. There’s a spot open in front of the shop, so I park there, feed the meter, and walk inside, mumble-singing the song from the radio, “Two step, and let your shoulda lean.” I say hello to Laura as I walk to the back of the shop. I set my backpack down in the back, grab an apron from the hook on the storeroom shelf. I walk into the bathroom. I look in the mirror, splash some water on my face and smile at my reflection. ”One more day.”
I wash my hands in the sink behind the counter. I wave my hand in front of the paper towel dispenser. It spits out an eight inch sheet of paper towel. I tear it off and wave my hand in front of the machine again. Another eight inch sheet. I tear it off and dry my hands with the two sheets. Laura is talking to someone who looks like her brother. Maybe it’s her boyfriend.
“Been pretty slow?” I ask her.
“No, it was really busy actually. It just slowed down.”
“Wow. Well, the weather’s pretty nice.”
“Yeah… Last day, are you excited?”
“Oh yeah. I can’t wait…”
“I bet.” She walks over to the table, under the pass-through window and starts packing her things.
I look in the gelato case: fresh pan of cannoli, fresh pan of tiramisu, fresh pan of malaga, everything else is about half full. I look in the sorbetto case: fresh pan of pineapple, fresh pan of tropical, fresh pan of pomegranate blueberry, fresh pan of lemon, everything else is running low. I take a spoonful of pomegranate blueberry. It’s cold and smooth, and as it warms the flavor melts across my tongue, sweet and a little bit tangy. I swallow it down.
Laura dons her backpack and walks out with her friend. ”Have a nice life,” she says with a smile as she puts on her scooter helmet.
“Nice working with you.”
She leaves and I scoop a little bit of chocolate sorbetto and a little bit of pomegranate blueberry sorbetto into a small green corn-plastic cup, into a cupcake-like mound. I sit at the little table under the pass-through window with my cup of sorbetto. I run my corn-plastic spatula-spoon over the humping purple-chocolate meridian. The schism smoothes and softens. I round off the hump into a lump, into a bump. I put the spoon, sorbetto-down, on the middle of my tongue, and pull it towards the front of my mouth, scraping the sorbetto from the corn-plastic spatula with my tongue. Each frozen bite slips down my throat like a candy eel.
I finish my sorbetto. I take off my apron and set it on my chair. I walk back to the storeroom and take an Altoids tin from the front pocket of my backpack. I take out one of the cigarettes Andrea left there for me. I put it behind my ear. I walk to the front of the shop. I pour myself a cold cup of coffee from the urn behind the counter. I heat it up with a splash of boiling water from the espresso machine. I walk out to the patio, set my coffee at the small table, in the back corner, and sit down. I light my cigarette. Across the street, I see the woman in the motorized wheelchair, rumbling towards me. ”Goddammit,” I mutter, stubbing out my cigarette, “Goddammit.”
I dream I am in Washington. I’m in the Capitol, in the statuary hall. I hear deep voices, but they echo so thickly I can’t make out the words. The echoes multiply and the voices deepen to become a churning cacophony, gnawing at itself and spawning simultaneously. The noise is insufferable: a tangible presence replacing the oxygen, a black adenoid swallowing elegant marble busts and intricate plaster moldings and, finally, my thoughts. Endless dark. And then bright white fluorescent light. I am in the Capitol, in my office, in my black leather swivel chair, behind my oak desk.
My wife appears in front of me. Her hair radiates a crimson halo. It is brighter than the day we swam in that azure cavern off Capri. She is naked and her breasts are pert and firm and her pubic hair is that same candied red. She comes towards me in silence, and I back the chair on its casters away from the desk. She kneels between my feet, unzips my pants, pulls out my flaccid penis and puts her hands behind her back. I take her by the hair and she opens her mouth. Her lips are full and smooth and red and glossy. I guide her mouth towards the tip of my penis, resting on the black wool of my suit pants. As her tongue touches the glans, she looks up and smiles and her teeth are razor sharp and her face is old and spotted and warted. Purple and crimson bruises ring her eyes, visible through her wax-paper skin. She lunges forward, and I tug her hair against it. She breaks free, swallowing my member. Her hair comes out in my hands in dull matted clumps. I wake up.
I am cold. My shirt is wet with cold sweat and sticks to my back. I sit up and put my elbows on my desk and rest my face in them, by my chin, on the heels of my palms. I rub my temples with my fore and middle fingers. I look between my hands at the agenda on my desk. The black ink swims on the white page, my head pulses. I pick up the beige telephone receiver from my desk and dial “714″. I hear a ring in the receiver speaker a second before I hear Laurie’s phone ring next door.
“Lorena Garcia.”
“Laurie, it’s me, I’m ready to go over today’s itinerary.”
”You sure?”
“Yeah, come on over.” I take off my coat and drape it behind me, over the back of my vinyl chair. I fold the right cuff of my shirt over, then fold it over again. I fold the thickened cuff one more length up my arm. The creases start to slip, the fold becomes a tangled roll of cotton-polyester blend, I push the roll just above my elbow. I repeat the process with the left sleeve. The door opens and Laurie walks in.
“Feeling better?”
“A little, yeah.”
“Ok. I went ahead and cleared your morning anyways. Armistise is gonna be your first appointment, so you’ve got a couple hours to relax. You should take it if you’re not feeling well, because you have a ribbon cutting at three, and then a police awards ceremony at 5.”
”Do I need a tux or anything for the awards?”
“No, you’re gonna be overdressed like that. We’ll lose the tie on the way over there.”
“Anything else?”
“The Union called, they want a quote on HR-765, and the woman with the hangnail on Medicare, Mrs. Delano, she wants a personal response from you, or she says she’s filing a malpractice suit.”
“Can she do that?”
“I doubt she’ll win, but she can file the claim.”
“Ok, send her a letter saying I’m sorry for her discomfort and that we uh, take very seriously all claims of malpractice by Medicare doctors and that we’re ‘looking into the matter’.” Laurie scribbles it all down on a note pad. When she goes back to her office, she’ll transcribe the note to her computer, and then send it to her BlackBerry and then e-mail it to the intern, who will write the letter to Mrs. Delano. “Is that it for the day?”
“Except for the private fundraiser tonight.”
“Shit. Do I need a tux for that?”
“No, it’s a luau theme.”
“What?”
“It was your wife’s idea. The caterers are doing a roast pig on a spit. ’Bringing home the pork’. Get it?”
“Very funny.”
“But that’s it. And you have two hours until Armistise is expecting you at the barbeque place. Anything else, or would you like me to leave you alone?
“That’s it.”
”Alright,” she says, neatening her manilla folder, “you’re sure you’re alright?”
“I’ll be ok.”
“Ok, let me know if you change your mind, if you need someone to talk to.”
“I will. Thank you. I’m alright.”
She leaves and closes the door behind her. My eyes fall on a photograph of myself and Sylvester Stallone. I lay my forehead on the cool wood of my desk and close my eyes again. My head pounds. I stand up and walk out of my office, down the hall to the men’s bathroom. I lock the door. I stand over the sink and splash water in my face, rubbing my face with the palms of my hand, slapping my face back and forth between my two hands. The faucet squeaks as I turn it off. I set my hands on the edges of the sink and lean in to the mirror for a closer look at the bags under my eyes. I feel the sink start to give as I put my weight on it, and I quickly stand up straight. I jiggle the sink. It feels like it’s attached by the pipe alone. I look in the mirror and make sure my hair is neatly parted, and I leave the bathroom. I walk through the maze of aides’ cubicles, to the elevator doors. I press the “down” button. It lights up. I press it again, jamming it into its socket, again, again.
“In a hurry, sir?” the intern asks.
“You have no idea.”
”Where are you headed?”
“The Grotta Azzurra.”
”Is that a new restaurant?”
The elevator doors open, and I get on the elevator. The elevator descends, stops, and the doors open again. I exit the elevator into the lobby. I see plastic ficus and shrubs, polyester flower petals and a fish tank. I see waiting room chairs upholstered in mauve and taupe. I walk through the lobby. I push its glass double doors open. I leave the home office.
I wake up and I don’t know where I am. I realize there’s someone next to me and a twinge of panic drops in my stomach. I blink my eyes and rub them and look around. I look at my wife, next to me in the bed. Her red hair is matted against her face, her mouth agape, her eyes still closed. I sigh in slight relief and pull the covers off myself. I breathe in deeply and exhale slowly and then do it again. I rub my left temple with the fore and middle fingers of my left hand. I rub my right temple with the fore and middle fingers of my right hand. I rub both temples. I get out of bed.
In the bathroom, I turn the shower on, to let the water heat up. I take off my silk pajama bottoms and the matching collared top. I sit on the toilet. I push my penis down between my legs and piss. I try to shit, but nothing happens. Steam begins to fog the glass shower doors and I get off the toilet. I reach my right arm into the shower, making sure it’s not too hot. I get in the shower. I let the water rinse over my body, until I’m wet all over. I take the bar of soap from its built-in enclave in the shower wall. I rub the soap between my two hands, to build up a lather.
Holding the bar in my left hand, I rub the lather from my right hand along my left forearm, then my left bicep and tricep, then my left shoulder. I scrub the lather vigorously into the hair of my armpit, scratching the skin underneath with the fingernails of my right hand. I rub the lather on my chest and stomach. I cup my testicles and rub them with the warm soapy water in my right hand. I take the shaft of my limp wet penis and gently squeeze it. I cup my hand over my penis and my testicles and rub them clean. It feels good and I take hold of the shaft of my penis again. I stroke it several times and it doesn’t get any harder and I give up. I rub the bar of soap between my hands again. Taking the soap in my right hand this time, I use the lather in my left to wash my right forearm and bicep and tricep. I scrub my right armpit as vigorously as the left.
With my right hand, I rub the bar of soap in circles on my right ass cheek. I switch the bar to my left hand behind my back and rub circles with it on my left ass cheek. I run the bar through the crack of my ass and rub the residue into a lather with my right hand. I lather both my legs and feet. Then I let the falling water of the shower rinse me clean.
I turn in small circles under the water, feeling its warmth on every part of my body. I feel its temperature start to fall. I stand directly under the nozzle and let what little hot water remains pummel the nape of my neck. I count backwards from ten. ”Zero.” I turn the water off and grab a crimson-red terry-cloth towel from the shower door.
I scrub my hair dry, and then drape the towel over my back and pull it towards my ass, to dry my back. I dry my chest and my arms. I remember what my arms used to look like, how firm my chest used to feel. I dry my penis and my testicles, and run the towel between my legs to dry the fleshy expanse between my genitals and my asshole. I dry my ass and the back of my thighs and my thighs and my calves and my shins and my feet. I hang the towel back on the shower door and I flush the toilet.
I brush my teeth with the whitening toothpaste in the medicine cabinet. I comb my still-damp hair, parting it down the right side. My hair is still black, still full. I walk naked from the bathroom. The sunlight peeks around the heavy brown bedroom curtains, embossed with hundreds of tiny golden fleures-de-lis. My wife lies in the same position, hair matted the same, mouth still agape, eyes still closed. I dress myself in a navy blue suit with a white collared shirt with buttoned stays. I choose a solid red tie. I slide my feet into a pair of black patent leather shoes. I thread a matching belt through the loops of my suit pants. I take my wallet and my car keys from the nightstand on my side of the bed. I look again at my wife and leave the bedroom. I pick up my briefcase in the foyer as I walk out the front door.
In the car, I listen to local talk radio, a show called, “Mikey in the Morning.” Mikey is telling a caller that he’s naive about immigration. Now Mikey is talking about me. Mikey is saying that I am naive like the caller. He’s saying that I don’t know what I’m doing, that I should be fired. He says that I’m a fat cat. I turn the station to classic rock and The Beatles are singing, “a crowd of people stood and stared.” I stop at the chain coffee store in the strip mall a block away from the home office. I order a small coffee. I look in my wallet and realize I don’t have the two dollars I need to pay for the coffee. I hand the girl behind the counter my credit card. She asks to see my ID and I show it to her. She laughs.
“What’s so funny?” I ask her.
“Nothing,” she replies, still laughing, “it’s just that you have the same name as our congressman.”
”What a coincidence,” I say.
She looks at me again and the smile disappears.
“Wait,” she says, “Are you him?”
“Guilty.” I raise my right hand like I’m swearing an oath.
“Wow,” she says, “What are you doing here?”
“Work.” I take my coffee and leave. In front of the home office I pull the gold Toyota into a parking spot with my name painted on the asphalt between its confines. I get out of the car and walk into the office. I get in the elevator and press a button marked “4″. The elevator goes up and the doors open. The intern at the reception desk sees me and stands up.
“Hello, Congressman!” he smiles, “I’ll let Ms. Garcia know you’re here.”
“Thank you.” I walk into my office and close the door. On the walls are pictures of myself. There’s one of myself and the president and one of myself and the last president and one of myself and the Lion of the Senate and one of myself and the chief of the Chumash Indians and one of myself and the foreign minister of Azerbaijan. On my beechwood desk is a picture of myself and my wife, swimming in the Grotta Azzura. Her hair is a brighter red in the photograph than it is now, my teeth a brighter white. There is a knock at the door. It is my chief of staff.
“Come in.” I say, and she enters carrying a manilla folder.
“Hello, sir,” she says, “Welcome home.”
“Thank you, Ms. Garcia.”
“Shall we get right to business?”
“We might as well.”
“Ok,” she says, opening the folder on my desk. She produces an agenda and spins it around on the desk, so it’s top-up to my perspective, and slides it across the desk. Below it in the folder is an identical copy, which she picks up. “For lunch, you’ve got Armistise, from Veteran’s Affairs. He wants to talk about the new VA hospital, specifically the leasing agreements and future development clauses.”
“Do we have to do it at the rib place again?”
“I could try and change it, but he’s pretty particular.”
“No, the rib place is fine.” I set my elbows on my desk and rub my temples with my fore and middle fingers.
“Jet-lagged?”
“Yeah. Laurie, I’m sorry, can you give me five minutes.”
“Sure,” she says scooping the manilla folder off the desk, “just buzz me when you’re ready.”
She walks out and shuts the door behind her. I lay my arms across the desk and my head on top of them. I close my eyes.
“This is what I wanted. This is where I want to be. I am not afraid.
This is what I wanted. This is where I want to be. I am not afraid.”
I repeat it, again and again as I march. The metal treads of the tank next to me clatter and clang so I can hardly hear my mantra. My pack feels lighter than it did in training, my rifle heavier. I wish it weren’t winter. Why couldn’t we have done this last spring? ”Then I wouldn’t be here,” I think. The wind howls down the street, channeled by columns of empty buildings.
I don’t know how far we have to walk, or where we’ll be when we stop. I know I have to stay next to the tank. I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else. The tank is American, built like a, well… When shooting starts, I will be safest by the tank.
I think there is a pebble in my right boot. I shook my boots out and ran my hand all along the inside lining before we left. They’re tied so tightly, almost halfway up my calves, how could it have fallen in since? I must have missed it this morning. I was so sleepy, and it was still so dark, I’m lucky I remembered my rifle. My rifle. I look down at it, away from the rooftops of the empty buildings, for just a moment. It is beautiful, the precision of its machining, the ruggedness of the dusty aluminum receiver, the smooth modernity of its plastic stock, the straight, perfectly-round steel barrel… I wish my washing-machine at home was this well-made.
The washing machine leaks. I haven’t done laundry since I got married, but Rachel says it leaks and that she hates that machine, so I have to fix it, so I hate that machine. I don’t know how it leaks, where it comes from. I’ve replaced every gasket, reclamped and checked every hose, it makes no sense. After every load of laundry, there’s a puddle underneath the machine. Rachel forgets and steps in the puddle, and then she yells at me to fix the washing machine.
I exhale and see her in the wisp of steam escaping. Then I hear the sound of the earth opening and the tank is gone and I am prone in a pile of dust and rock and it is raining pieces of the empty buildings and I am deaf. I feel the earth shake again behind me and I turn and see the tank, rocking forward with the recoil of its soot blacked cannon. Another building comes raining down. Now people, running. I see screaming, but I don’t hear anything. Men with guns are taking positions in the rubble opposite, among the girls and kids running away. Positions. Shit. Little bursts of orange fire from the barrels of the men’s guns.
I scramble to my feet, concrete and sand and blood shifting under me as I do, and run ducking to the tank, to shelter. My commanding officer is waiting behind the tank already. He’s yelling at me, but I can’t hear what he’s saying. I point at my right ear and shrug. He understands and tells me in slashing hand-signals to take the alley on our right and flank the next street. I nod.
Leaning my back against the back of the tank, I slide to my left, keeping my head low. I reach the tank’s right tread, squat and turn around. I peak one eye around the tread. They’re gone. Where’d they all go? Shit. My CO looks at me and I shrug. ”Nothing.” I say. I can feel myself talking, feel the vibrations in the bones of my skull, but I don’t hear it. He repeats his slashing hand gestures and shoves me from behind the tank.
I run crouching to the alley. Once there, I move slowly, but purposefully, the sight of my rifle at my right eye, that plastic stock buried in my right shoulder. I sweep the perfectly-round barrel from side to side as my eyes trace the same pattern. I aim at the sky as I look up to check the rooftops. I lower the barrel, my eye still on the sight. I near the end of the alley and press my back up against the far wall. I creep left along the wall like this. At the corner I stop. I lean my head ever so slightly past the safety of the wall. My left eye strains at its peripheral extreme. Another empty street.
I swing the barrel of my gun around the corner. My head follows, attached at the rifle’s sight. My chest and shoulders and right hip come around the corner, exposed. I look up into a face, centered in the sight. A boy’s: wet with tears, muddy in this dust, but not crying now. In the reticule, I see the tiny muscles of his face tighten, his delicate jaw clench. I see his lips move and I hear his voice and he says, “I am not afraid.”
i sit in the cold of new night. an older couple walks briskly by and i nod to them, unrequited. the darkened side street is quiet. there is a small aluminum floodlight in a cabinet inside. i am supposed to attach it to the top of the one of the double doors that is closest to the outlet above the cabinet. there is a rubber-coated clamp welded to the aluminum floodlight for this purpose. i am supposed to attach the floodlight to the top of the door, thread its cord over the door’s top hinge, through the gap between the open door and the jamb, and plug it into the outlet above the cabinet.
i am supposed to make sure the conical flood of light it emits falls on the cardboard cut-out of a six-scoop waffle cone as tall as i am. the light is supposed to make it easier for people to see the sign. seeing the sign is supposed to make people want to eat ice cream, which we sell inside. if passers by succumb to the sign, i’m supposed to scoop the flavors they choose, into the vessel they choose, and give them that vessel. they, in turn, are supposed to give me money, in an amount corresponding to the vessel they have chosen, which i am supposed to place orderly, according to denomination, in the cash register.
i’m not going to plug in the floodlight. i don’t want to sell any more ice cream tonight. not that the floodlight works that well, not when its cold like this. i smoke a cigarette and my stomach agitates at the settling darkness. a group of arab men passes in tight formation, tersely debating the youngest war as they go. a sliver of the conversation lingers after them and finds my ear: “what peace…” the way they’re dressed reminds me of the secular muslims who smoked cigars at the Café Bassam, when it was still downtown, when one could still smoke inside. when i worked as a valet. when i was supposed to park people’s cars.


