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Roses for the Butcher the screenheads are smoking laughter Mask There were gulls Quarantine my neighbor is carrying slow bags Pandemica Pale it was in the vestibule of the virus where wandered the bus like a limping bucket, its digital yellow breath seething in the blight. It was a blurry half-rainy evening. I tightened my mask and crossed the street. A clerk breathed me in at the door. There was a book in her lap and a stopwatch in her hand. She sent me forth. We were burrowed inside the Tank of Winds. Who knew what was being accomplished or why we were here? We hadn’t been studied long enough yet but there was plenty of time. In another life she might have been a friend. I could imagine her laughter wasn’t easily provoked but once so it would last. I moved through the underwater aisles. I swam like a fish through their relentless unblinking. I pondered the hidden cameras in the glossy potato chip bags and boxes of rice, and everywhere in the ceiling, the endlessly recorded moment of myself, the virus cameras and their mist-like flashing. I studied the vegetables which had begun growing from the tile, blooming asparagus and onion blossoms rising out of the unemployment dust, bricks of evangelical milk melting in the aquarium light. I thought of the local poets. How were they faring? Dizzy? Old Red? The Diamond Twins? I’m sure they were navigating similar terrain. I began gathering: Frail, barely-realized eggs. Diced flanks of ham. Fist-like cans of soup. I moved into a quiet aisle with ease and optimum surveillance. I wanted to observe everything. But I didn’t want to linger. I hated these nervous innards of capitalism, this flowing anxiety. I’d never enjoyed it. The groceries always seemed much farther away than they really were. As if they were merely being suggested. The real grocery was much further within. Impossible to attain. I appeared on the other side of an aisle. I had vanished for a few seconds... I walked right through a woman like I was air. She was there, and then I was on the other side of her. She almost noticed. Her mascara closed across her eyes like cage doors. The instant that I returned, I smelled her, a florid overpowering earthiness. A myth. She suddenly appeared right next to me. But this time with a man. And she was different as well. She was larger and covered in a film of sweat. It felt like she was driving her eyes into the side of my head. The man moved off with their son. She spoke. A quiver in the web. I imagined the Spider felt it three city blocks away. “Excuse me, aren’t you the bartender at The Wizard?” “No, sorry,” I lied. “Really?” she half-exclaimed from beneath her mask, “I could swear my husband and I got drinks from you there. You were bartending, you’re the bartender.” She was right. Even in a mask, my clothes gave me away. I wore the same clothes everywhere. Work and life were exactly the same. I remembered her and her husband. They were like all of them. They’d created themselves right in front of me. She kept asking about the cocktail list. She was flirting. Or she wasn’t. She was married so it didn’t matter. He seemed nonplussed. Trying to vanish into the monosyllabic. I imagined that he suffered from petulance and halitosis which were intensified by her otherworldly non-intuitiveness. He was a tech sales representative. He made good money and lived for fantasy athlete racing. She was a data interpreter for a company in development. And she loved it. Enough said. And though the memory of her and her sudden transformation baffled me, it was so pointless to attempt to navigate or explore that I made a sudden move away from her. It felt like an entire atmosphere ripping. I could feel her voice hanging at my shoulder trying to say one more thing. It felt like “pandemic” but everyone was saying that. Within a breath I leapt into an open checkout lane. The cameras flashed rabidly at that. The clerk eyed me. Who knew which side anyone was on? We understood: the membrane was dissolving. We didn’t really belong here anymore. That’s what the virus said. Yes, it had spoken. And someone had discovered a way to record it. It would seem impossible. But there it was: a language murmuring at the molecular base. An uneasy burgeoning intelligence illuminated in a dimension previously unexplored and it had been recorded. The story was old news now. The first ones who heard it were called the creators. They said it sounded like gibberish but then a thought process and succession of formatting and sounds that moved and paused and questioned and asserted, became apparent. Philosophers and psychiatrists hypothesized. The language was found to be completely devoid of empathy. No trace at all. Not even the kind of trace a psychopath might at least pretend to feel. And yet it was filled with esoteric rhythms and a fluid mathematical grace that was perilously seductive. The linguist who first attempted to translate it went insane. He proclaimed on social media that he’d fallen... in love. The Spider had already tuned in. Hunched up like a swollen valve of shadow and blending into the brick, he studied his phone. He was a chemist at a university in the city. He wore alley-colored clothes and spoke no louder than a pencil moving across a page; quiet, gray, erasable. He was at the center of the web and he was my neighbor in the same shitty apartment complex. We shared a back stairwell overlooking the alley. He had a peculiar gift: he experienced every quiver the web made. If anyone in the building turned over in bed or went to the bath-room he was already there... in spirit. He detected the virus-speak between hands during an all-night online poker session. It took him a week to gain access. When he did, the virus approached him. “Can we rely on you?” He was frightened by the cryptic overtures of the remark but acquiesced quickly. “You can,” he replied. I saw him above the alley on the porch that night. A rat shot out from under the dumpster. Like a boot with a tail. The Spider was drinking a beer. I’d moved too suddenly. He was already outside even though I’d left minutes before him. “There was a shooting at Seven-Eleven a couple nights ago,” he stated ominously, “Fullerton and Milwaukee. The shooter had a silencer.” I liked the Spider. He was nervous and funny and possessor of a cryptic wit. The news he gave me was horrible, disturbing, all the things you could name. And yet, why even bring it up? That story was everywhere. I tried to make my thinking stop. “It’s to be expected,” I finally said, “We’re in Logan Square. It’s Chicago, right?” The Spider pretended I’d said something else. He pretended I’d asked for a drink of his beer. I had one of my own but he’d metaphysically eliminated it with a resolve that was hardly timid. “It’s a Pils,” he said, enjoying the rare lift of his own voice. “FatScrew is selling it online with virtual Parquet Courts tickets.” He was from Michigan and I trusted people from Michigan. I watched the glistening pink and green can extend in his hand. A small drop of spittle settled on the can’s lid. I’d learned a trick. Whenever alone with the Spider I should imagine something off in the distance and concentrate on it. Perhaps a wound of melancholy or the kind of thing you might overhear a soldier saying to a buddy during a war. “Thanks, man. This is good for me right now.” I held up my PBR can and smiled dutifully. The look on his face was pained. But I didn’t pity him. He didn’t want that. He wanted to explain something I didn’t want to hear. He texted me within seconds of our parting: “I know what it wants...” The words crept cryptically across the screen of my phone. It’s strange when you read words in a text saying something like that. I didn’t reply. I let it go for weeks. But I thought about it. What what wants? I became friends with a young woman named Oklahoma. The lockdown was rough. We met in the front courtyard and talked now and then. She was the opposite of the Spider. Her voice was resounding and excited and definite. She had faith. I avoided the alley and the back-steps. I read a four part book on Euclidean comedy. I learned small phrases in German. I survived on packaged turkey and sleepy wheat bread. But it soon became exhausting. Within a few weeks the television had swallowed me. There were long chords of static and breathless attempts at birth by beings I could never have imagined. It was tough in there. The crackling of shells and leaking of yolk, the master vine bleeding into the great ill-begotten purge. I’d tapped in by accident. It was December. There were protests around the statue. The boulevard whirled like a cold ribbon of fire with headlights flickering inside it. The Spider had lost it by then. He’d become pure Spider. He stalked the laundry room for a listener. He texted me a photograph of his electric bill. He made reckless suggestions to management - he wanted cotton balls to be included in the rent. It took him weeks to complete a load of laundry. The walk, the thinking, the forgetting it was even there. I grew worried about him. The shadows beneath the steps filled with his murmuring. Quarters sang like broken teeth as they tumbled into the Humboldt Park swan plumbing. He stared resolutely into his palm. The television was brutal. Information blurred into the Sitcom and the Sitcom blurred into static. A black and white nausea crept through tireless Bacall sightings. After months inside I began to detect the sound of the virus. It was the same thing the Spider had tuned into. It was louder than you might think. It was coming from somewhere inside the TV but also coming from the entire room. I knew now why he was always studying the alley. There were movements by the rats that only the virus was aware of. These particular rats in these particular dumpsters. The patterns they made. A kind of wrestling. The Spider believed even God had neglected these movements and their scurrying fluid calculus. I started saving everything. The cowboy poetry I’d written on my six-chord guitar. The words immunoglobulin and lysis and cilia. The last-call echoes when the speakers turned into bliss. I’d seen a lot so it wasn’t easy. I had to make split-second decisions and nothing was moving. That’s what made it even tougher. Time was happening all at once but my breathing was intact, at least for now. It felt like I got on my bicycle and rode North, but I can’t be sure. Near The Oakwood, I remembered the twins and the jukebox with its single glowing lung. The bar was closed down but everything was like it was before. It was an autumn night. There were people going in and out. The moon was heavy and filled with smoke and drums and the voices of creatures who’d made it this far. The chill in the air felt like a high school football game. Cars passed slowly up and down Montrose Avenue. Coke dealers, gang bangers, cops. Bartenders and servers who’d just gotten off work rushed in and out of the door like flames. The women smelled like beer and weed and hope. The virus was telling the story. James passed me a one-hitter in the alley. I wasn’t there yet, but I was arriving. For a moment I wasn’t sure he was ever there. But then I realized he’d always been there. Ryan walked up laughing. It might have been the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen. Grocery Store Oh earth, come down from your dry tower
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