a plagiarized sexual position from everyone I
Transcription
a plagiarized sexual position from everyone I
ISSN: 2374-2526 Issue Six Winter 2015 Crab Fat Magazine Issue 6, November 2015 ISSN: 2374-2526 Cover: Venus II 36" x 28" Oil and acrylic on panel By: Larissa Hauck Masthead: Caseyrenée Lopez, Editor-in-Chief EllaAnn Weaver, Fiction editor X. Paul Lopez, Reader Writers and artists maintain ownership/copyright of all work presented herein. a plagiarized sexual position from everyone I ever touched or what happens when one is formed out of whitman bridge songs and gender dislocations or everything about your body is a lost dialect & a rumination about the reservoir of language below your chest By: Aimee Herman | 4 Charles By: Janelle Greco | 6 Share My Body and My Mind with You By: Alexandra Naughton | 7 L'appel du vide By: Larissa Hauck | 9 Ward By: Layla Al-Bedawi | 10 Revelation By: Alexandra Romanyshyn | 11 Sleepwalker By: Larissa Hauck | 13 Life, Death, and a Chocolate Chip Scone By: Claire Hagan | 14 Elegy By: Alexandra Romanyshyn | 20 The Scoop By: Anniken Davenport | 22 A Smile Deeper than Moonlight By: Bill Wolak | 23 Remorse By: Carolyn Stice | 24 Pie is a Cheap Substitute for Longing By: Carolyn Stice | 25 Molotov By: Emmett Haq | 27 {the books in my library} By: Courtney Marie | 31 Lung Copy By: Elizabeth Hynes | 32 Centerfold Versailles By: Dorothy Chan | 33 When Flesh is the Winding Sheet By: Elizabeth Yalkut | 34 Leading the prayer By: Eric Allen Yankee | 35 Azahares que Estallan By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky | 36 Rodents By: Mark Rosenblum | 37 Sonnet (The Exiles) By: Gary Wilkens | 38 Beginning College in Arkansas By: Gary Wilkens | 39 Algo Oculto en cada Sensacion By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky | 40 The Virginity Myth By: Hadassah Grace | 41 Occupation: Hustler By: Hadassah Grace | 43 Scenes of Leaving By: Emily Blair | 45 2 Winter 2015 Starfuckers By: Hadassah Grace | 50 How to be a Writer By: Hadassah Grace | 51 Hand Over Mouth By: Elizabeth Hynes | 52 Life Equations By: Hannah Sattler | 53 Negotiations By: Kim Hunter-Perkins | 54 Knowing By: Kim Hunter-Perkins | 55 Not Spicy By: Kenneth Pobo | 56 Mamihlapinatapai By: James Freitas | 57 Alegre Polvo Veraniego I By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky | 58 In Charge By: Isaac Hunt | 59 My Heartland-Bred Moonbeams By: Keith Gaboury | 62 Between Rome and Aldebaran By: L.B. Sedlacek | 63 You've got yours By: Larissa Hauck | 64 The Relevancy of Desire By: Lori England | 65 Smell By: Mandee Driggers | 66 It’s Christmas By: Jason S. Parker | 67 Dear Neighbor By: Mark Blickley & Amy Bassin | 68 Oooooh, What Did Drake Say About a Bottle and a Bitch? By: Mica Evans | 69 Essay in Lines (Step Down Dear Goliath) By: Mica Evans | 70 Astronomical Soliloquy By: Nathaniel Duggan | 73 Born to be different By: Adorable Monique | 74 Normal Kids By: Stephanie Cleary | 75 O H By: Steven Alvarez | 78 denizens By: Steven Alvarez | 80 Alegre Polvo Veraniego II By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky | 81 Ink By: Gregory M. Fox | 82 afflatus By: Tatiana Saleh | 86 Eden By: Larissa Hauck | 87 Crab Fat Magazine 3 a plagiarized sexual position from everyone I ever touched or what happens when one is formed out of whitman bridge songs and gender dislocations or everything about your body is a lost dialect & a rumination about the reservoir of language below your chest By: Aimee Herman When every area of a body has been rummaged and you think there is nothing left to learn but suddenly the sky unfolds like an atlas of detours and cave dwellings & you notice that nothing looks familiar but in this lost you are found the moon could easily be called a universe of glowing haiku in the sky in the shape of a honeydew and this air smells like October but it is March legs straddle the rusted history of a bicycle purchased for eighty dollars three years ago from an old man’s trunk but none of that matters because where I am peddling is toward you reference : passion propeller I study your chapters through every postcard and book leaning against wood from old wine boxes and there may not be any graffiti here, but you have tagged every wall of my mind 4 Winter 2015 and what does it mean to find something you weren’t looking for but here beneath this pile of bones and boners and bound chests and scars and secretive blinks that stubbornly remain open did you know that when you sleep I counted all your lashes and threaded verbs to each one so you’d keep moving beside me and perhaps I pressed in a noun like home beside two middle ones to remind you what this is what is this I can’t I can I can tell you that when your parietal lobe climbs into my mouth in the evening or early morning, I feel like I am no longer a tourist in my own body. I can tell you that my hypothalamus becomes an alphabet full of pages you leaf through with your fingers. I can tell you everything I want you to do to me using only slang and ropes. I can show you how bruises form each time we create percussion with our hips. I can beg you to remain even when I beg you to stop. Crab Fat Magazine 5 Charles By: Janelle Greco C harles started by drawing an atom. It looked like an olive at first, but then he drew more rings. In stilted English he told the class that the pit was in fact a nucleus. When a person launches into a speech about charges and electrons and energy being passed back and forth, you don’t stop them for anything, even if you’re not sure where it’s going. Charles is small; he has a grey beard that comes to a point. When he speaks to you about life and gratitude and particles, he looks you straight in the eyes. There’s a charge that glistens in the center of his irises, as if giving advice, handshakes, and details about the way cells are formed is what he’s made for. The more he talks about positive and negative charges, the more hand gestures he uses. His arms are widened now as if he were hugging an enormous tree or conducting an orchestra. Charles loves quotes by famous philosophers and shuffles audibly when he comes over to show you one he’s found. “You’re a good and generous person,” he says. He insists upon it so much that it quiets all doubts you have on the subject. Charles rides the subway for eight stops in the wrong direction with you just so he can tell you how important it is to give to others and to be alive. You can’t always understand the vowels and syllables he uses, but you understand without fail the way his body coils and then opens up like a star when he makes a point. You once asked Charles if he came in pocket size so you could carry him with you wherever you went. “But I’m right here!” he says. The way the specks of dust vibrate in the light and air between you are proof that this is true. 6 Winter 2015 Share My Body and My Mind with You By: Alexandra Naughton 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Succumb my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Isn't my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Buoys my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Ebook my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Ditto my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa String my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Kill my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Keep my body and my mind with you Crab Fat Magazine 7 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Shrug my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Save my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Shape my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Sever my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Shaken my body and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Absurdly my body and mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Share my buddy and my mind with you 25 Nov Based Goth Alexandra @theTsaritsa Share my body and my mind with you 8 Winter 2015 L'appel du vide By: Larissa Hauck 48" x 24" Oil and acrylic on panel Crab Fat Magazine 9 Ward By: Layla Al-Bedawi I lost my perfect vision and my horsetail-thick hair to my twin cousins. “Look at you,” they would chant, “Such lovely eyes, the only green ones in the family. Such long lashes, how they curl. Such thick, strong hair, thicker than ours even.” Everyone knew the evil eye was strong on my father’s side. The twins moved into our house the summer before I started seventh grade, two almond-skinned angels with matching sets of date-colored eyes and passion fruit lips. My uncle had sent them to live with us while their country was being ravaged by the god-fearing and the godless alike. Sitting in the back on the first day of school, I found I had to copy from my neighbor, the chalk on the board no more than a translucent fog. A fortnight later, the new girl in class, her rising popularity in inverse correlation with her falling neckline, started laughing at the frizzy, ridiculous mess on my head, and the rest of them joined in, old friends and all. “Don’t show them your hands,” my mother warned me. “They can’t leave a beautiful thing alone.” I buried my long fingers deep inside my armpits and studied the twins from corners and door frames as they sipped tea in our living room, perfect little feet on the Persian rug, the harmonies of their laughter a dog whistle my father couldn’t seem to help but follow, bringing them fruit then pastries then dripping glasses of ice cold Coca Cola, a thing he usually called women’s work. My mother stood by, out of a job. When the war exhausted itself the twins disappeared, and I watched myself curiously as I mourned their absence. By then my scalp was showing and I'd had to move to the front of the class because no one would let me copy their notes anymore. My world was getting murkier every day, but I didn’t tell anyone—glasses would certainly not help me make friends. A few months later, my father left, too. My mother refused to answer any of my questions, but at night I could hear her cry on the phone to her sister, wailing and cursing the twins, their spells and charms. I imagined it must have been something they said, though they never talked much around my father, communicating with giggles and batted lashes instead. It must have slipped by me, something like, “What a lovely couple you two make, auntie and uncle,” or, “Fatima is so lucky to have you two. What a perfect family.” Now I cut my hair short, and my glasses weigh heavy on my face like defeat. But my hands are flawless, my fingers like cherry branches in the spring, my long, hard nails painted with warding spells, ready to take out anyone’s eye. 10 Winter 2015 Revelation By: Alexandra Romanyshyn They say the body reveals the soul. I’d like to believe, so don’t you tell me full-figures, buxom breasts, have more to say than a slim waist. There’s no cure, no easy fix for hollow hips or hungry lips when the cause behind it’s in my mind. I look inside and only find I’m not enough until I’m much much more confined. I remember the first time dad said have salad I remember the “wise” model advising lose the baby fat chuckling the camera adds ten pounds of flab That was after hypotension, family tension, hypoglycemia, borderline anemia, social alienation, selfimposed starvation, calorie-calculation, false self-perception, eventual self-deception. I was a nutrition recorder on the border of breakdown. I was— disorder. The body reveals the soul? Humph. The soul of stardom is nip and tuck. Puke purges sins. Celebrities in magazines yield out-of-the-field dreams, because make-up and photo-shop make them seem what I never can be. Actually, bodies like me conceal the psyche I buried my burdens to achieve this physique my imagination’s machinations spurned Mom’s birthday dessert. Mom, your cake is out of the question because my question is how many carbs to consume when my jeans give me no goddamn room. Happy birthday while I waste away, my waist—a model of deprivation a means of deprecation, a method of damnation. I’m a gum wad stretching between the bottom of your shoe and cold concrete, one step forward and I stretch thinner weighing my worth, I grow thinner trying not to snap. Only thinner, straining, thinner when your foot crashes down, crushes me, I am only a blob, a bulging slob. Your weight is my pain my pain—my weight gain. I await your next step to render me slender again. Time for a new conviction. Court’s out, adjourned—the verdict turned in. My judge’s sentence, not to judge. Sentenced to acceptance, I am no exception Crab Fat Magazine 11 to the rule of imperfection, and as such, it is no matter of contention that I will never be content. just content myself to know that one day I’ll get off that shoe. be my own shape, let myself eat cake. 12 Winter 2015 Sleepwalker By: Larissa Hauck 24" x 18" Oil and acrylic on panel Crab Fat Magazine 13 Life, Death, and a Chocolate Chip Scone By: Claire Hagan Pieces Small-town store Four round tables Scratched up floors Worn wood Display cases and coffee containers That breathe out sweet sugar air You spend the hours With wax paper sheets Grabbing pastries Slicing bread on the ancient machine Cleaning and customers Paper coffee cups Dim glass plates Topped with scones and bread and cinnamon rolls First Impression I bike up to Douglass loop with a beat up copy of Hamlet in my backpack. I lock up my bike in front of the ice cream shop when I hear a shout to my right. Everett is leaning out the door of a small store, his long brown hair pulled back into a messy bun. “Come on in,” he tells me. “So this is Breadworks,” I say, stepping through the door into the warm store. Everett walks back behind the counter where a young man with a black beard is wiping down the glass display cases filled with bagels and pastries. Everett turns to the young man. “This is Clare. She was one of my students at the Governor’s School for the Arts.” The young man nods and raises his hand in greeting. “What are you doing now that you’re out of college?” I ask Everett. “Working here,” he replies, “Doing art. I’ve got a house down on Dorothy that I’m turning into a screen-printing studio. And you?” “I was actually just up at Big Rock. I’m getting pictures to use for some children’s book illustrations I was hired to do.” “Sweet. High five, man.” Everett says. I oblige. “Other than that, I’m not doing much. Orientation was last week, so I’m headed back to dear old Manual soon.” “Senior year?” he asks. “Senior year.” Visit: Marshall Once I stop by the store with Marshall Berry. He’s Wendell Berry’s grandson and absolutely hates being introduced that way. Self conscious, he hides his messy hair under a beanie cap. He is a year older than me, a freshman in college, and he has no idea what he wants to do with his life. He doesn’t seem to want much of anything. 14 Winter 2015 We don’t work out in the end. Visit: Everett I promise to meet a friend at Breadworks. Everett is there, and I sit at the metal table by the end of the counter, chatting with him in the empty store. “Say, Clare,” he leans over the table. “You’re pretty good at reading people. Right?” “I guess so.” Everett gets this far-off, dreamy look in his manic eyes. “Doesn’t it make you feel like a god?” Visit: Bellarmine Scholars Competition Early morning, and I sit at Breadworks with my parents. My chocolate chip scone and peppermint tea taste like a thousand hugs. I triple check that I don’t have any chocolate or crumbs on my face. I have to look nice today. I wear a black blazer and low grey heels with a flowered dress. It is the morning of the Bellarmine Scholars competition, and if I manage not to screw up an interview, a paper, and a round table discussion, I might just be looking at college for free. Somewhere around Here I’m sitting at a table, sketching for the last art assignment of my high school career. I go up to ask for my mug refill. Hanna is working that day. She is a small and compact woman with short grey hair, Everett’s manager as well as his mother. “There you go, Darlin’,’” she says, handing me my mug. “Now didn’t Everett tell me you were one of his students at GSA?” “He sure did.” She puts a finger over her lips, a line of thought between her eyebrows. “Where are you at high school now?” “I’m in the Visual Arts magnet at Manual, same as Everett was. But next year I’m gonna be just down the road at Bellarmine.” “And are you doing work study?” “No,” I say, “I was hoping to get a job...somewhere...around...here.” Hanna hands me a job application. Things I Can Do Because of Breadworks I can balance a loaf of bread on one end Bagging it up with my other hand I can make a latte Clean an espresso machine Steam milk to perfection Talk to a stranger like they’re a human being Remember the orders of all the regulars Juggle And blame everything on Steve It is very important to blame everything on Steve. Teachers Half my high school teachers live in the neighborhood by Breadworks. If you think I’m kidding, I’m not. Crab Fat Magazine 15 My first day of work, Mr. Curtis comes in with his daughter. Curtis is the photo teacher with a shaved orange head and bright white teeth. His daughter is a blond middle school girl who shares her father’s love of all things Weird Al Yankovic. They sit at a table eating bagels, and because the store is so quiet in the afternoon, they stay and talk with Everett and me. “Man, you should have seen this girl on the last day of school,” Mr. Curtis says, nodding his head in my direction. I had gone off on this asshole for making a crass comment about violence against women. That day I found out Curtis wasn’t mad at me for cussing a guy out in the middle of class. He was actually really proud. Order: 2 Bagels, one sesame, one plain. Cream Cheese. Medium Coffee. Mr. Crain walks in with clouds around his head. He wears a baseball cap over his short grey hair, and his eyebrows, as always, are furrowed in thought. “I talked to Adam the other day,” I tell him. “Do you know what his major’s gonna be?” “What?” I smile. “Education. He says he’s going to grow up to be you, only less pretentious.” “Less pretentious! Please. One time I walked over to his desk, asked him what he’s doing, and he says he’s inventing his own language.” Order: Chocolate Croissant. Small Breakfast Blend Ms. Rich comes in sometimes as well. Hurry is her name, and chaos runs in her wake with little red curls. I always like it when those two come into the store. It reminds me of the girl I was. And the woman I want to be. One time little PJ comes in with a red plastic purse that says Alexis. “It used to be mine,” Rich says. I tell her I’m listening to an audiobook in Spanish for En el Tiempo de las Mariposas, a book she recommended to me before she left Manual. I was just a little Sophomore then. Order: One Country French Traditional Loaf. Sliced. Ophelia and Lu Second week of work I walk in to find Strawberry Banana signs replaced with Peach The flavor of July Peach muffin, peach Danish, peach scone I ate as many peach scones as I could, Bringing them home in a wax-sealed bag from work I will always remember that last scone Eaten at the end of the longest day of my life Split three ways Between Luisa, Ophelia, and me We drove to my familiar house. Only mouths as we tore through the kitchen and buried our spoons in a bowl filled with glistening ice cream, berries, all covering a warm peach scone from work That whole month passed in peaches And we waded through blankets Swam in seas of comforters and pillows all wrapped up in piles of cloth on my bed 16 Winter 2015 until three souls breathing we fell asleep The next time I went into work All of the scones were blueberry Catalogue of Regulars (Abridged) There’s an old French couple. The woman is stout with a brown face and short brown hair. She does all the talking, her accent shaping the corners of her words. The man is tiny and bald with thick frame glasses and boxy white dentures. He mimes for me to put whipped cream on his hot chocolate, a small performance there in the store. Order: Two Decaf Lattes. Raisin Pecan Mini Sliced There’s a morning crew that comes in most days, a group of about four or five people, all in their 70s I’d say. They take up two small tables, reading the newspaper and talking. It’s mostly men, but there is one woman with short white hair who is always there. When I start working, they all ask for my name, and remember it, too. I hope when I am older I am like them, surrounded by friends and conversation. Order: Mugs of Coffee, sometimes iced, sometimes decaf. Assorted pastries. It must’ve been the second day I worked that I saw her. A woman walked into the store. She was plain and wore no make-up, her blond hair pulled back into a ponytail. Though she seemed tired, there was a beauty and grace about her. The morning crew all greeted her. In her arms she held a tiny red creature, a little baby only days old. “What’s his name?” one of the morning crew asked. “His name’s Patrick. It’s his first time out of the house.” She walked over to order and a little nose poked out of the wrap around her shoulders. I’m going to watch this child grow up, I thought. Order: Blueberry oat-bran Muffin, Mug of Coffee David is a plumber, I believe. He’s small of stature and friendly, with an everyman’s face covered in dark brown stubble like a farmer’s hands covered in dirt. He knows everyone from the neighborhood, and his conversation is always kind. Order: Loaded Chocolate Chip Cookie or a Blueberry Muffin, Small Americano My Breadworks A couple months into fall semester Someone starts talking about baguettes before Brit Lit I tip my words into the conversation Telling them to try the baguettes at Breadworks Where I work And Dr. Gatton’s eyes light up twinkling as he says “My Breadworks!” The one on Douglass Loop I confirm And he recommends the Irish soda bread With a smile Crab Fat Magazine 17 Family Walking It was the day I told Hanna I’d be in Nicaragua for two months this summer. She was excited, telling stories of how she went to France with a one-way ticket and $300 in her pocket. That was back in the 80s. Now it seems like everyone is leaving. I’m leaving. My coworker Alayna is leaving for the Peace Corps, and Everett will be leaving soon to work a fish processing job in Alaska. After that, he’s gone. Moving to North Carolina. Larry Horton walks into the store, his small ponytail running down his back like a paintbrush. He had to sell the hardware store next door, but it’s still called Horton’s. Hanna asks him how he is. “I’m in pain,” he says. Hanna had said she was going to leave—Steve should be there to take over my shift in an hour or so—but Hanna sits down at the table by the window, talking with Larry about his back pains and catching up with him. A couple tables over, Lucy from the frame shop next door is chatting with someone she knows, and their conversations sound like music in the store. Light turns the tables to mirrors; it is one of the first warm days of the new year. Sitting at the wooden chair by the counter, I pull out an anthology of plays from my Gay and Lesbian Drama class. I turn to the back cover, and I start to write: “There is a kind of family here Not the kind you trap in a picture frame To hang on a living room wall What we have here is a family walking Circling round sidewalks and Highland blocks Sharing a meal Passing stories across the tabletops Leaving scars along the ancient wood floor Spelling out stories The swinging bell sings As they step out into the day.” An Overheard Conversation It is my first spring at Breadworks, the weather slowly working its way back to the July warmth I first knew. The little French woman comes into the store. She is alone today. “One decaf latte with a single shot of espresso. Extra hot?” “You’ve got it,” the woman says. I make the latte, sure to put out the two shot glasses where the espresso comes out. Our machine can only make two or three shots, so whenever someone wants one, the second usually goes unused. When the French woman is with her husband, it’s convenient, because we can split the shots into their two drinks. I pass the latte to her across the counter, and she sits down at a round table. Then David comes in. He peeks in the display cases. “Your last loaded chocolate chip”, he says, and I take the cookie out of the case to set it down on a plate. I’m sweeping seeds off the bagel cutting board when David walks over to the French woman’s table. “I was sorry to hear about Au Pierre’s passing. He was a good man, and I know he will be missed.” 18 Winter 2015 “I am glad he did not have to suffer in the end,” she says, her accent touching the edges of her words. I remember an October Saturday when I was hanging around the store. Everett pulled down this old model car based on some jalopy from before 1930. It lived on the top of the glistening silver machine that steamed and hissed as our two pots of coffee brewed. The model car had delicate detail and bright silver wheels that turned easily across the table top. “He just gave it to me one day,” Everett said, talking about the French man. I feel strange as I pour the second shot of decaf down the drain. Lost libations for the dead. I want to say something, but I’m not quite certain how. Epitaph I sit with Adam on the sidewalk by Douglass The sun’s light all asleep The streetlamps draw tangled patterns spreading out from my bike resting on concrete beside me We wait for bus headlights to cut through the air And in the peaceful minutes I sit by Adam Across the street I see The quiet yellow neon of the Breadworks sign Blinking in the night And I can still see Everett leaning out the door on a summer’s day Mr. Crain walking his dog one warm Saturday All the stories played out there upon the stage Passing away And I feel Adam beside me This moment We will pass away as well But for now we are here Breathing in the night Crab Fat Magazine 19 Elegy By: Alexandra Romanyshyn Twenty-three She’s seated, feeling each knob of her pelvis. The sore on her sit bone won’t heal. Fat that would’ve cushioned her bones long vanished. Twenty-two She’s hunched over a toilet wondering whether she has the guts to gag because she couldn’t gulp one iota of ipecac. Four fingers down her throat, she starts to lurch. Her stomach’s already too empty for anything but mucus and blood. Twenty-one She’s wondering how many calories are in a cocktail. A hundred and fifty per martini, she won’t get drunk tonight. Twenty She’s counting how many dates she drove away with disorder. Her heart is red-blooded but her belly is yellow with fear, and she weighs her self-worth everyday on a scale of glass so fragile, an extra two pounds, they both smash. If that glass were a mirror distorted to shrink her thinner, her eyes would still lie and see her hips wider. Nineteen She’s eaten pizza for the first time in years. Her stomach aches for days. Eighteen She’s home from college for the first time. Her high school friend wraps two hands around her waist and asks, “You losing weight?” Her mother secretly sautés food in extra butter, her aunt sends her carefully-selected fattening care-packages, her classmates ask why they can’t meet for ice-cream. Seventeen She’s concerned her body will never give birth to anything but disturbance. 20 Winter 2015 Sixteen She’s addicted to the adrenaline of swimming, cycling, dancing, all that elevates the heart rate. She consumes huge quantities of protein because it boosts the metabolism. Five cups daily of green tea, not meant for antioxidants, but to expend more energy. She lives on celery that contains negative calories. Fifteen She feels the need to complete two hours of cardio six days a week. She’s in constant pain because she won’t increase how much she eats. Seeking the best of both worlds, she competes with men’s athleticism but eats a delicate diet fit for women. Fourteen She’s dizzy, like she’s already a skeleton that can’t stand on its own, like the blood drained from her head absconded with her ovaries either gone or unresponsive, like she undid puberty on her poorly nourished body. She’s the only kid to visit a cardiologist because her heart is a poor psychologist, mercilessly quitting due to lack of energy. Doctor’s orders? Just eat. Thirteen She’s idolizing bulimic ballerinas. A friend sarcastically calls her fat. She doesn’t get sarcasm. Twelve She learns about calories, counts them every day since. Eleven She sees a picture of a woman and supposes, it’d be nice to look like that. Crab Fat Magazine 21 The Scoop By: Anniken Davenport W hy are you sitting there, staring at your hands? You asked for this meeting, begged for it really. Now you're leaving all the questioning to me. You're the one who's supposed to ask all the questions. Isn't that what people like you do? It's your raison d'être. You just love asking questions, trying to trap your subject with clever turns of phrase, with flattery and persuasion. Look at me. Look up. Yes, that's it, lift that chin up a little more. You can do it. I'm not that frightening, now am I? I'm not a monster. Or at least I don't look like one. Do I? There. You looked. Your eyes, what a lovely shade of blue they are. Violet like the lilacs that I'm sure are blooming right now outside my old house down in Georgia. They were so pretty, so fragrant, so dark like a week old bruise, all purple and shiny with just a hint of goldenrod around the edges. You looked away again. I got carried away, didn't I? Sometimes it's hard for me. My mind just keeps slipping down that path no matter how hard I try to focus. What's that? I can barely hear you through the speaker. Did I do it? What do you think? You've read all the testimony. You sat through most of it. When did you decide you were writing the book? Was it when the news story first hit? Or did you at least wait until after the coroner claimed it wasn't an accident? You're loyal, I'll give you that. And patient. Barely missed a court date, which is more than I can say for my so-called friends. Not a single character witness. I bet you even showed up for the appellate arguments, didn't you. Yes, I thought so. Wouldn't have missed it for the world. Never know when there's some real drama coming, do we? Don't want to rely strictly on transcripts. Those don't tell the whole truth. They're sanitized, sterilized. Clean. No stench of death, no whiff of rotting flesh, of vengeance. You flinched just now. I did it again. Focus. So what do you want to know? Yes, I know time is running out. It always does. No, I'm not going to tell you just yet. I'm not stupid. I know you need it for the book, but you're going to have to work just a little bit harder if you want it to be a NYT best seller. Look at me. You need to be there. Right behind the window, looking in. I'll give you a cue at the very last second. Only you will know the signal. I'll open my eyes wide and I'll smile in your direction. That's how you'll know. It'll be our little secret. You like that, don't you? I saw you smile just now. An exclusive. That's how it ends. 22 Winter 2015 A Smile Deeper than Moonlight By: Bill Wolak Crab Fat Magazine 23 Remorse By: Carolyn Stice Because I mistrust my tongue and tone, because I know ice laces my words, I tried hard not to press my thin Puritan’s lips as I spoke. Night lengthened and wrapped its frosty arms over our backs as we walked through dusk. Now, standing here, I hold the kettle aloft and wait. Washing my hair in the sink the water trickles like divinity, down my scalp and onto my neck. If cleanliness is next to godliness and that is next, to holiness aren’t I working my way, up some ladder toward reward or my next incarnation where I can live as a house cat free to be wild or sweet or cruel because that is the mood that carries my day. How do you measure the loss of that you did not know you wanted, as you watch it speed past, a bread truck, through the city where you have walked, broke but contented, for years without naming your hunger. I know how to say yes without meaning it because the phantom in my chest does not always plead loudly. Look, I only want to live in this way: a dozen bowls on the table each of them hot and sweet and filled to the brim. 24 Winter 2015 Pie is a Cheap Substitute for Longing By: Carolyn Stice for C.K. Williams After the interview for a job I need but do not really want I stand at my kitchen window. The semi-hard April ground keeps freezing, and softening in turn. Whatever shoe I wear these days is wrong, and I am forced, to keep them all on the shelf: snow boot rain boot tennis shoe so many opportunities to fail. I spoke today, in half-truths to convince them, to convince myself that forty hours a week translates to happiness. The ravens are out, circling the yard. Their clucking-quork crosses property lines echoes up, and down our hill. I wonder if they are measuring time or space. My grandmother, calling cows in 5 a.m. November light. My mother in her clean-room suit bent over, a spark-plug, at midnight while I slept in an empty house. Is this the work of my people? Forty hours and benefits. What kind of person would say no to that? Not them. Not my cousin scrubbing toilets or sister, answering phones Crab Fat Magazine 25 all day, making reservations. My father’s oil-rimmed hands. They, would never say no. A body in motion stays. in. motion. All I can hear inside my cabin is the gears of the clock knocking time forward and the scrape of the cat’s paw, across the floor. In thirty minutes, I will stand at the stove again stirring a pot, another meal, and the dishes, will fall dirty into the sink. Floors, need sweeping and clothes, sit in tidy heaps waiting to be moved from bed to chair. Sure, there is pie. but peanut butter, and chocolate, are a cheap substitute for longing. Or maybe I am thinking of the many flavors of grief. Lemon curd for the winter. Rhubarb only in spring. Dark mousse when the glare of summer light plays too lightly on the waves. What taste can bring oblivion? I’ve been through it over and again the forty hours of desk computer calendar stretching on. The curl of my pen in on itself. I’ve run it through my mind so much, so often, I feel unutterably, weary. 26 Winter 2015 Molotov By: Emmett Haq T he landlord is the type of man your couch, head propped under a commemorative father would have called “one slippery pillow stitched with the initials of the sorority son of a bitch.” His moustache is too that kicked her out, wearing one of your bras thick for his face, drawing your attention and and a pair of sweatpants spattered with what is keeping it for the duration of his speeches (you hopefully mud. She has just done a tiny bump watch, transfixed, as it jumps and wiggles to the and is characteristically relaxed, a languid smile cadence of his utterances, looking like nothing playing across her face as she watches what so much as a patch of grease-blackened steel appears to be a public-access program about wool, abandoned in haste by some errant how garbage trucks are built. dishwasher). The bumper of his gleaming black You feel roughly the same way about pickup truck is unadorned, but it says all the Mila’s heroin habit as you do about more for its austerity—you can tell by the way revolutionary communism and this limehe swerves around Prius drivers and barrels colored couch: you’re not exactly enthusiastic down the thoroughfare that his dream-team about it, but don’t have any strong convictions bumper sticker would read “NIXONagainst it either. You are no stranger to mindREAGAN ’16” and his vanity plate would be altering substances yourself, though you’ve unprintable. never even considered picking up Mila’s vice. He looks like someone who has done Something about the thought of sticking a serious prison time, someone who successfully needle inside yourself makes your veins feel incited a riot in his cell block, itchy and your head feel cold in Your girlfriend Mila someone whose prison a way you are wholly unable to calls him a fascist, nickname was “Vinny the articulate. Shiv” or something equally Your particular poison has which would sound a gangland. Your girlfriend Mila bit more venomous if always been that which resides calls him a fascist, which just across the counter of the she didn’t call nearly would sound a bit more neighborhood drugstore, where everyone a fascist. venomous if she didn’t call the goateed, skeletal pharmacist nearly everyone a fascist. twiddles his thumbs, waiting for Your girlfriend is a self-described his pretty young assistant to return from her revolutionary communist and does not believe lunch break so he can resume his macabre in the capitalist system of renting property, but dance on the border of sexual harassment. unfortunately must be complicit in this system There is nothing you hate quite so much as in order to continue living in the dubious unpredictability, and the sniveling medicine luxury of your shared studio on 66th Street, in man in his white coat and tarnished wedding the heat-hazy heart of her native Houston. She band represents a known and stable quantity. often wonders aloud whether or not you truly You tell Mila what the landlord said to you understand the struggle of the working class, this morning. The two of you owe seven coming as you do from a middle-class hundred dollars and if it isn’t “in my hands, background and participating willingly in the signed, sealed, and delivered” by Friday horrors of capitalism. morning, you will be escorted from the She is curled on the drab green sofa you premises by the Houston Police Department. inherited from your mother, in the ungainly Probably not very respectfully. You lost your position that makes her most comfortable, job last month—“company-wide cutbacks,” russet legs slung sideways over the back of the said the slack-jawed pantsuit who functioned Crab Fat Magazine 27 as your immediate supervisor, just after assuring you that it was mere coincidence that you were being let go the day after the regional manager watched your girlfriend aggressively French you at the door—and there is even less cash on hand than your usual, which is none. Mila is not fazed. Mila is never fazed. “We’ll burn the fucker’s house down,” she says lazily, scooting closer to the television. “In this way, each new truck is covered in steel plating that can withstand head-on collisions of up to 100 MPH,” intones the narrator above the sounds of the construction workers outside. You turn off the TV (manually, since the remote has been missing for months). Mila’s gaze shifts to you. It is not a pleasant one. “I was watching that,” she says, in a way that somehow implies several other, lessfriendly sentences. You do not like to make Mila upset. She is good to you, or at least she makes you feel you are good enough for her. This is not something you have experienced in past relationships. This eviction threat, though, cannot be ignored no matter how compelling the construction of sanitation vehicles might be. You explain the situation in a kinder, gentler, wheedling tone, implicitly begging her to care. Mila’s eyes gain a faraway air, and she responds, as though reading from a script, “There cannot be, nor is there, nor will there ever be, real freedom as long as there is no freedom for women from the privileges which the law grants to men, as long as there is no freedom for the workers from the yoke of capital, and no freedom for the toiling peasants from the yoke of the capitalists, landlords and merchants.” You stifle a groan as her eyes refocus on you. “You hear that, Amala?” (You nod solemnly, knowing this must be played very carefully, so as to avoid upsetting her.) “No freedom for the toiling peasants as long as there’s no freedom from the yoke of the landlords. This has been going on for centuries, you know! Millennia!” 28 Winter 2015 You continue to nod, increasing your tempo slightly. “Know who said that shit?” Mila’s eyes are glossy, shining with the spirit of the Red Army, or possibly with the glaze of heroin. She has already forgotten all about the landlord and his jumpy moustache. You shake your head no. “It was Lenin. He had it figured out a hundred years ago. But people never fucking learn, do they?” Tactfully, you say, “No, I guess they don’t, but Mila…what are we going to do about the apartment, baby?” Her facial expression shifts abruptly. “I can’t fucking believe this. I’m trying to teach you something here! Don’t you care about the proletariat at all?” You recede into your mind, nodding and expressing sorrow at all the right times, and eventually retreat to the bedroom, where you squeeze your fluff-spilling stuffed monkey until you fall asleep to the dulcet tones of the garbage truck program’s narrator. Sometimes there is nothing else to do but this. You are awoken by your cell phone’s inoffensive text-message ringer. It is your friend Jim, who manages a bar at night and is rarely coherent enough to send texts at this hour, for one reason or another. He is offering you a job as a server at his bar (it is not actually “his” bar, but he refers to it as such, with the propriety of the employee who knows he can get away with whatever he wants). You can hardly believe your good luck. The bar, you explain to Mila as you finish up your makeup and reach for your first bottle of “bad brains” medication (as you call it in an unconvincing attempt at good-natured selfdeprecation), is called “The Mast & Mizzen,” which as far as you can tell does not make any sense. It is a pirate-themed bar and restaurant. You practice an “arrrrrr” in the mirror, and laugh softly to yourself. Mila is still angry with you. She does not laugh. You reach for your second bottle of medication. “Not too hokey,” Jim assures you, in response to your barrage of text-based inquiries. “Ur typical bar & restaurant, just with silly names on the menu.” This is as reassuring to you as anything can be, realistically speaking. He neglects, of course, to mention the pirate uniforms. You are hovering near a table of thirteen evangelical Christians with a pitcher of water when you realize your phone has been vibrating nonstop for who knows how long. Mila is angry with you for not telling her when you will be home. You are always supposed to let her know when you will be home in case it affects her plans for the evening. You apologize as best you are able while sidestepping the stony glare of the front manager. Under the oppressive shine of the employee closet lights, which never turn off, you fish for a Xanax in your purse. You cannot find one among the hurricane of months-old receipts and fraying hair ties. You fill the pitchers of the evangelicals, who are discussing what Jesus would have thought of the president’s health-care plan, and narrowly avoiding drenching the oldest and surliest of the bunch, who sports a “Keep Christ in Christmas” pin atop her flat-brimmed hat. You duck to the back and take a swig of Pinot Grigio, which is not actually for drinking but for “Pillager’s Piccata.” You die the thousand tiny deaths of terror and neurosis that characterize each moment of your shift, and for that matter each moment of your week. You make it through. You toss your nametag onto the dresser (“Amala” was mangled as “Amarah” on your first day and you were told you’d have to cover the reprinting charge, so you’ve left it as is for the moment) and head to the bedroom, desperate for a bit of peace. You are, unsurprisingly, disappointed. Mila is pacing lengthwise across the room with a sloshing bottle of Dewar’s in one hand and a carving knife in the other. “We…we gotta do something,” she says by way of greeting you. “’S gone far enough. We gotta do something.” She has that particular edge to her voice that you associate with the smell of blood and the feeling of being discarded. Her voice turns you into a used tissue, an empty beer can, a spill to be cleaned up. “What are you talking about?” You gently try to take the bottle from her hand. She yanks it closer to her chest. “Talking about the landlord. Mister G. P. fuckin’ Jackson. He’s a leech. He sucks away all of our money, he takes the people’s lifeblood, and he gives us nothing in return. He’s a goddamn leech,” she repeats. Resisting the urge to point out that G.P. Jackson has probably used this precise imagery to describe the two of you, you instead appeal to Mila’s more logical side. “There’s nothing we can do, except pay the rent and look for a cheaper place. This is how the world works, Mila. I’m not saying you’re wrong, but….” “But nothing,” she says icily. “There’s always something the underclass can do to throw off its chains.” She turns sharply, as if remembering an important appointment, and picks up a hand towel from the frowzy stack on the floor, the cleanliness of its contents rendered indecipherable by the dim light of your bedside lamp. She stuffs one end of the towel into the half-full Dewar’s bottle and holds it up to the light, as if inspecting it for structural flaws or code violations. “Mister Jackson,” she says slowly, as if gauging your ability to comprehend her words and finding you wanting, “owns a very large office complex on Canal, just down the road. I would be willing to bet that, like this apartment, it is poorly maintained and would be absolutely devastated, were an unexpected catastrophe to occur. Like, for example, if someone were to start a fire.” Mila snorts perfunctorily as she cradles the bottle which you are only just now realizing is full of gasoline or motor oil or whatever the hell it is that Molotov cocktails are full of, you don’t know, you are not a revolutionary, you are just a waitress, and really only a fair-tomiddling one at that, Molotov cocktails are not and should not play any sort of role in your daily affairs, what the absolute hell is going on here Mila. You say this, or most of it anyway, or at least the last part. Crab Fat Magazine 29 She takes a step toward you. “You are so “Anywhere you like,” she says with a faint fucking spineless.” Another step. “This is why smile. I never trust you with anything important.” “I…I didn’t sign up for this, Mila.” Step. “Let’s go. Quit playing games. It’s only a “I didn’t sign up to have a cowardly ten-minute walk.” Step. “Come on.” capitalist-loving class traitor for a girlfriend, Step, and then you are in the now did I, Amala?” She is sneering Her voice, you middle of 66th Street, in that at you openly now, violence particular type of night that can think to yourself, implicit in her bearing. “Now only be experienced in South throw the fucking Molotov.” sounds like a Texas, a blanket of gloom Silence. shattered by great swatches of “Amala.” Nickelback neon and halogen, the plaintive You could be at home with concept album cries of overgrown insects mixing two Klonopin and a Netflix with the swears and horns of a about bad choices. Original series right now. thousand angry neighbors. “Throw it, Amala, or I’ll Step, and you are squinting to make sure make you regret it.” She is standing to your left. you stay close to Mila, who is practically To your right is the entrance to a room full of skipping with excitement, her jangly voice filing cabinets and hardwood desks. You still occasionally tearing into you with halfhave no idea what this office complex actually whispered exhortations and taunts. Her voice, houses. you think to yourself, sounds like a Nickelback “Throw it, you stupid bitch!” concept album about bad choices. You wish You squeeze your eyes shut, dimly aware desperately for a Valium. You realize that for of the building’s proximity to the police station, the last several minutes you have been powerof the heroin in your girlfriend’s pocket or at walking down 66th Street in a pirate costume, least in her veins, of the ache in your back from complete with three-cornered skull-anda shift full of pirate jokes and single-digit tips, crossbones hat. of the fire marshal’s nightmare on your right, Step, and you are standing at the rear of Mila’s white-hot fury on your left. entrance to the Harford-Bentley Central You pick a direction, almost at random, Processing Office, which you think is an and hurl the Molotov. insurance agency, but you have never actually been sure. The office is unlit, except for the lawn lights outside, which never seem to go off, and the maintenance door is heavy-looking and forbidding. The air here is even thicker with the nightly cacophony of the crickets, or cicadas, or something. Step, and watch Mila scrabble up the side of the building like a particularly odious Marvel supervillain. She is doing something with a screwdriver at the corner of the window. Absurdly, there is only a screen protecting the office’s interior from the likes of you. Moments later, she appears at the door, beckoning you inside. In one fluid motion, she flicks on the dingy overhead lights and presses the makeshift bomb into your startled hands. 30 Winter 2015 {the books in my library} By: Courtney Marie will outlive me. and if i collect enough of them they will convey convincingly the interesting intellectual well-rounded person i wish i was. and when i’m dead someone can buy the lot for one low low price and maybe for one moment they will reflect on what an interesting intellectual well-rounded person i might have been. Crab Fat Magazine 31 Lung Copy By: Elizabeth Hynes Collage with wax 32 Winter 2015 Centerfold Versailles By: Dorothy Chan 1. In elaborate we trust: As in Fragonard, put me on a swing— as in centerfold, put me in the nude, save for a pastel garter with bow. I lift my leg can-can style, swing overlooking the well-trimmed gardens. Let that garter bounce right off for him to catch, looking up my leg. 2. And I enter the gardens: flower motif over nude body— the Marie Antoinette fantasy of making love in the grass, not letting the soot get in your privates. The light and shadows hit me— I play coy, go into the flower bush: flowers over V, flowers over size C. 3. Make me majestic, stand up straight for portraiture: hands on hips, purple bra falling off, garter belt to match— no panties. I suck my stomach in, giving me the pout. Hair like a lion’s mane, the chandelier’s above me, illuminated—the room vast, the king’s bed messed up— golden, golden golden: candles burning, my ass is one fire. They open the curtains— Majesty’s now in the room. I take off my bra. Crab Fat Magazine 33 When Flesh is the Winding Sheet By: Elizabeth Yalkut Something in the kitchen catches fire and a city starts to burn. That's what happens and I'm not sorry. Who wouldn't want to be an emperor with a violin, fingers strewing notes like gasoline along the road to Rome? Apologies are for the people walking backwards on the road, let me tell you a story instead. It's a good one, incest and rubble and a plate full of dormice with a glass of red wine. We are all rodents, eyes gleaming and tails flickering like flame, flinching from loud noises and birds swooping down, fragile bones inside a velvet sheath, heart fluttering inside the cage of bones. Sometimes you have to split yourself open as cleanly as a ripe apricot, expose the dry kernel inside. Sometimes bones aren't protection for the softer tissues, sometimes flesh is the winding sheet around the body. What was I saying? Oh, death. Boring. Obvious. Everyone tells stories about death, about love, about how they're the same side of two different coins, one the inside of a Möbius strip, the other the outside. Have another glass of wine, darling, the Klein bottle isn't empty yet. We can stay here a while longer, go on talking. The other day, I was walking by the river (it isn't a river, just salt spat out by the ocean, but let's pretend) and I thought I saw a firedrake swimming under the bridge, all pupil-less eye and many-jointed wings. But the river isn't burning, we're safe here, the city is only buildings and people arranged in an orderly three-dimensional grid, and other such tidy lies. You're good at that, aren't you? You're so pretty. I've never felt like this before. I want to spend my life with you, sweetheart. Baby. Princess. I forgot — that's not my name. I don't know who I am but that isn't my name. That’s only one of the things I’ve lost along the way, one of the least important. The pen that ran out of ink when I was alone in a bus station and it was snowing, that was frightening, like being abandoned by my shadow. Somewhere my shadow is sitting in a cathedral made out of light, a smudge in the midst of alizarin crimson, cerulean blue, harlequin green, amaranth violet. Somewhere I am already there. I have already been rescued. The self-rescuing princess does not need armor, a horse, a sword. The selfrescuing princess doesn't have long golden hair or blue eyes or skin like cream. The selfrescuing princess chews glass and peels her own oranges. There is an orchard full of lemon trees which is my kingdom: pucker up. I woke this morning covered in blood again. Every month, this happens, and every month I'm surprised all over again. 34 Winter 2015 Leading the prayer By: Eric Allen Yankee I. Immigrant Spirit On September 11, 2001 I led the prayer I was a student of Religion Learning the ways In which humans have Tied, fastened, and bound their spirits We stood in a warehouse of immigrants Me – a suburban white boy Recent immigrant to the city Two Puerto Rican Americans One Mexican American We held hands and mined our fear For the words to chip out comfort II. Is this America's new immigrant song? First tower struck Ground the fleet Block the borders America America America Has no room for you America America America Has no womb for you Second tower struck Give bombs to the police Let the streets wear armor America America America Has no flower for you America America America Has no hour for you III. The sea is my home My grandpa was born On a boat. Crab Fat Magazine 35 Azahares que Estallan By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky 40in x 30in 36 Winter 2015 Rodents By: Mark Rosenblum S olitary in my secluded garden, quiescent on my lounge chair of interwoven human hair, I observe the squirrel. He gnaws with fervor on an acorn, but I know he is surreptitiously watching me. When I hurl my prosthetic leg at his furry little cranium, he scurries up the oak, hiding behind a cancerous wooden bulge humping the tree. Soon the costumed rat emerges from behind the middle finger limb flipping off humanity. He slinks suspended, upside down; tiny claws arousing infected bark. He is a fellow scatter hoarder--a kindred spirit. He hid my soul last spring when he spied me bury you under the tree. Crab Fat Magazine 37 Sonnet (The Exiles) By: Gary Wilkens Striking outward from the galaxy’s rim, velocity a little less than light, the few Last Ones try with parched minds to limn what the void whispers, the shape of the night that will not have a dawn. A century they built these last ships, generations worked and died to craft these engines. Undersea they grew the great habitats. Nearby lurked the planet stabber, the death head. This last world he vowed to take. The myth enemy, the old terror scratched on cave walls. Cast like fortune-telling bones, forced like rats to flee, they tell their young a story of return, of exiles, of a billion ways to burn. 38 Winter 2015 Beginning College in Arkansas By: Gary Wilkens My first concentrated task in college was picking raspberries on a sustainable farm, plump bright brains among jade leaves. They smushed easily and bled down my fingers so I went ahead and munched many more than I collected. Oh how they burst, fat and tart. I saw sweetness. I took it. I was not ashamed. Along the row I walked long into twilight, hands smeared crimson. Later inside with the other students on the orientation trip we sat in circles on the floor and sang Brown-eyed Girl. It was here that Melvin admitted casually that he was gay, the first openly gay person I had ever known. He was slim and handsome and gentle. Damn but he was unafraid. I saw that his black hands were streaked with sticky juice too. We had both killed hundreds of berries, and we were unrepentant. Crab Fat Magazine 39 Algo Oculto en cada Sensacion By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky 20in x 20in 40 Winter 2015 The Virginity Myth By: Hadassah Grace When was your first...? I was twelve, we climbed over the fence, into the playground of Wairaki Primary school at midnight, his lips were cold. No, wait, I was seven. I told my next door neighbor we should practice for when we both found real boyfriends. We hid in her closet. I pressed my chest against hers, even though she didn’t want to. Well how old were you when you lost…? I was fifteen, her body felt like what I was made for, we stumbled through each other's clothes and over each other's feelings But that doesn’t count, when did you...? I was sixteen, born again and committed to the straight and narrow, so we could only use our hands and mouths, we soaked the sheets in guilt But that's not right either. I was thirteen, he told me he loved me and that everything would be OK, he was twice my age I was fourteen, the concussion lasted for days, I caught the bus home bleeding They say you can never step in the same river twice that the body completely renews itself every few years so I was seventeen, reaching out to take what I wanted for the first time I was seventeen, he bought me a vibrator for my birthday I was seventeen, a single bed is too small for three people seventeen was a good year OK, but have you ever...? I was 20 he'd never been with a woman before. He opened for me, I was scared to hurt him, and I did I was 22 she’d never been with a woman before, she tasted like cumin and honey I was 22, he’d never said ‘I love you before’ I was 22, he’d never been with anyone before 22 was a good year Maybe we lose things in layers Snakes, shedding skin that's been touched, making the fingerprints part of our pattern Maybe we find ourselves in pieces Crab Fat Magazine 41 tangled in sheets, waiting for others to give us what we've always had. Maybe I'm still a virgin Maybe there's no such thing. 42 Winter 2015 Occupation: Hustler By: Hadassah Grace I'm the stripper who made Ben Moynihan squirm frustrated on the lap dance couch whispering, "Every girl is a kind of slut." making it rain crumpled dollar bills and bullets But I’ve seen the look a virgin gets, when I take off my G-string like they found the secrets of the universe between my thighs Loneliness won't make you hate women, but hating women is a lonely sport He asked me, “How should we do this?” concussions blooming like petals stitched into the stained upholstery And I am advised to be cautious carry a weapon head straight home after work don’t make your blood a birthday present keep your thighs wrapped tight in dirty sheets walk with keys between fisted fingers I'm the whore who made Elliot Rodger cry I swiped left on tinder even though my description says I'm dtf His all-caps cursed that I was a FAT UGLY DYKE DIDN'T WANT YOU ANYWAY FUCKING CUNT GO KILL YOURSELF I HOPE YOU FUCKING DIE he wanted me to know he was a real alpha male As if a dog with its teeth bared is what I'm looking for And I am advised to be smart meet in a public place look for early warning signs that might indicate danger the creeping spread of black mould on the insides of his mouth the half moon scars his nails have left on the soft skin of his palms be vigilant I'm the bitch who made Rusty Houser punch a hole in the living room wall we got into an argument at three in the morning in the comments of a status update about abortion rights by a friend of a mutual friend he thought I should keep my opinions to myself but that my insides belong to everyone He told me truth and death will always go hand in hand Crab Fat Magazine 43 but some people will kill to keep their eyes sewn shut And I am advised to stay quiet don’t be divisive smile more, say less train your teeth with superglue so you never provoke the kind of anger that leaves you in pieces 44 Winter 2015 Scenes of Leaving By: Emily Blair H e built his peace with Plexiglas and Saran wrap and fishing wire, all wet cotton and translucent insubstantial sandwich bags and clotheslines strung empty. His peace was a mobile hung beneath his skull, crystallized in amber. He caught women like a Venus fly trap, throwing themselves against the bird cages of his fantasy, growing feathers on the sides of thin faces and picking each other bloody. He built his peace with the bones of the dead, doorframes of tibias, skinned hands housing incandescent bulbs. He falls out of love with these fallen goddesses at high noon and cries, shaking windows and cracking his heart into four equal pieces, a leaking blood orange, all pulp and no play. I am his latest woman. I am pure and whole and human. I am the one who will live forever and ever and ever and. *** He is the sun in late afternoon—shadowmaker, wind-breaker, protector against loneliness. Who else would ever love me? Who else would even try? He holds me with both hands and insists that I text him when I get to work every morning, a sign of caring, of something that smells like love. I move into his place almost immediately, my own room gutted, my roommates joking that I have died; they call me The Ghost and I see it as a point of pride. I pour myself into car trunk and side table and the space between his bed and wall until I have nothing left. He is the sun in late afternoon, earth-scorcher, fire-starter. My passion knows no bounds; his passion is measured. *** He is pine tree grown inward. He is blue pine hiding between skin and organ, pores seeping sap and needle-nose-hairs and great stretching arms of arcing boughs— a whole forest of fir, and I am nothing. Trees are our ancestors made immortal, I’ve heard. Untouchable, he sits on the side of a mountain just to contemplate his majesty. I worship at sprawling roots and shake holy water from a tin bottle onto the ground around him. His gaze does not waver from the horizon, never smiling down from this throne on high, while I chant his legacy under my breath, stretching his stiff spine an inch more with each added tale. My mother asks how he’s doing and I say great. Fantastic. He’s getting a lot more work these days, and soon, money won’t be the insurmountable burden that it is now. I eat Saltines and jalapenos and drink vodka in lemonade, cauterizing myself from the inside out, and it’s all fine, and I love him. *** He exists in the space of a short breath just before the word “and.” He is the longest sentence ever said or thought or written. And another thing—And just so you know—And I just think it’s funny that— He walks through the house throwing phrases behind him, carpet-bombing the bathroom, leaving mines in the bedroom, the kitchen covered with one more things. His pockets hang heavy with slight offenses from months past, a sneer here, an unenthusiastic orgasm there. Do you want this? Is this what you wanted? Crab Fat Magazine 45 He threatens to take me down with him, as if I would not willingly break his fall with my whole body, with everything I think I have. *** His gaze lingers on our waitress and I wonder what he was like before I met and caught and made him. *** He is an ugly bird whose name no one I am supposed. I am ought. I am bending knows. He is not goldfinch or cardinal or blue and never breaking. I am the surface of soft, jay or even that lovable villain crow. dry snow. What is he? Angry. What is he? Infectious, I buy only his favorite beer and bring him parasitic, a boil. one still-cold from the market fridge because What is he? All encompassing, blocking he wants to know that I have gone nowhere out the sun. Oh, how I love him. else. He carries in the groceries to see if I have I watch him from my bought anything he dislikes, He carries in the groceries to make sure I am not window and he does nothing from dawn to late evening, wasting his money on shit. to see if I have bought caught in a state of perpetual This behavior is, of course, anything he dislikes, to movement, swirling around completely normal, because make sure I am not wasting the same branch for five I am nothing but a stain on hours, wailing and shrugging. his finances, social life, his money on shit. His whole body shivers with existence—nothing can the effort of doing so much for no reward. come from me but problems. His favorite beer I decide to give him a soul. I have enough is a craft IPA and twice as expensive as soul and he has none. I pour myself through a anything I would choose to spend money on, sieve, me into him, my marrow working but that is more than okay. overtime, my heart weak and easily caught—a three-legged dog heart, low flying and *** wounded. I feed him out of my cupped hand and he I wake him up in the mornings slowly. We never bothers to learn control. My palms call them li’l kisses. He laughs and rolls and become pockmarked, covered in weeping moans in faux anger. I smile and kiss every scabs and half-formed scars. exposed inch of skin. Oh I love you, I sing. I He laughs deep in his body when I wince love you love love you oh I love you so. away from him. He is not a small bird. And I do. I feel as though I found him in some long forgotten corner of the world and *** brought him to the light. What would we ever do without each He orders our dinner. He knows I hate other? olives and orders me a Greek salad. He would recede and I would grow strong What, you don’t like it? Weren’t you and lithe without stoop. I would flower into supposed to be dieting, anyway? something like the person I thought I would be He orders a burger and I don’t consider one day, when I was naïve and didn’t know saying anything about how he stopped what love felt like. exercising a month into loving me, having me. I leave his coffee beside the bed and close It doesn’t cross my mind to dislike his soft, the door softly on my way out to work. hanging stomach, his lack of sex drive, his heavy breathing even while sitting still. *** 46 Winter 2015 No light escapes from him. He is the reverberation of ten thousand big bangs, of five hundred birds screaming over plucked-off wings. I am sorry! I am sorry! I am sorry! He is forgiveness. He sets the sin and forgives. He builds the maze and rejoices when I make it through. Oh, he is grace personified. He is the perfect lover I never earned. I try and try and never earn, in debt up to my eyebrows, nose barely bobbing above the water, his grace only so buoyant, my mistakes egregious. I cannot work this off. I’m sorry. Oh baby I’m sorry. Thank you, I’m sorry, thank you, thank you. *** He is threatening to kill himself again. He threatens to kill himself a few times a month when things fall into a groove, when I am breathing too easily. I must not contradict. I must walk softly. I must assure him that he is my moon and stars, and urge him so gently to eat something, please, for me. Stay, for me. Just a small bite, for me. I pick up comforting him like old knitting, my fingers swift on this familiar pattern. I can comfort him and let my mind wander, petting his head and thinking of the housework that needs doing while saying, Never leave me, never go. I don’t know what to do without you. I love you, love you, I will always love you. He never kills himself. He never even tries. *** We stop having sex. We are not in a slow spiraling dive down, a lessening in frequency, passion eventually petering out as we slowly grow accustomed to the pitch and roll of the body beside us. It is immediate. It is distinct. When I try to engage him, he sighs and looks away. His body reacts but he does not. He has not looked me in the face in three months. Six months. Eighteen months. He asks if I am so weak, that I need sex. If I am so animalistic, disgusting, trashy. I remember when we used to kiss. Is it as simple as that? Can I claim the mask of innocence to say that I miss kissing my lover, miss the way he used to look at me? I would do anything, I think, if he would let me. *** I went to the ocean three weeks after I met him. He was obsessed with me, and I needed it. Drank it up as if dying from thirst, as if drowning, as if my gut could absorb him whole, like salvation. Drank like I had never tasted anything so wonderful in my life. He called twice a day and I would leap from the pool or dinner table to take the call. When I got home, he had sent me a bouquet of flowers for each day I was gone. My house held the scent of sweet decay for a month afterward. He came by to check on me at night, called it tucking me in. Once I was picking up a pizza and when I got back he was slamming on my door with both open palms, screaming himself hoarse. I thought you were gone, I thought you were gone, I thought you were dead. I held him up with the full weight of my body as he squeezed my sides until I could barely breathe. Baby, I would never leave. I could never leave you. I’m so sorry. I never knew what I was apologizing for, only it’s what you do when a man is sobbing because he cares about you. *** He is an overwhelming roar of emptiness between ears. I hear nothing over the ringing. I feel nothing but the roar of that sound, my body a tuning fork, vibrating within my own skin. Crab Fat Magazine 47 I stand up straight, choke on occasional breaths, feel my heart pound against every inch of skin. Oh baby, I didn’t mean to. I am sweating, heart hard, body aflame. I will die in this fire, my heart a stone. Honey, I’m sorry. I fall into him, stepping off a cliff. Who would believe me? My ears ring and I see nothing and feel nothing and my entire body is suspended in tar, suffocating on darkness fully formed. We’re in the shower and the water is hot. The water is very hot. I make a joke about his body. Something about his penis, how sad it looks unaroused. Something not meant to hurt him. He shoves me into the side of the shower, hard, smacking my head against the wall. I’m sorry. Sorry. I stay on the floor of the shower. I can feel the hot water running down my back and the hard, grimy bathtub beneath knees and palms and I know what has happened but can do nothing. He picks me up and wraps my wet body in his own. My legs no longer work. I am so sorry. The side of my head is hot, a knot forming, all of my blood rushing to under my tongue, in my ear, deep in my stomach, heat coming off of me in waves. He wraps me in a towel and lays me on our bed, half exposed, my bare leg and hip and side not enough to merit a reaction, my body an offering, too scared to shift the towel, too scared to make his kind gesture look anything but majestic, staring at the wall, my joints filled with lead. He goes back to watching TV and gets another beer like nothing happened. You know I would never hurt you. I nod and nod and nod and. *** He is the slant of sun at 4 p.m. at the beginning of winter. He glares 48 Winter 2015 but offers no warmth. He is storming through the glass door of our living room and doing nothing. It’s windy. It’s too cold. He is the one who brings false hope of warmth. Can you pick up some dinner? I’ll pick me up some dinner. He eats a calzone in front of the TV. His flesh is distended, uneven. His entire body is a temple crumbling, and I wonder what he once looked like, what he looked like when I first saw him. I look at him without blinking, and do not go blind, and eat pretzels and peanut butter for dinner, and I do not glance away, as if I am someone too. *** Where’s my work shirt? My favorite one, the blue one. Where is it? I don’t know. Did you wash it? When did you last wear it? Monday. Well, did you do laundry? What the fuck do you think? Of course not. When do I fucking do your job? Are you going to work for me today? Fantastic. He throws a coffee mug at me. It makes a crater in the drywall. I am living on the moon. I am made of wept stars. He puts on a red shirt and does not look toward where I have rooted myself when he leaves twenty minutes later. I will die leaning against this wall in our bedroom. I will never make a noise again. I stand for five minutes after he leaves and I could stand here for days more, years, a woman petrified, my weight threatening to sink this whole building, fracturing floors and buckling foundation. *** Nothing keeps me upright but the desire not to die. Living, maybe, is the optimist’s goal, but not dying is the structure around which I plan my escape. I will hold this body upright and continue and scheme and squirrel away money and know that the end will not be death, not for me. Not in this case. Dying sounds like an emptiness I cannot fathom, and having once been happy, having once wanted food, having once been kissed softly— I know that life has the ability to sing. *** He is banana peels and apple cores and chicken bones and bread heels and not even a dog would pee on him. And I hold bitterness close to my breastbone, clutching it for fear that letting go will mean forgiving, and I am not ready. I have never tasted forgiveness but it sounds like castor oil, good for me, hell on earth, look how fucking great I am, that I might be able to forgive. I fill my legs with bitterness, heavy, concrete, lead, bones bowing. Is this holding on? Is trying to hold the tides in my arms holding on? Am I wrangling the moon, shooting down the sun, screaming into the sky like I have finally seen the scars on my skin from being set aflame? Is this holding on? I tried vomiting, starvation, shaking hands, smiles ripping the edges of my mouth. I tried emptying myself onto city streets, and new men touching me as if I were made of glass. My gynecologist told me that I had scarring in my vagina, but nothing, in her words, too serious. My doctor asked if I thought I needed pills for this, and I figured that wouldn’t be so bad, a mellowing agent take a sander to my hormones to discover something beautiful and forgotten beneath it all. My mother told me that she had known all along when I told her, when I only told her, that he could raise his voice sometimes. Crab Fat Magazine 49 Starfuckers By: Hadassah Grace We went to the Carter observatory, to learn about planets and constellations, and all I could think about was fucking you. Don’t get me wrong, I know the magic of the cosmos. I’ve read all the Carl Sagan quotes - you know the one about how we’re made of star stuff? 8 years old I was top of my class in science, my teacher kept me after school so I could listen to a recording of the radio waves produced by a pulsar it kind of sounded like a fat kid trying to tap dance on a trampoline but it still made my toes curl I was listening to a star But next to you, arms barely touching, heads tilted back tourist style at the horsehead nebula splayed across the ceiling I swore if you threw me one more diastemic grin I would strip you bare and boldly go where no man… actually, I don't know, are you into guys? anyway space it’s the final frontier, right? the unfilled spaces between us riding the air, you push out and out and out no matter how close we press ourselves there’s emptiness in between our bodies where the curve of your stomach fits the small of my back there are galaxies of gaps to fill Have you ever noticed when the moon wanes, it looks like its being swallowed? Call me the night sky and I will devour you. I'm willing to bet there's a universe of poems full of metaphors about stars. I didn't mean to write you one, honest, but astronomy turns me on. And the only word for my attraction to you is gravity I try to pull away but there are forces at work Fuck Shakespeare, we’re not star crossed lovers Let's be starfuckers Drive out where city lights have faded wait for darkness, set up the telescope and forget to use it 50 Winter 2015 How to be a Writer By: Hadassah Grace Step One: Call yourself a writer Find a job that embarrasses you. One your parents told you never to do. Something so pointless and demeaning that when people ask you what you do, the truth will stick in your throat. You’ll feel it bubble up like blood through clenched teeth. In a panic, throw your shoulders back and shout, “I’m a writer!” and hope that someday you might win a poetry slam, with enough prize money to pay your power bill, so you won’t feel like such a fraud. Step Two: Stay up late. Get high too often, fuck too hard, eat until your stomach hurts. Find men who think they don’t deserve you, and treat them badly until they realize how wrong they were. Play music loud, read books from start to finish with no breaks, call in sick to work so you can finish all seven seasons of that show you hate. Don’t let your mind rest so you never have to sit in silence and remind yourself of all the reasons you didn’t commit suicide. Step Three: Sit in silence, and remind yourself of all the reasons you didn’t commit suicide. Remember when your dad stopped trying. Weeks before his heart operation, the pills untouched in their little white bottles. The way you sat by his bedside reading T.S. Elliot, in case he could hear you through the coma. Later your mother will call it ‘medicide’ and the word is a fist to your stomach. There were reasons, remember? You had them tattooed on your thighs, carved them into bathroom walls, muttered them under your breath as you bit into the skin around your nails. Remember that the reasons came from a book your dad gave you, on your birthday the year before he died. They didn’t work for him. Step Four: Go out walking. Late at night, after your boyfriend has gone to bed, even though you know he wishes you would follow him. Choose uncomfortable shoes, and a jacket that isn’t warm enough. Find a hill steep enough to make your lungs ache, and don’t allow yourself to slow down. In darkness, think about rape and murder statistics. Or zombies. Or that creepy girl from The Grudge. Do this until your cramped computer desk is the only place that feels like home. Step Five: Call yourself a writer. Say it to yourself this time. Write poems like brushing your teeth. Every day, or something starts to rot. Crab Fat Magazine 51 Hand Over Mouth By: Elizabeth Hynes Collage 52 Winter 2015 Life Equations By: Hannah Sattler We make a science of the stars and the constellations inside our hearts, as though there are definite answers and love is just a solution, an inevitable conclusion of certain sums, this syntax of science. You + me = we. Attraction2 = love. ("#$%&'(*+&,-(–/01/#$"$%&'()0(%3%4",%$%/( = relationship 5'#/,$"%'$6 But numbers and equations tangle in my mind. All I know is what I see. Gravity works still. Don’t worry. I checked. We humans can’t grow wings no matter how we wish to fly. And in the skies the stars commit suicide. 789:;<=:>?@ x −𝑐𝑙𝑎𝑟𝑖𝑡𝑦 = no real solution. ?A@B>C:@ Even science proves there is not always an answer. Crab Fat Magazine 53 Negotiations By: Kim Hunter-Perkins I rest my cheek against her naked thigh; night air cools against my liquid face as you kiss the echoes of her orgasm, fingertips tangled in my hair. 54 Winter 2015 Knowing By: Kim Hunter-Perkins Our lips crackle on contact Lightening and cherry bombs Illuminating the narrow Corridor of books where the air is heavy with a need Driven by ten thousand taps of the enter key (ten thousand breaths of anticipation) the press of your knee against mine, eyes slipping from my ankles to thighs, and recognition of like calling itself by name— We snap apart, stunned. Then I grab your tie, pull you back for more. Crab Fat Magazine 55 Not Spicy By: Kenneth Pobo Y ou go to Popeye’s for chicken. You’ve been hungry all morning. This was not a good day to ignore breakfast. At the funeral home, the dark-suited man who wrote down when you would pick up the ashes and asked if you needed more death certificates looked sincerely saddened by your loss. It’s not like he has a choice. Some people sell hamburgers; others sell how to handle grief. It’s expected. Your stomach kept growling while he was stripping your sorrow naked and rubbing word lotion all over it. If you could have told your stomach (your husband refers to it as a tummy) to quiet down, you would, but that would only have confused the dark-sleeved one. The “loved one” was your sister, Maggie. No one else would make “arrangements” for the family’s black sheep. At 39, she died of drugs and drink and maybe a few other things. There wouldn’t be a funeral. You’d scatter her ashes around the Peace rose. She wasn’t a peaceful person and roses meant nothing to her. You’d may as well stuff her in the trash and wheel the receptacle out for the garbage men. But that wouldn’t do. You aren’t sentimental and neither was she, but no, not that. When your mother told you Maggie was dead, she sounded as if she were telling you about a school that had closed. Her voice, a phone wire with no electronic sizzle. She had disowned Maggie, had been hurt enough for one lifetime. She asked you to “take care of it.” “It.” So you did. The drizzly day smelled faintly of cooking fish. You took the day off, not to grieve, just to get things done. Maggie had ripped you off many times. You felt sorry for her even when she did it. She was a mess. You tried to get her to seek help. She called you a “Shithead” and hung up. She was partly right. You know you can be a shithead though you hide it better than some. At Popeye’s you said you wanted it mild, two wings and a thigh. And a biscuit. And a watered down-Coke. You studied your fingernails as they got your order. You drove home. Oh no. Spicy. Crap! You hate spicy. But you didn’t want to go back. You ate it and cursed, blamed Maggie and your mother. Your dad is dead but you blamed him too. Your tongue felt unnaturally warm. You looked out the window which looked at you. It knew you would soon be breaking. 56 Winter 2015 Mamihlapinatapai1 By: James Freitas I was happier than I thought I ought to be. Struck by the smell of her hair; the little things I learned, standing in the sillage of her spirit. In that embrace. A rooftop encounter—really a prolonged mamihlapinatapai. A hair-width between hands, nervously shaking. I’m an edition on reserve unavailable (in different senses of the word) but she seized me: my feeling. Nobody could pry it away. Still nobody can. That fuzzling first gasp of asphyxiation— I felt. (waking from falling in a dream) mamihlapinatapai. She kept my smile and so did I— gorgonized. Awake all night in sleepless vorfreude2, itchy anticipation for another another Hoping erlebnisse3— mamihlapinatapai. from the Chilean Yaghan language. a look between two people sharing an unspoken but private moment. German, joyful intense anticipation that comes from imagining future pleasures. 3 German, the experiences positive or negative that we feel most deeply and through which we truly live. excerpted from Wikipedia. 1 2 Crab Fat Magazine 57 Alegre Polvo Veraniego I By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky 12inx12in 58 Winter 2015 In Charge By: Isaac Hunt T he paper road map we’d picked up from California. Our oldest daughter had just given one of the multiple rest areas was birth to our first grandchild and we weren’t spread in front of me, propped against going to let the two thousand miles between the steering wheel and staring me in the face. Davenport and Canterbury Row stop us. My I’d been looking at it for over five minutes, wife hated flying and I hated driving… so it while my wife of thirty years drummed her was decided that we would drive to California, fingernails on the glove box and stared through see the sights along the way and take our time. her sunglasses at the deserted parking lot of the It wasn’t exactly that I hated driving; it’s just service station and beyond that to the even that I’d spent thirty years as a state police more deserted road. I felt tiny beads of sweat officer in Iowa, driving eight hours a day, five trickle down my temples and onto my cheeks. days a week. The calluses on my butt had just Any second now she would ask one of two started to wear away after six months of living questions, “are we lost” or “do you want me to off a pension and now I was expected to sit in go in and ask for directions?” I was almost a car for thirty plus hours with a million other concentrating more on the digital clock above lunatics on the road pulling boats and campers, the radio, than the multiple semi-trucks taking up two lanes roads twisting all over the map and soccer moms yelling at a Voices would get in front of me, trying to time dozen kids. All this without the raised, doors would get when my wife would open her legal ability to arrest someone. mouth and cause me to open I-80 proved to be less slammed and feelings mine and thus start the first scenic than we’d thought and we would get hurt. argument of the return trip wound up pushing through to home. Monterey in two and half days, The little green numbers flashed to eightthe sights and leisure be damned. And what do fifteen and my eyes instinctively darted over to you know, Miss I-don’t-like-to-fly drove my wife, anticipating that now was the time. approximately two hours. In thirty years Her fingers were still drumming on the glove nothing much had changed. box, but I heard her sigh and I knew it was Being a grandparent was amazing. I got coming. With three to eleven words she was puked on, peed on and somehow in the ten going to openly question my manhood and my days we were out there, my daughter and soncontrol over the situation and subsequently in-law never had to get up in the middle of the send me into a feeding frenzy of retorts and night. It was amazing... The little guy was cute excuses in an attempt to salvage my pride and and his middle name was James after me, so I retain my right to hold my man card. Voices couldn’t complain too much, at least out loud. would get raised, doors would get slammed and We didn’t get to see the kids very much feelings would get hurt. Three to four hours of anymore and they didn’t have any other family silence would ensue, broken only by the within six states, so the new parents were glad occasional pothole or rumble strips on the for our help. But at the end of ten days, I was highway. All because my manhood wouldn’t ready to shove off and make the journey home allow me to admit that I didn’t have a clue to my recliner and my wet bar in the basement. where we were and I didn’t have a clue how to My wife cried the first hundred miles and get where we were going. sniffled the next hundred after that. It was our first vacation since I retired and I suppose it is my fault that we got lost. we’d decided to drive, all the way to Monterey, Before we were through the Sierra Nevada Crab Fat Magazine 59 Mountains, I made the innocent suggestion that maybe we should take a different route home, take a few extra days and do what we’d intended to do on the trip out there, see the west. I was newly retired, my wife was a school teacher on summer vacation and our three daughters were out of the house (although our youngest was threatening to come back). We had no obligations and no reason to be back. Through the sniffles my wife agreed. I turned off of I-eighty and my wife pulled out the map. We got part way through Nevada then decided to go to Idaho on a whim from my wife. While I drove, she googled bed and breakfasts and off the beaten path tourist traps on her new smart phone. On the same whim she picked an old fashioned bed and breakfast south of Boise in some little town that I can’t even remember the name of. We could see mountains out both windows in our room, snowcapped peaks and clouds that seemed to be resting on them. The moon had been nearly full and we’d stayed in bed watching the stars touch the mountains. We made love for the first time in several weeks. It was a good whim. Back on the road we went cutting through northern Wyoming and headed for South Dakota. We didn’t make it. My wife was humming along to the radio and searching for our next stop, while I tried to estimate our gas mileage in my mind before hitting the information button on the display screen to confirm or usually deny my estimation. “I’ve found it!” My mind had been wondering and I was suddenly jerked back into reality. I swerved onto the rumble strip on the right side of the lane and then quickly corrected. I shook my head and then grinned sheepishly at my wife who was shaking her head at me. “We’re getting twenty-eight point two miles per gallon.” “Uh huh, well congratulations. I’ve found our next stop, Mama Smith’s Old Time Bed n’ Breakfast.” Sounds miserable… “Sounds fantastic honey, I’ll pull over and we can plot it out.” 60 Winter 2015 We’d only seen sagebrush and cows for the last thirty miles and I debated just stopping in the middle of the road. As I slowed to a stop my former career kicked in and I went ahead and pulled onto the thin gravel shoulder and put the car in park. My wife was already pouring over the road map and plotting a course in her head. After two hundred miles, two detours, and a two-hundred-dollar cell phone with no service, I was really wishing the course she’d plotted had been written down somewhere besides on her smart phone or in her head. We were somewhere north of Casper, Wyoming, at a tiny service station with two pumps and a bucket of greasy looking water that I presumed was for washing the windshield. I had no idea how to get where we were going and daylight was fading fast. I’d been able to stall for a few minutes while I filled the car up with gas, the old fashioned pump motors humming louder than any gas pump I’d ever heard before. When the handle on the pump clicked and the pump motor stopped humming, it was time to face reality. I went inside the station long enough to pay the grizzled old owner his forty-two dollars and then walked back toward my impending doom. I stepped inside the car, grabbed the map and spread it in front of me, acting like I was an expert cartographer and up for the challenge. The numbers on the digital clock flashed to eight-sixteen and she finally broke the silence. “I’m going to use the bathroom, or most likely the outhouse. Do you want anything from inside?” I kept staring at the map and shook my head, dumbfounded that the two inevitable questions had been ignored and the formula for the rest or our trip had been shattered. She pushed her door open and stepped out, I braced myself for the slam, but it didn’t come. The door shut quietly and she walked away adjusting her purse on her shoulder. I watched her in amazement as she walked away, seeing her for perhaps the first time in many years. She was still tall and slender, the gray in her hair was dyed away monthly and she had tiny wrinkles at the corners of her eyes. Three kids and thirty years of marriage to me were visible in her shoulders and hips, but she never looked more beautiful. I wondered how I looked in her eyes, my hair was thinning, my six pack was twenty-five years removed and if I didn’t trim it regularly, then the hair grew out my ears and nose. I watched until she disappeared inside the tiny service station, berating myself for judging her too quickly and supposing that she would dare do something so sinister as to question my manhood and relinquish my control by asking for directions. I looked back at the map for a few more seconds and then slowly folded it back into a tiny rectangle. Without thinking twice, I tossed it into the backseat and then started the car. In thirty years of marriage I’d been through all the ups and downs imaginable. There were times when I wanted to pull my hair out and times when I knew my wife wanted to pull my hair out. I wanted to laugh at how something as trivial as not wanting my wife to ask for directions had caused so much inner tension in me. I could remember her leaving me countless lists of step by step directions for a hundred projects over the years and somehow still screwing them all up. If I couldn’t manage something that simple, how could I expect her not to question my map reading abilities? As a man I wanted to be in control, I wanted to be in charge. As a retired police officer it was that much worse. I’d spent nearly my entire adult life living with four hormonal women, going through puberty, college, two expensive marriages, hot flashes and now a new grandson. That ancient inner voice that was passed on through a thousand generations that whispered and sometimes shouted for me to hunt, kill, make fire, and be a man, was quite often suppressed. Through it all I somehow avoided a midlife crisis. My wife stepped into the car with an armload of snacks and beverages and I watched her with a smile, while she organized her hoard carefully and methodically. “I got you a Diet Coke and a bag of peanuts, unsalted and also a snickers bar. If you have to use the bathroom I suggest you wait until we get into the country, if the men’s bathroom is in any way as disgusting as the pit I just walked out of.” When I didn’t answer she looked at me and raised an eyebrow. “You ok?” “You bet.” “Do you know where we’re going?” I shook my head and smiled. “Nope. I’m lost, but as long as you don’t care, then neither do I. Let’s find the first motel that doesn’t have cockroaches sneaking out the door and then let’s stay up all night making love.” She blushed and then smiled, shaking her head. “James, you are something else.” I buckled my seatbelt and put the car in drive and then pulled away, leaving the dingy service station behind. “Yeah, but you love me.” She leaned her head on my shoulder and put her left hand on my leg. “Well, somebody has to.” I guess I never really wanted to be in charge, I just forgot that I didn’t have to be. I had a wonderful partner and a blessed life. As we drove down the road with the moon ahead of us and the setting sun at our backs, I realized that my manhood had never been in danger and that the only one who had ever questioned it, had been me. Crab Fat Magazine 61 My Heartland-Bred Moonbeams By: Keith Gaboury I cannot spit out a lie under a potbelly Moon. Three moonrises ago, I slapped down a Ben Franklin for a waxing gibbous hit to spike into the Kansas pores of my fucked-up prairie brain. My dealer smirked in the spread of my Heartland-bred moonbeams liquefying in a milk carton bottle right outside Wichita where Lord’s Diner and that speed trap meet. Brown bagging on I-35 through a chigger-heavy night, I wobbled forward, swallowing swimming photons born in the Sea of Tranquility at half past one. Thirty minutes on, lunar dust gathered onto my chestnut skin. After the black particles hitched a ride on the beams’ flight, they spread across my forearms and femur with every gulp I swigged back along a shoulder of traffic-strained eyeballs. On the highway’s exit ramp, I winced at the sting of the bottle’s final drops, my head swirling at the intersection of host and desire. Who am I? Must you insist? My dirty self collapsed within a Universe of split lips opening wide for a strawberry June shine spilled across the only home I will ever know. 62 Winter 2015 Between Rome and Aldebaran By: L.B. Sedlacek When the space probe Pioneer 10 crossed the orbit of Jupiter, the Gladiators had long since retired without a pension plan their weapons never leaving the solar systems. Pioneer 10 crossed the asteroid belt between Earth and Mars without fighting to the death or letting the bloodthirsty crowd give a thumbs up thumbs down to say whether it would live/die some 8 billion miles from home. Rumor has it, a few Gladiators avoided the branding of the body, the hot iron on the flesh used to make certain they were dead. The Gladiators escaped to the star, Aldebaran. Aldebaran -- a K5 III star orangish and large. Known as the Bull’s Eye. The Gladiators’ retirement packages transferred fully intact. And Pioneer 10 should reach Aldebaran in about 2 million years. Crab Fat Magazine 63 You've got yours By: Larissa Hauck 24" x 18" Oil and acrylic on panel 64 Winter 2015 The Relevancy of Desire By: Lori England It's irrelevant; as it's been eleven years, since your lips last locked with hers, since you ran your fingers across her flesh. Felt her soft kisses along your spine. Eleven years since you cried in the crashing rain, over an admission, never again acknowledged. It's irrelevant; as it’s been ten years, since you met him and were jolted by the sudden current of your love. Since you watched your future map out down long, smooth roads. Erasing all trace of trails not taken, with your new collective consciousness. It’s irrelevant; as the buds you have planted begin to bloom since you are unlikely to uproot the life you have grown together as you watch your branches blossom upwards Incessantly intertwined. But as you idly ponder the faces of strangers, smiling at the curve of a hip, swooning slightly at long fingers, arching your ear to catch an arresting accent, you do not differentiate your passing desires between he or she or them. It is not greed, like your mother said Not confusion. Or a phase. It is woven into you, root to tip. Crab Fat Magazine 65 Smell By: Mandee Driggers Her womb was a speakeasy. New plastic, warmed by electricity. A dead gerbil in the fallopian tube of your apartment. Smell of exploding biological clocks. 66 Winter 2015 It’s Christmas By: Jason S. Parker I t’s Christmas. Sitting by the fire, your back begins to burn. You hear the song in your head about chestnuts roasting by an open fire. Except it’s your back that’s roasting by an open fire. So you move to the sofa. You watch Bobby strip the wrapping paper off the toy boxes, a glass of eggnog in your hand, making you feel too tipsy for a Christmas morning. You better slow it down. You don’t want Bobby to remember you like this on Christmas 2015 and one day realize you’re an alcoholic. Uncle Ernie puts on a CD, Reba McIntyre’s Christmas album playing Jingle Bells through the old stereo system. Dumb redneck woman, you think, but Uncle Ernie, the lifelong tobacco farmer, wants to hear it. You let the hick music play in your home, though you’d rather be listening to 50s style Christmas music, classy tunes by legendary Jazz musicians like Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong. Meanwhile, Scrooge is wrapping up his encounter with the Ghost of Christmas Past. The CEO of Toys R Us is sleeping in, atop a mound of cash. A kid is jamming a corncob pipe into Frosty’s face. The racist family from A Christmas Story is laughing at an Asian family signing, “Fa ra ra ra ra ra ra ra ra.” As for me, I’m standing on the tin roof of the colonial brick home I grew up in. I can’t stand spending another holiday minute in that house. It’s too quiet in there. If I had the money, I’d move in a heartbeat. My brother was shot in the kitchen. He had come home past curfew one night. My dad didn’t recognize him in the dark and shot him in the forehead with a twelve gage. My mom came down the stairs in her nightgown and, in her despair and anger, she took the twelve gage and pulled the trigger on my dad, spreading buckshot across his chest. Then she stuck the barrel in her mouth and pulled the trigger. It took the cops weeks to figure out what happened, the order of events. They knew my mom had clearly committed suicide. They didn’t know whether my mom or dad had shot my brother. They didn’t know whether my brother or my mom had shot my dad. They had to bring in a detective from Nashville to figure it all out. This colonial house is two stories with an attic. If I were to fall off this tin roof, I’d easily break a leg or an arm. Maybe if I took a swan dive I’d break my neck and die. I don’t want to take the chance of breaking my neck and living in a wheel chair. So I suppose that idea is out of the question. But, as cold as it is out here, drizzling snow accumulating in the treetops around me, I won’t go back inside. Crab Fat Magazine 67 Dear Neighbor By: Mark Blickley & Amy Bassin Watercolor and paper 68 Winter 2015 Oooooh, What Did Drake Say About a Bottle and a Bitch? By: Mica Evans I’m lighting spiffs as if the taste could take me back to childhood. Should have been a stripper. Could have been a rapper. The hyacinths are growing walls around me. I’m alone smoking a sour sativa and searching recipes on my phone for the scones I wish I had, but there’s a crow's nest in my gut getting bigger. I’m a bad bitch, and that’s good. I’m a fat bitch, and that’s bad. I love a girl like earl grey tea with supper. Evergreen trees pop up when she talks to me. I’m graphic, fading graffiti She calls me a work of art, but I’m a piece of work. She’s a garden of earthly delights. She’s a bar fight about jazz theory. She’s my sweaty, full beard in the middle of August. On the dock at Devil’s Lake, I love her. Like fast fingers on a fret board, I love her. I’m afraid that if I cry I’ll never stop. Crab Fat Magazine 69 Essay in Lines (Step Down Dear Goliath) By: Mica Evans New friends are important, but really. I just want to kiss her on the fists, mouth. On a stark afternoon in a parking lot near Capitol Hill. Really, I just want to close my fingers. Slowly wrinkle the silk of her vintage blouse. I would love myself more If I could sew new sequins onto this backless, black dress I bought to impress her. Draped across red sheets, I’m so afraid of ending up cold. In the morning after moisturizing, I cry out the chipping window as I lift it: I am in the oven and won't stop smoking until somebody attends to me! This is a lie; however, I'm still overdone. Over five months ago Brendon resigned from our year and two weeks of relationship with a letter which he delivered to my room. I've lost four pounds and still his position has been difficult to fill. Four pale ales pounded the floor and spilled all over my catalogues and socks today, before my mid-day workout. I pray for peace or at least some shiny, leftover shards of glass around the door. * It's Friday and I want desperately for someone to love me tonight. I wrap my fat body in tight fabrics which highlight my ass and thighs. This can be considered attractive because I’m black. All the little white boys and girls will rejoice and react when they see my black ass dance past them. All the little white kids will relate to my ass, because they’ve seen it before at Summer camp, in dirty magazines, on TV. I’m getting ripped and I slide bright gloss onto my big, black girl lips. A painful little piece of glass sticks to the skin on my right foot and I wait ages to pull it out but don’t know why. So I’m watching music videos and getting high by myself in preparation for the evening ahead. I’ve had 3 beers but still 70 Winter 2015 have trouble looking myself in the eye. Right when I thought I could keep sharing myself, Brendon went back on the deal. And I’m still so hard on myself. And he had always been using the wrong script. * Once, Brendon was running his skinny, pale fingers through my hair and he asked me if I was black, I laughed and said yes babe but the question was strange: Who had he been seeing for 12 weeks? I sometimes dream of placing an ad: Sad Sista seeks someone to have and to hold. Perhaps a pretty Pisces girl or a sturdy Taurus Moon. Maybe an Aquarius to sit in silence with. Or a verily passionate Virgo with a beard. Oh, and I’m Sad Sista, I want someone to hold, but I’m beautiful so don’t be afraid. * I want someone to be excited by me. I want someone to be impressed. I want to have sex without someone’s plantation fantasy playing out. Right now, my hair is blue because I’m carrying a sadness that could sink you. I put on black shoes, an electric jacket, and I leave to drink someplace new. I’m going out to send flirtations to this girl that I adore, I’m going through the motions with perfume and booze, preparing for her party. She’s a stand in crush because I’m lucky enough to know that my body doesn’t repulse her I smoke my cigarette leaning on the white shingles of her house before going inside. I try to blend in but everyone notices me, and they tell me about how I look. I’m not scary, but I’m frighteningly beautiful. My big limbs command the attention of a room. * A cigarette smoked to the end rolls back and forth on the asphalt outside Her house, and a full figure fumbles across the threshold with a grin. His fists are anxious and clenched. His clothes don’t fit on his large frame. Crab Fat Magazine 71 His fat red lips are menacing in the light. Stomping upstairs, his big limbs swing like saddle bags, and the white people look on in awe. He throws his Technicolor coat to the ground and bounds his black body towards Her. Happy Birthday, says the giant, and a heavy silence falls. He is frightening, but there’s something that draws them in. She thinks he might be charming, so reaches up to grab His arm. Clenching his brown flesh with Her fresh, white hands, She is the bravest of her kind. His wide nose and wild hair are really turning her on. There is music, and it’s thumping; She wants to see the monkey dance. He likes the bass line, and starts pumping, his fist, like a club, in the air. Little white bodies writhe all around him, their heads up to admire the beast. He feeds off their fantasies of knocking him down. He grows taller and stronger on the off beats, he gets bigger and blacker on the down. The crowd’s eyes close as they sing louder: Monster; no good blood sucker! Fat mother fucker! His black face looks mad with joy, as he gesticulates, and bounces in time. He is grooving, and jiving, and growing, and free. The villagers are opening their eyes. Their white hands stop wiggling and the music turns off. They look up at him in horror, and awe. He bumbles up onto the table and starts to hum his favorite hymn. Is he hungry? Someone feed him. The villagers whisper and draw back. He sings and his black throat rumbles: How Great, How Great Thou Art! The villagers back far away and cannot look at him anymore. He beats time with his hands like a club against a skull, and when he’s done, all the villagers can say is: You are wonderful to admire, but frightening to confront. Step down dear Goliath, step down. 72 Winter 2015 Astronomical Soliloquy By: Nathaniel Duggan Dust twirling in the fat pool of sunlight warming my lap and you beside me warming the room from the hearth of your chipped desk and Mr. Magri yapping about how dust is made from stars and we’re made from stars and everything we call matter glowed a million billion years ago in the gooey plasma hearts of stars and gravity is a trampoline with the bowling ball spheres of stars in the center twisting and bending everything and even light particles smaller than dust cannot help but fracture and weave against that pull and the stardust twirls in the sunlight pooling in your lap and I cannot resist your pull for even though it is invisible as the stars a million billion miles away it wrenches my heart and I want to be your satellite and drink your molten flares and circle you endlessly but even the eternal lock-step of orbit wouldn’t quench my desire and maybe the moon feels something similar for the earth it must never touch and perhaps the splintering of comets colliding is a kind of joy in which two motes of dust forged in the same star and separated at the winking start of the universe finally converge and glitter and weave and dance together to the loving rhythm of physics. Crab Fat Magazine 73 Born to be different By: Adorable Monique Acrylic over canvas paper 74 Winter 2015 Normal Kids By: Stephanie Cleary L et us consider a pregnant woman. Inside her womb, a gestational sac becomes a multitude of specialized cells, each doing something important to develop a baby. An embryo the size of a pen point is already forming a head, legs, and an umbilical cord. At just six weeks, there is a beating heart. In the seventh week, the sex is determined. This is a fact. A gene is either triggered to produce testes and becomes a boy, or the embryo develops ovaries and becomes a girl. In the next months, the embryo grows and changes. At 10 weeks, it is a full-fledged fetus. At 11 weeks, changes in hormones trigger the production of external sex organs. At 19 weeks, a female fetus will produce her own teeny tiny uterus. Eyebrows and lashes grow between weeks 23 and 26. Every week something new and amazing happens, and every new and amazing thing is already known. Ultrasounds will confirm everything is going as expected. On January 22th, 2005, Ronnie Paris, Sr., and his wife rushed their three-year-old son to the hospital. Little Ronnie had fallen asleep at Bible study and slipped into a coma. He never woke back up, and died on the 28th. During his short life, his father worked on “toughening him up” because he worried that little Ronnie was gay. He did this by smacking him in the back of the head, slamming him into walls, and “slap-boxing” with him. The matches were so intense that the poor kid would shake, cry, and wet himself. This systematic abuse went on for months before his defeated body finally gave up. Despite all of this knowledge, every pregnant woman still holds a mystery. Who will this fetus be when he is born? What color will his eyes be? Will he have a fluff of downy hair or will he be bald for months? After the birth of their son, parents will be amazed by him, kissing his fingers and toes, brushing their lips against the soft skin of his forehead, stroking his cheek with their thumb. Parents, grandparents, relatives and friends will all take turns pointing out that he has his father’s chin, or his mother’s almondshaped eyes. So many people will love him. So many people will dream for him. On April 6th, 2009, Carl Joseph WalkerHoover made the tragic decision to hang himself. He couldn’t take the constant bullying about being gay. He used an extension cord. He was 11. As the baby grows, his parents will look for milestones. They will check his progress against information they find in the doctor’s office and the internet. They will compare his progress to other couples’ babies. They will want to make sure everything is as it should be, that their baby is normal. At just two months, he will recognize his parents faces, and smile in response to their voices. At four months, the sweet sound of baby’s laughter fills the house with joy. At nine months, the little baby boy knows that waving means “bye-bye.” Soon, he will be crawling around looking for things to put in his mouth. Around his first birthday, he will start talking, saying, “Mama!” and “Dada!” It’s only the beginning. “Faggot,” “pussy,” and “gay” are just words, but when two middle school kids shouted them out at Kardin Ulysse, they also chased him around his school cafeteria and beat him. The whole event was captured on surveillance camera. Several cafeteria workers witnessed the event but weren’t authorized to Crab Fat Magazine 75 stop student brawls. Kardin’s glasses were injured that the man originally thought broken into his face by the younger boys, Matthew was a scarecrow. In the hospital, it damaging his cornea. Five surgeries later, it is was discovered that Shepard’s skull was still unlikely Kardin will ever see correctly broken in the back of his head, and in front of from that eye again. his right ear. The beating damaged his brain In the blink of an eye, the baby boy will stem so severely that his body wasn’t able to be a toddler, riding a trike, building with regulate his temperature, heart, rate, and other blocks, and learning to color inside the lines. vital functions. He was hurt so badly that The toddler who wants to marry his mommy doctors weren’t able to do anything. He died a and is afraid of the dark will become a little few days later, shortly after midnight on boy who is proud of himself for eating all the October 12th. green beans on his plate at dinner. He will start school soon. He will make friends. They But he will not be the same as the other will all play in the backyard, brandishing sticks boys. He will play Army in the sandbox, but imagined into swords, sometimes he will play with while their mothers drink his sister’s Barbie. Once or On October 6th, 1998, 21coffee on Saturday twice, he will get caught, year-old Matthew Shepard mornings and plan play and slightly scolded for got into a truck with Russell sneaking into her room. His dates around the hectic schedules of busy mom will decide not to Arthur Henderson and families. mention it to his father, Aaron James McKinney. The little boy will thinking it’s just a phase, have a birthday every not a big deal. Certainly, she year, and the line his parents mark on the will decide, her son is still normal. doorframe to the kitchen will inch it’s way up. As the boy enters high school, his parents On his tenth birthday, he will be four feet, will worry that he still hasn’t had a crush on a seven inches tall. He will look like all the other girl. Girls will call, and he will hang out with boys, same haircut, same baseball uniform, them, going to the movies on weekends and same Old Navy casual school clothes. His out for pizza on Tuesday nights after Drama super-hero backpack will hold the same books Club. But there won’t be any of that awkward and homework as his classmate’s bags, and he tension, that heightened awareness of will watch the same cartoons as everyone else personal space and boundaries between this when his school day is done. young man and the teenage girls he makes friends with. On October 6th, 1998, 21-year-old Matthew Shepard got into a truck with Russell On September 22, 2000, Ronald Edward Arthur Henderson and Aaron James Gay asked a restaurant cook emptying the McKinney. He met the pair at the Fireside trash for directions to the nearest gay bar. Lounge, a bar in Laramie Wyoming. They After being pointed in the right direction, Gay buddied up to Shepard, and offered him a ride opened his coat to show off a gun, telling the home. Instead of taking him home, they cook he was going to “waste some faggots.” drove out to a rural area where they nearly A couple minutes later, he walked into the killed him. They tied him to a fence, pistolBackstreet Cafe and opened fire, killing 43whipped him, beat, whipped, and tortured year-old Danny Overstreet and wounding six him. After fracturing his skull, they left him to other gay men. die alone. One day, his mom will pick up his phone A cyclist found his badly beaten body while her teenage son is in the shower. She eighteen hours later. He was so grotesquely will see the websites in his browser history, 76 Winter 2015 and she will cry. She will cry not because her son is gay—she will have suspected it long before and she won’t care. She will sit at the kitchen table and weep because she will worry. She will worry for years, because all moms do (they worry their kids will be sad, or get leukemia, or struggle in school or have acne and be teased, or fall in with the wrong crowd and do drugs, or be kidnapped by a stranger, or molested by a friend, or text and drive, or drink and drive, or have sex—worse, unprotected sex, or get hit by a bus, or catch cold and die) but now she will have to add to that long list of fears. Every day, she will have to worry if someone will hurt her son because of who he loves. Crab Fat Magazine 77 OH By: Steven Alvarez thing known don’t know—know—no—don’t know do not know but H knows so know still—though—still do not know what’s known is only this—that this thing stays unknown H knows—know car horn howls & know buckling clouds & that without doubt know smog of daysky too H knows—knows buildings—continually walk by— H knows—knows six train—knows hot stuffy subground transport—&knows words—O words—know—know—H knows—know how a dirty down-&-out man without food sits with a sign saying “I ALLOW INSULTS FOR $2.00” out on 34th—&know how folks pass without looking but actually looking— & know how various dirty down-&-outs know how to unlock & gain casual & quick withdrawn looks of apathy & lack—know that this dirty down-&-out man holding I ALLOW INSULTS has a lack but don’t know that that lack is not this lack—not knowing still not knowing— no do not know but Fra L.p.g.am knows—as know— this—know—distinctly—know—saw a man in a tux passing this down-&-out man on 34th & that this down-&-out man took a buck from tux man without insult— H says know this too—know how tourists flock to buy postcards I ♥ NY t-shirts at six for $10 & snap photographs of that big building on 34th & 5th staring upward not watching as walking & bumping into folks & not at all saying pardon— a past passing tourist H knows sd pardon— H & . . . & know that that big building on 34th & 5th displays distinct hot colors at night occasionally hazing clouds a colorful clinking curtain bliss& that that shining light this building puts forth all night costs cash—much in comparison to say how much a dirty down-&-out man can amass in many months at two bucks an insult—& that that is all just—& know dignity all right— know shiny lights at night so that is all right all right— H says this is not a lack at all no not a lack at all— this is a lack though— & not a lack too— alas a lack now for to know don’t say “O I know” —do not know—& do not now say know—but this thing—do not know—H says right now— that “O” just sd is truly hollow—for in fact—do not know—shall know—shall find—soon as L.p..r.. & stop— know now sift to find alas—¿sift & you shall find? alas— will know not-knowing will subsist nothing nothing not to know—know but—shall know 78 Winter 2015 think—do a Po..d—& now only say “sd” for “said”— no Po..d wouldn’t know— a tourist L.p.g.a. knows sd “sd” —as you know—sd that past tourist sd as that tourist sd pardon— no Po..d wouldn’t say pardon— Po..d might say “Paaahradoon” — know Po..d sd things such as that—in that fashion—in his mail H knows—knows Po..d was mad that way . . . stop . . . ¡lack! . . . want . . . wait what says what this H knows now . . . H knows—wants—now—now what—wants to know—warmly— & that knowing to know is truly moving— truly moving— & this thing out of sight—that that thing out of sight— is what is missing in this childish thing sd—a not knowing construction truly a thing not constantly a consonant but a thing similar to a consonant round as a consonant “eeeeeeeoahahahghghghghgh” sd H spit-dink Crab Fat Magazine 79 denizens By: Steven Alvarez listen up now yr labor’s instrumental to live opportunistic taking what comes & precariously insecure yr wd be fictitious family / kintracted flexibility has four ayes anger anomie anxiety alienation now this to you focalized to you you do not do what you are not you define yrself by what you are not structured word by what you cd not be less what cd be faceless & sighted worms copper telephone removed brick global transformation 1975 2008 disembedded financers disrobed individuals competed to touch their toes for individual mobility to open them ass doors flexible say it now: we cd all be richer w/ workfare fare on yr own who cd bend over furthest for less & who cd resist commodification & who cd hiss this deregulation but instead regulation regurgitated rewritten & who cd not argue real wages will not rise or be a means of reducing inequality 80 Winter 2015 Alegre Polvo Veraniego II By: Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky 12in x 12in Crab Fat Magazine 81 Ink By: Gregory M. Fox W e were happy, weren't we? We were happy. It's been so long, but I still don't know what happened. I don't…but I think I might be starting to understand why Roya would…I think I understand how you can want something so bad. I wonder, is that why you…what do you want? What did…do you think we could ever…no. Everything's a mess. I want us to be happy. We were, weren't we? We were happy?” *** Long before all that, we're carving our initials into a tree: KE+BE. We laugh at the difficulty of carving the curved lines of a heart around the letters. It's our wedding day. *** in?” “I told Roya she could move in.” "You did what?" I ask. "Brandon, we talked about this," Kit says. "We talked about helping her, but moving “If she's going to get out of this affair with Lucian, she can't stay in an apartment he's paying for. Besides, you said yourself that this house has more room than we need.” And I just can't say no to her. “It's only temporary, right?” “Just until she finds her own place.” She kisses me on the cheek. *** Roya has marks on her wrist. I know that they are scars, little white hatch marks that you can only see in the right light. But when she's bored, Roya draws over the lines with pen. She connects and adds to the lines until she has spelled out words. Once it's THINK. Another time it's LOVE. Often it's profanity. One time, she wrote lots of very skinny letters to spell out, ALL THIS INK IS MAKING A MESS. Kit worries. She feels like Roya's not handling her situation maturely or like she's not mature enough to handle it. She worries that staying with us might make Roya depressed about how her life is screwed up and about how ours is happy. She worries that Roya might try to contact Lucian. And when she worries, she drinks. *** Jordan is an electronics sales rep. who visits our branch about once every quarter to pitch the latest products. This time he's selling some new phones—not his best offering. I'm the one who has to give him the bad news that we're not making a purchase. “Maybe next time you'll have something we need,” I tell him. “It's nothing personal.” “Oh of course. I know that. But if you're feeling guilty, you can make up for it by buying me dinner.” We chuckle. “I don't know, Jordan; that sounds like a conflict of interest.” “Hey, I can be discreet.” I blink. “Jordan, are you asking me?” “Is that too fast? How about just drinks, and we see where it goes?” “Jordan, I'm not—I have a wife,” I say, holding up my left hand. He shrugs. “Like I said: I can be discreet.” I'm too taken aback to speak. Jordan takes my hand with both of his and gives it a firm shake. “I'll see you later, Brandon,” he says while walking away. “Let me know if you change your mind about those phones.” He had slipped his business card into my hand with his cell number written on the back. I crumple it up and put it in my pocket, then leave work early to surprise Kit. *** 82 Winter 2015 I'm picking up extra groceries at the store—just a few essentials. We run out of things more often now that Roya is staying with us. She tries to buy her own groceries, but she can't afford a lot, and things like milk, eggs, and bread tend to disappear quickly. Wine has been going quicker too. I'm trying to pick out a couple bottles when suddenly he's right beside me: Lucian. I've never met him, but thanks to Roya, I've seen plenty of pictures. Maybe he sensed that he was being looked at because he turns my way, and we make eye contact. It's only for a moment. He nods and then grabs a bottle of wine and walks away. I have no reason to suspect he knew who I was, but to have such a casual, insignificant interaction almost upsets me more than all I know about how he's treated Roya. I follow him, trying to look casual. In the next aisle, he is walking beside the woman I know is his wife. They're smiling. And I wonder, are they actually happy together? How much does she know? How much has already been ruined? *** Roya's moving out. She has a new job, new apartment, and new tattoos on her wrists. One is a flower and the other says something inspirational in Chinese. “They're reminders,” she says, “about who I am and what I've been through. And this way, I won't do anything to my wrists so that I don't mess them up.” Kit has still been worried about Roya. She would worry more if she knew that Roya had a text from Lucian in her phone. *** It's my first time with a man, but it's not Jordan; it's a different work colleague. There was a regional meeting in Milwaukee, and afterword, several of us went out for drinks. We've done this plenty of times before, but something seemed different today. Or maybe there was something different about me. After a few beers, I excused myself and headed to the bathroom. Feeling jittery and rebellious, I went into a stall, took out a pen and wrote BOOBS on the door. The immature act felt strangely liberating. When I came out, Asian Mark from the Twin Cities branch was the only one left. He had been the only one left for an hour. We call him Asian Mark because Mark just seems like an unusual name for a Chinese American. But I'm not calling him that now. In the back of his Cadillac Escalade, I'm moaning “Oh Mark,” and he's whispering, “Yes, yes.” *** I don’t say much at the hospital because I'm in over my head, and she's Kit's friend anyway. “Has he called yet?” Roya asks. “No,” Kit answers. “No one's called.” “Do I have any messages?” “Roya, don't keep asking me that.” “Could you just check?” “I did. Five minutes ago.” Roya is pale and shaky. The day before, she called Kit and admitted that she had just swallowed a bunch of pills and was saying goodbye. An ambulance got to her in time, but she's still in rough shape. Her eyes are red, watery, determined. “He's going to call, I know it.” “Why would he call?” “To see how I'm doing.” “I thought you guys broke up again?” “He cares about me,” Roya says. “And I want him to know I'm okay.” “Roya you tried to commit suicide because of him. Why would he call? Unless … Roya, you didn't.” “Look,” she says through fresh tears, “I know it's not the best way—that it's not exactly right, but he still knows. He'll be worried, and then he'll call, and he'll finally leave her so we can be together.” “And if he doesn't?” Crab Fat Magazine 83 “He will.” Roya's looking down at her hands, or maybe her arms. She's gotten more tattoos on them since she moved out of our house. “Will you … will you let him know where I am?” *** We end up at the same bar where Mark and I first hooked up. Not wanting to spoil things, I don't mention it to Stefan. However, just out of curiosity, I revisit the bathroom stall I had vandalized that night. My graffiti has been covered over with a slightly different shade of paint than the original. I take out my keys and scrape the word BUTT into the wall, pushing hard to leave deep scratches. Even if they paint over it, those grooves will remain. I return to the bar and Stefan greets me with a kiss. “I'm so happy, Brandon,” he says, “I hope this day lasts forever.” On the drive home, we get stopped by a train. It's going slow enough to read the graffiti spray painted on the cars. Most of them are just stylized names, sometimes overlapping each other. The word SEX is written on a number of cars with varying techniques and skill levels. One ambitious tagger had clearly been *** interrupted while writing in big black letters: TIME IS A DICK AND I'm sitting at a bar in San WE'RE ALL—it's easy enough Antonio, and the whiskey is not “Yeah. I've been to figure out where that was working fast enough. I came into feeling great. No going. town for the company's national “Why do people always depression, no conference, and of course, I ran mess things up?” Kit asks, and I into Mark. In half an hour we're reminders. I feel know she's thinking of Roya, supposed to meet for drinks at the like I'm actually in bar across the street. I'm not sure not trains. When we get in the house, control of my life.” what to expect, but I want to be Kit immediately pours a glass of good and buzzed before I go over wine. I tell her that I've been there. I order another whiskey. thinking. I tell her that we should consider a “Brandon?” separation—that we both need some space. I It was a woman's voice. I turn around to tell her that it's obvious we're not happy. But see who's addressing me. “Roya?” Kit is shocked. While I pack a suitcase, she's “In the flesh,” she says with a smile. yelling and throwing old keepsakes out the “Mind if I join you?” door. “Yeah. I mean, please do.” She sits beside me and orders a beer. “What are you doing *** here?” I ask. “I live here now.” Stefan is my third lover. Mark and I had “You do? When did that happen?” continued our affair, having rendezvous at “About a year ago. I was trying to get away every regional meeting with the occasional from…well, you know. I thought a change of weekend in either Minneapolis or Milwaukee. scenery would help get everything out of my But eventually he got transferred to a position system.” out west. We didn't even try to make it work. “A year…” And I realize it's been over After him, there was Corbin, but we couldn't two years since I've seen Roya—not since that stand each other unless we were having sex. day in the hospital, the same day I left Kit. Stefan is nice, but I think he is hoping for a We're still technically married, but we've hardly bigger commitment, and I'm not sure I'm ready talked in all that time. “And has it helped?” I for it. ask, “The change?” 84 Winter 2015 “Yeah. I've been feeling great. No depression, no reminders. I feel like I'm actually in control of my life.” “That's great,” I say. “And you look great too.” She's lost weight, and she's dressed much more stylishly than she ever was in Milwaukee. Her sleeveless knit dress shows off the elaborate tattoos that now cover her arms. “And what brings you here?” she asks. “Oh, work,” I say, glancing quickly across the street. “Ah. And are you and Kit still…I see. Do you want to talk about it?” To my surprise, I do. *** Roya has the sun tattooed on her right breast and the moon on her left breast. A tattoo on the top of her right thigh reads, all we are is just ink on a page, and one on her left thigh reads, all this ink is making a mess. I bury myself between those sentences, grope wildly at those celestial spheres; we devour each other. Roya is the only woman I've been with since my wife. In the morning, we are quiet. I know it's not just the hangovers. When Roya gets in the shower, I check my phone. There's a missed call and a voicemail from Kit. She couldn't know, could she? But why now? I play the recording: “We were happy, weren't we? We were happy.” Crab Fat Magazine 85 afflatus By: Tatiana Saleh We settle the terms of our disagreements through scribbles on a napkin passing it back and forth, its torn edges and scrawled excuses, You take my poetry and wipe the ketchup from your collar. That last morning, after I ordered eggs and you ordered nothing, your waitress with a wandering gaze forgot to leave utensils, so we ate with our hands, let the syrup dribble over our lips, covered the table in a sticky mess. My reflection in coffee scarcely recognizable, like an infant’s first high, hungry for attention, as if to say, “This will not be like the last time.” This is not the first time. And if I am to be sincere I must deny myself of you, you, your grisly hand sliding up her skirt, sliding up mine. A hand on my knee, unwashed, an eye on the waitress, oh, your vagrant magic I wish I’d plucked it out. I take a used pen to scratch adieu into your receipt no time to edit or spellcheck for this brand of poetry is best served now, the process one I know so well. 86 Winter 2015 Eden By: Larissa Hauck 16" x 20" Oil and acrylic on panel Crab Fat Magazine 87