Rocks Off – Part III

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Stage Four: Depression

New year. New Misery. Cue the confetti and streamers.

This marked the second time that Anna broke Alex’s heart. This time, he didn’t pretend to be apathetic about talking to her. Alex wanted to talk to her—he desperately wanted to. But even he knew after the Dillard’s parking lot event that he had to preserve some dignity and refrain from talking to her. How long would it last? He wasn’t sure. He did everything he could to avoid his phone and Messenger as he settled back into his routine.

Alex did not talk to Anna for an entire year. They stayed “friends” on social media but did nothing to interact with one another. There were no “likes.” There were no comments. He just initiated a cold war between himself and his phone screen, which showed him everything she did with her family. He saw everything she did without him.

What about Alex? He had his job, a little weekend beer, and some weed when he felt spicy. But that was about it. Life went on. Alex did his best to move on in the ensuing weeks and months. Without a girlfriend or any potential prospects on the horizon, Alex did everything he could to avoid sitting in the filth of missed chances and awkwardness.

There were times when he wanted to message her. He wanted to do it out of the blue at first. One time, on the Fourth of July, he drunkenly wrote out a giant block of text to her. He asked her what the hell happened. He asked her if it meant something; she wouldn’t have abruptly lost contact with him. If anything, she could at least let him know her reasoning. He felt like she owed him that. He knew things were highly complicated. He had no idea how she felt. She had a family to think of. After all, it all happened so fast. Literally and figuratively.

Alex became methodical with his process over time. He had a whole plan of action to message her back. The first drafts always came with the conviction and intent to win her over. He wanted to be back in that car to finish the job. He later discovered through more drafts that he just wanted answers. He just wanted to know what the hell happened. Above all, Alex enjoyed the conversations and wanted them back. It didn’t even have to be fun and flirty. Anything. The only silver lining of the whole ordeal was that it got him back into the writing process. These weren’t short stories, of course. But, a start.

Alex didn’t realize how much he relied on Anna to fall asleep until he didn’t have it. During the first few months of 2022, Alex regressed on the sleep he worked so hard (through nightly conversations with Anna) to get on track. By April, the insomniac gave in to his condition and tried to use his time awake wisely. He journaled all of his thoughts. It was a better way to spend the evening than staring at the wall or the television. The writing became therapeutic. Alex went through dozens of Moleskin notebooks over the year, filled with imaginary conversations he might have with Anna. He also went into great detail about his feelings towards her. Some of it was sad, judgemental, and angry. Other pages reeked of sentimentality and desire.

In the end, he still had the lust. He had the memories. There were also two nude pictures to fall back on. He stopped looking at them altogether by the end of the summer. Alex even managed to get back into contact with Andrea. Not to his surprise, she already had a new boyfriend and was still doing well in her career. He told her he was happy for her and apologized for being an automaton in those last few days of 2021. She thanked him but became quiet after the conversation turned from “bouncy catch up” to “here’s why I am so sad.” She told him to take care and rest before she hung up. She had to go to the mall to get something with her boyfriend—the mall. Go figure.

Alex meandered through everything else in his life through the fall and early winter. Those weeks and long days felt to Alex like he was swimming through the mud: possible to do but never advisable or wanted. Anna never messaged. He saw she went on a family vacation to Yosemite. Alex thought that looked fun but wondered why she didn’t block him. Was it a lesson in cruelty? Alex decided to go home again for Christmas. There would be no drunken New Year’s Eve parties with Marty this time. He just wanted to spend time with his family. The holidays came and went with little fanfare. Alex put a brave face on the entire time, playing the part of the dutiful son to his mother and father while still waiting for word from Anna.

Alex spent the day helping his dad reorganize his office on the day before New Year’s Eve. John, a recently retired family practitioner, wanted to move all his old files and papers to the attic or shred what he didn’t need to make way for his latest hobby: painting wooden ducks. While moving all his papers, Alex put all the paper and notebooks in his desk drawer into one box. Rummaging through bits of nostalgia Alex could remember from his childhood, he found a new-looking address book.

“Hey, Dad. Is this address book new?” Alex remembered the worn, brown leather notebook with scraps of paper and business cards stuck between its pages.

“Ah, yes,” his dad said. “Your mother gave me that last year on Father’s Day. After I retired, I spent a little time updating all the addresses we received from friends and family members. It was fun to do some correspondence like that, old school-style.” The slang he put at the end of the phrase made Alex grit his teeth in laughter.

“So, these are updated addresses?” Alex was curious.

“Yes, Alex. Who do you want to look up? Take a look yourself.” He did. Leafing through the pages, he found some old familiar faces. Tim and Jill Anders. Carol Baker and her giant ass house on the James River looked the same. He thumbed to the back and saw it.

Anna and Rodney Block (Renquist)

4528 Fort McHenry Parkway

Glen Allen, VA 23060

Holy shit. There it was. After all this time. After all these years. That was Anna’s address, or at least an old one. Alex lifted the book to gesture to his dad. He had to look like he was posing a question and not fleecing him for information.

“Hey, Dad, I remember Anna. I know she got married. I didn’t realize she moved to Richmond.” Alex hoped he could maintain his nonchalance.

“Oh yeah, we got a Christmas card from her and Rodney a few years ago with their little boy. I kept the address label and added it. I don’t think they’ve moved since then. Remember when she threw you in the pool at family gatherings?” Alex did but tried to put it out of his mind. He wondered if his dad would buy that the same girl gave him half a blowjob in a parking lot almost a year ago. He bet he wouldn’t believe it. Over the past year, Alex started not to believe it himself. He quickly snapped a picture of the address with his phone and continued helping him move papers to the attic.

That evening, Alex decided to drive by her house on his way back to D.C. He told his parents he would go home early on Sunday the 1st. The plan was to get to her house in the Innsbrook section of the Richmond suburb in the late morning, just in case she and her family were out. He didn’t want to be seen.

New Year’s Eve came and went. He did get a call from Martin but decided to sit out this year. Lightning would not strike twice with Anna. He wasn’t that lucky. Alex told him that next year, of course, they would party just like in old times. Alex doubted it. He spent the evening instead reading through a few of the Moleskin journals he brought down. In the three days he had been back home in Williamsburg, he filled half a book with his thoughts, most of which came after discovering Anna’s home address.

Alex pulled away from his parent’s house at 7:30 a.m. He said goodbye to his mom and dad and told them he would return for his mother’s birthday in March. He parked his car on the side of the road when he drove out of eyeshot and opened his phone to find the image of the address. He typed it in Google Maps and resumed driving: One hour and fourteen minutes until arrival. That put him at their location around 9 a.m. Perfect.

He arrived on Fort McHenry Parkway at five minutes before nine. Alex parked his car a quarter of a mile from his destination to gather his thoughts. He took a giant sip of gas station coffee, now cold and starting to turn into a wet, grimy sludge in his mouth. The acrid taste was necessary to wake him up. He could do this. Alex took a deep breath and resumed the drive, parking on the opposite side of the street in front of the Renquist residence just past 9 a.m. He turned the car off. He didn’t think keeping the car running in case her neighbors grew suspicious was wise.

The first thing Alex noticed was the house: A modest house in an upper-middle-class neighborhood checked all of Anna’s boxes. He saw her silver BMW in the driveway. She was likely home. He wondered which of the windows was for the spare bedroom she spent her evenings messaging Alex from. He guessed the top left.

Alex stared at the house for a few solitary minutes. His right hand clutched his phone while his left held onto the latest thoughts he wrote down in his notebook. How long is too long to linger in front of the house? It wasn’t like he planned to get out of the car and casually walk up to the door, knock, and come in for tea. He wasn’t that stupid, but he knew he would fill the other half of the notebook that evening with alternate scenarios where he did. Scenarios where Anna answered the door in tears, overcome with joy that her knight in shining armor finally came to his senses to rescue his princess. Scenarios where he punches the abusive Rodney out to save Anna and her young son from the jaws of an unhappy life. There were also scenarios where the door opened to a shotgun and an itchy trigger finger. These were all possibilities in his mind he knew he could expand on later. For now, he wanted to savor the moment. That is until somebody opened the front door.

Anna left her house around 9:15 a.m. to take the trash out. Alex wasn’t sure that she could see him in his car. She could identify what his car looked like. Alex panicked. Could she see? The trash can, now in the front of the street, ready for trash pick up, was only about ten or fifteen feet away from his car. He could either run for it and speed away or slink down in the front seat and pray she doesn’t notice him. With her taking more and more steps towards the trashcan, Alex decided to turn the car and gun it. He turned the car on, pushed the gear into drive, and sped off, immediately hitting her neighbor’s trash can across the street with the right front bumper of his RAV-4. His first thought after hitting the can was the relief that the airbags did not deploy.

If Alex didn’t have her attention before, he did now. Immediately after hitting the trash can, he looked to his left and saw Anna staring at him in disbelief. She threw the trash down and ran towards the car in her pajamas and slippers.

“Alex, are you okay?” Her immediate first emotion was to make sure he was okay. His car would certainly need about a thousand dollars of repair. The trash can sat unphased and resilient like the iceberg that sank the Titanic. The metaphor was not lost on Alex.

“Yeah, I am okay, I think,” said Alex. He wanted to look down in shame but figured the face-to-face interaction was what he had wanted anyway, so he might as well soak it up. The look of concern turned directly into anger seamlessly.

“Alex, what the fuck are you doing here? How the fuck are you even here? You can’t be here!”

“So, funny story,” said Alex. “I was cleaning out my dad’s office and found your house in my dad’s address book. I know I shouldn’t be here. I am sorry. I just had to.” Alex felt like crying but knew better.

“Ugh, let me guess…that fucking Christmas card, huh?” Alex nodded. “So you’re spying on me and my family?”

“No! I mean, kind of? That wasn’t my intention. I wanted to see your house before I made my way back up to D.C. I wasn’t going to go in or anything.”

Anna folded her arms. The trash was still on the curb outside of the black receptacle. “Okay. So you just wanted to be a voyeur. I get it. Very classy, Alex. I would have thought better of you.” At this point, Alex did start to tear up. He couldn’t help it. All those months–All those journals filled with his thoughts and feelings. Anger, sadness, depression. All of it came out at once under his eyes. The tears trickled down his face.

“Well, what the fuck do you expect me to do, Anna?” His voice grew a bit louder yet weaker in its delivery. “We share this amazing afternoon at the mall. It was the first time we had seen each other since we were kids; somehow, it all clicked eventually. It must have because I am sure you remember what happened next.” Anna looked off to the left after he said that. “And yet, halfway through, you just leave and decide to ghost me. How long was that going to last?”

“It’s a two-way street, Alex,” Anna said. “You could have messaged me.”

“Oh, I know I could have. But I didn’t. I wanted to keep what little respect I had for myself intact. But don’t get me wrong. The scenario played out in my mind.” He lifted the notebook he still clung to in his left hand. He shoved it at her as if to tell her to open and read it. She did. Flipping through a few pages, she looked around to see if her neighbors were watching.

“Jesus, Alex. What is all this? A manifesto on how you want to kill me?” She half laughed at this but wasn’t quite sure what she was reading.

“This is one of many journals I’ve kept since January about my thoughts. They aren’t all about you, but most of them are. They include what I’d say to you if I ever saw you again. I am here now and know exactly what I want to say.

She gave the book back to him and took a step back. She also resumed folding her hands.

“I want to say that I love you. I know I shouldn’t, but I do. I know you have a family, which complicates things, but I do. I don’t want you to say it back necessarily, but you might, too. I couldn’t even bring myself to write those words in the dozen notebooks I filled up with words this year, but I am saying it now. I love you, Anna Renquist. And I miss you. I’m sorry we ended things so awkwardly. We can’t just pick things back up, but can we at least resume what we had?

“Alex, I’m sorry, but I don’t love you.” His heart sank in his chest. “We can’t resume what we had.” The arms uncrossed. She put one of them on the hood of his car and drew closer to ensure nobody heard her. “What we had was fun. It was flirty. It cleared my head and made me feel some worth again. And yes, for a minute there, things got out of hand, and we both acted in the moment.” She cleared her throat. “No. I ACTED in the moment. And I’m sorry for that. I’m sorry I did that because that is not what I wanted. When I told you it meant more than just friends and more than just talking, that was completely true. It was more. But there was a time and a place, and that place shut down the minute we kissed.”

She leaned in closer. Alex’s tears stopped, but his stomach was now in his shoes. “And it was a wonderful kiss, but something I could never do again. Not for me. Not for my family.” She started to cry. “I came back from that parking lot a different person. I had crossed a line. But truthfully, I have you to thank for that. It made me see my errors and gave me a roadmap to improve the life I had with my son and Rodney. I know you don’t want to hear it, but things have been great with us.”

“That’s great,” Alex said in between sniffles. “I’m glad my half-blowjob did that for you.”

“Don’t be like that, Alex,” Anna said. It’s not like that. There’s no reason to be crass. You gave that to me. I know you’re angry. I know you want to be mad at me, and you can. You have every right. I led you on and then cut you off. But I am here now, telling you your love did not go to waste, even if I can’t ever give it back to you rightfully. You got me my ‘mojo’ back with my family unit. Can you at least acknowledge and accept that as a good thing?”

Alex thought about it. “I guess I can. I am happy that you’re happy.”

“That’s great, Alex. I know it’s hard. It’s a tough pill to swallow. But I know, after all the hours we talked, that you will find somebody fantastic. You’re a special guy.” The words “special guy” kept playing like a broken rewind button in Alex’s mind. It felt almost too cliche to say, as if rehearsed. Maybe it was, and she always knew he would come around one day to confront her.

“I’m sorry it didn’t work out, but I want you to know I am better now because of you. Please take care of yourself. Please move on from this. I know I have.” She touched his hand and held it there for a second. A solitary tear ran down the left side of her face and onto her hand. She turned and walked away towards her bag of trash.

“Oh, and Alex?” Anna was now back on her side of the curb near her trash can. “Can you make sure not to show those journals to anyone? Maybe burn them? I would rather you not keep that much personal information about me out in the open.”

“Sure thing,” he said. “See ya.”

She smiled wide enough to convince Alex she meant it, too. “See you, Alex.” He pulled his busted car into drive and sped off.

When Alex got home, he took the 11 journals he had filled over the year out to the small communal grill on the top of his apartment building. Thankfully, no one else was up on the rooftop terrace. He put them all in a neat pile in the center of the charcoal grill and lit a match, setting thousands of words and hours of writing on fire. Washington was very cold that afternoon, so the warmth of his words gave him a sense of relief for the first time in a long time.

While his journals burned, Alex went into Facebook and deleted Anna from his friend list. Still without a cell phone number, he was entirely out of contact with her.

Stage Five: Acceptance

Alex knew a few things. He knew how to press a pair of pants properly. He knew how to read a map, even if he primarily relied on Google to direct his navigation nowadays. He also knew how to correctly guess all fifty states within three minutes, a party trick he pulled out in shared company if he was a few drinks in and feeling frisky.

He also knew that Anna was an unhealthy obsession. That obsession took over his life for the better part of an entire year. And for what? One ten-minute makeout session and the opportunity to be ghosted twice? Not to mention a bumper that cost over one thousand dollars to fix. Most obsessions end in disaster or a renewed vigor to pursue that vice. Alex had neither. He knew cutting off contact with her was the best thing to do, even if he didn’t want to.

Over the next few weeks, Alex resumed life, which went on as planned. The shame of that New Year’s Day melted away eventually. It took time. Alex often woke up in a cold sweat, worried he was back attempting to drive away, only to hit a trash can. Sometimes, he hit a person. Sometimes, it was Andrea. Each time in his dream, he saw Anna and her family staring at him, pointing and laughing.

The weeks turned to months without a word. No contact. Out of the blue, one day, Alex confessed everything to his mother. She called to wish him a happy birthday in March, not expecting to morph from caring mother to relationship therapist. He only shared that the girl he fell in love with was a “childhood friend.” When his mother pressed him on exactly who it was, he just told her she was “taken” and “definitely not interested.”

His mother wasn’t mad. Not in a traditional sense. She wanted to understand why it meant so much to him. “Alex, you never took too much interest in much growing up,” she said, “at least in the traditional sense of sticking to it.” She breathed a few sighs of frustration. “I’m just trying to understand why you thought this was a good idea if you knew this was all going to fall apart.”

“I don’t know, mom. I think I’m a fool, but I knew I was. It was like lining up off a cliff as a lemming. You know you’ll fall, but you’re scared as hell as you watch everyone else punch into oblivion.” For the first time in weeks, Alex held back tears. “I just want to eliminate the frustration and stop the endless loop of longing.” She talked to him for another half an hour or so, assuring him this would be between the two of them. His father would not understand.

Spring came and went, and Alex was still waiting for word. Eventually, Alex got a therapist to discuss these complicated issues. He knew he could not rely on his mother much longer. Keeping any information from her husband was hard enough. That kind of one-on-one interaction had an expiration date, and the date had come and gone.

The therapist’s conversations started slowly at first. She was good, however. She knew when Alex withheld his feelings or critical information. After a few sessions, Alex became an open book. Dr. Riser convinced Alex that his happiness and Anna’s were more important than any relationship. The last thing Anna told Alex to do was move on. Through intense sessions and lots of journals (not the crazy kind he wrote in before), he felt like he could.

Spring gave way to summer. There was no contact, but Alex did well in his job. What he could do was amazing if he didn’t spend all night complaining about it to someone. No one was there to orchestrate the instrument of sadness he played so well. Alex even had a half dozen dates with a girl he met at a Starbucks in May. They had some perfectly satisfactory sex on the Saturday before Memorial Day. The relationship didn’t last long, but the staying power of that brief interlude was enough to believe that Alex could move on. He could do it. All the while, the irregular sleep pattern that crept up in the post-Anna depression season began to return to normal. Each six to seven-hour sleep felt like a victory.

He went on vacation with his parents to New York City. They had a wonderful time. When his mom asked for an update on how he felt, Alex was happy to report that the time he had invested in himself was beginning to pay off. He thought everything tasted better in New York, especially a BEC (bacon, egg, and cheese) with a side order of self-reliance.

Alex returned to Williamsburg in the fall for his father’s 70th birthday. Over sixty people, including several doctor colleagues, relatives, and family friends, showed up. Anna’s parents showed up halfway through the festivities. Alex made it a point to talk to them to catch up. He felt like a voyeur, asking about their personal lives and their daughter’s.

He looked attentive when they updated him on everything Anna and her perfect family were doing this fall. She was not feeling well; otherwise, she planned to show up with her family. A likely story, Alex thought. Before they left, Alex went up to her parents one last time to tell them to “give Anna my best.” They said they would. Alex secretly hoped they did. Laying in his old bedroom that night, he felt much different. He hoped they would forget it altogether. He stared at the ceiling, marveling in disbelief at how stupid he had been, when his phone chimed. It was a message request.

Anna.

He didn’t want to look at it at first. Setting his phone back down on his small nightstand, he immediately picked it up to stare at it for a few minutes. He finally opened the app to see what the request said.

Anna Renquist

OCT 21 at 11:48 p.m.

Hey.

That was it—after all this time, just a simple “hey.” Nothing else. It may be better that way.

Alex’s first thought was to revert to his former self. He wanted to renew the conversation and get the old feeling of all-nighters talking about everything and nothing back. They may have a few laughs. Maybe she’d talk about how good of a kisser he was or send another nude photo. Everything was possible within those three letters: H—E—Y.

Alex sat up in bed and began writing a response. He wanted to say more than “hey,” but not enough to look desperate. Her parents went home and talked to her. Or maybe she called and asked how the party was (and, in her way, asked if I was there). If that didn’t seem fishy, he didn’t know what did. One or more of their parents were likely smart enough to combine two and two.

The words flew off his fingers. After finishing the text, he realized how desperate it sounded:

Hey, Anna. How are you? Long time no talk. I ran into your parents tonight at my dad’s 70th birthday party. Did they talk to you? Anyways, how are you doing? I’m good. I’ve been doing great. I am just focusing on myself and doing what I must to get over you. It was fucking hard. It took therapy. I’ve been going to a lot of therapy. Do you know how much that shit costs? But I talked it over. I talked over you–I talked through you. I was able to find a way to grow accustomed to the convenience of your absence. It started to feel good. At least I have found a way to believe myself when I say that. Therapy will do that. I worked hard to find a solution to save face and move on, all the while respecting your clear-cut boundaries made on that day at the beginning of this year. It’s been a while, but I must admit how good it feels to see you text again.

Alex did not hit send. He set the phone down and walked over to his window. Alex’s father had a small Japanese maple in his home’s front right flower bed. Alex thought about the Japanese maple on Anna’s back. Anna’s nude back and perfect ass. He thought about what the tattoo would look like bent over. Would she like that? He didn’t realize he was touching himself at first. With nobody else in the house, the feeling came naturally. The whole ordeal of stimulative muscle memory felt like a car accident in reverse.

Moving slowly at first, the memories played like flashes in his mind. He tried to remember everything. All the joy. All the pain. The body. The perfect nipples. The anger. The breasts. The bad breakup. The half-blow job. Up and Down. The door slamming. The trash can. The tattoo. The tree. The tree on her backside. Her ass. The tree. All of it at once. None of it at all.

Alex came quickly inside his pajama pants. He immediately removed them, changed his underwear, and washed his hands. Returning to the bedroom, he looked out the window again before grabbing his phone. He pressed DECLINE on the message request and crawled back into bed. He slept until 10:30 a.m. that morning.

We’re all just simple fools looking for a new and convenient way to get our rocks off.

Agent Detmeier

This is a short story featured on my new outlet for writing content, Delusional Thoughts From Fantasy Island (DTFFI). DTFFI is a twice-weekly email where I share original content in the form of lists, poetry, non-fiction, and fictional short stories. You can subscribe for free now by going HERE.

What happens when you are the watcher being watched? A short story thriller of fiction.

FBI Agent Detmeier didn’t think he’d hang off a helicopter anytime soon. It was the furthest thing from his mind this evening. Television and movies certainly ruined the junior agent’s perception of the service. After completing his training in Quantico, Jim Detmeier proved adept at the computer-something he was always mildly teased for by his classmates. Even in the twenty-first century, the classical style of bullying still exists. 

Because of that aptitude, his first job upon graduation last fall was the incredibly dull and monotonous Cyber Surveillance Unit. Since then, it’s been six months of monitoring shitty civilian tips and loose ends. If the Federal Bureau of Investigation had a hazing ritual, the Cyber Surveillance Unit would be at the top of the list. 

Agent Detmeier spent most of each 12-hour shift monitoring specific individuals on the Internet for suspicious activity. These often come from anonymous tips or go into the FBI pipeline for a suspect’s continued use of suspicious sites, usually teetering around the dark web or more suggestive sites of varying perverse flavors. Most of the time, individual targets did very little else beyond looking at pornography and sports scores on ESPN. Thankfully, most of the targets had their laptop cameras closed. For every closed camera was another in full, unceremonious view. Detmeier would like to forget more than he’s seen in the last six months of old perverted penises than three lifetimes could make up for. 

Jim strolled to his office outside Washington, D.C. He lazily swiped his badge at the entrance and again at the elevator to the tenth floor. Jim yawned twice while clutching his large mug of coffee and swiped one last time into his SCIF, or sensitive compartmented information facility. In that room, he shared a cubicle area with three other agents, each monitoring three given contacts during their shifts. 

“So, Timmy, who do we have on the docket tonight?” Tim was the closest thing that Jim had to a friend in his new position. Jim hoped Tim felt the same, but he couldn’t tell. The other two agents with them tonight, a brooding woman named Felicia Parker and a tall former Division I basketball player named George Russell, sat quietly at their desks. Only Agent Parker mildly acknowledged Jim’s presence. Her eyes screamed, “You’re late,” without saying anything.

“Goddamnit, I hate when you call me that,” said Jim. He revealed a slight smirk that matched Jim’s like a mirrored image. “Ugh. Fine…Asshole. So, we have the same three people as last shift – the suspected car thief, the boring fertilizer guy, and the chronic masturbator.” 

“Ooof, that’s tough. I get a new one tonight to add to my list after closing “Mr. Pyro.” Jim’s smile widened in a grin that screamed “obnoxious” and bordered “shit-eating.” The police in Dayton, Ohio, arrested Terry Tuttleman, 46, AKA “Mr. Pyro,” last Friday for conspiracy to burn his business down for insurance. It wasn’t necessarily a feather in Detmeier’s cap, but it gave his supervisor enough onus to provide him with more complex cases. 

“So, who’s the newbie? I know you got the other two boring ones. Let’s hope this one is interesting.” The two boring targets Tim referred to were both cyberbullies at the high school level. Beyond a few anonymous tips, there was nothing the FBI could do until either escalated their childish banter. Jim looked at his email and task package list and found his new surveillance target: William Ames, a suspected dark web administrator. Things were looking up. He closed his eyes briefly and sipped his lukewarm coffee before turning to Tim. He had to think of a witty retort. 

“Oh, whatever. At least I don’t have to sit there and watch my new guy type out Internet searches for Sydney Sweeney’s feet pics.” Jim laughed. He got him good. Tim started to chuckle but cut it off when he realized that would likely be most of his shift’s next 7-10 hours. “I got me a suspected dark web administrator – read it and weep!” His voice went into a southern drawl that sounded like he was the ringleader of a rodeo. Tim stared blankly back at him.

“Oh, screw you, that’s actually exciting!” Tim mimicked the finger (after all, the watchers were also being watched) and slinked back into his six-screen rig for another hour of monitoring Pornhub searches and Door Dash orders.

Jim settled into his shift setup after meeting with his supervisor to discuss his new target. Most of the surveillance job inside the SCIF was monotonous and tiresome. Without using a cell phone or regular Internet searches, each agent did what they could to ensure their eyes wouldn’t cross. As much as it sped up brain melt, a successful tour in this job wrote an agent’s ticket to bigger and better things within the Bureau. Jim could hang on that helicopter after all. 

The first hour went smoothly. Both of Jim’s cyber-bullies had homework to do, so most of their searches involved Wikipedia and Chat GPT. Mr. Ames, however, was very strange off the bat. Jim noted a list of searches in his log. He stared at the list on the screen in puzzlement. 

“Jazz influences of modern artists and rock music”

“Indian pornography and red circle sexy sexy”

“Metaverse article about the influence of technology and A.I.” 

What the hell did jazz influences and Indian porno have to do with the Metaverse? Some searches and websites puzzled the brain, but those three made zero sense. Jim looked at his watch. 8:30 p.m. Break time. He left the secure facility and walked outside with his telephone in hand to call his girlfriend, Maddie. The phone dialed three times before she picked up. 

“Hello, Clarice,” she said in a voice that attempted to mimic Hannibal Lectre. After half a year on the job, he thought she would tire of it. She did not. 

“Ha. Very funny,” said Jim. “How are things going?” 

“Not too bad. Just finished cleaning up after dinner with Janice.” Her roommate was sweet, if not mildly excentric. “Besides a bunch of random robo calls on my phone interrupting our meal, it’s been quiet here. Are we still planning to go to the farmer’s market tomorrow?” Jim had to do the mental math on how much sleep he could get before going to her apartment at noon to go to the Annandale farmer’s market before it closed at 1:30 p.m. 

“Sure, babe. Just slogging through this shift. I swear it will get better. I promise I’ll get on the day shift once I close another hot case.” Jim wasn’t entirely convinced that was true, but he had to give her a convincing lie. 

“Yeah, you will, Mr. Rockstar. OK. I gotta go. Try to call me again on a break before I go to sleep around 11:30 p.m. Love you.” 

“Love you too,” Jim said. He hung up and realized he would be a fool if he didn’t put a ring on her finger by the end of the year. He filled his lungs with the last deep breath of fresh air for the next three hours and returned to his desk. 

The night continued as usual. After a few random chats with friends on Facebook, one of the bullies looked to call it an early night. The other bully focused his attention on a girl. A few D.M.s he sent to the poor girl’s Instagram made him cringe. Either way, he made a file for the new conversation in case it progressed into something more serious. Mr. Ames continued a dizzying array of searches that made no connection. If this guy continued to type out gibberish with no prospect of conversing with anyone online, he would suggest his supervisor dropped the case. Either way, he logged his next set of insane searches.

“California drought figures  2011 to 2022”

“After Hours Movie Quotes”

“Lion and witch and wardrobe” 

“Lady PGA tour leaders of the last twenty years” 

Jim continued to monitor the two active targets for the next hour. Eventually, Mr. DM gave up on his latest love, Lex, and fell asleep. That left Mr. Ames. His next slew of searches seemed as random as ever until Jim noticed something as he logged the final one. 

“Heroism in the military and examples”

“Electric vehicles of the future”

“Realizations of horrific news for J.D.”

Jim looked at his watch. It was 11:16 p.m. He wiped his blurry eyes and looked at the last one: “Realizations of horrific news for J.D.” What? What is J.D. This guy did a lot of dumb searches, but that one seemed especially stupid. Jim waved Tim over to look at it. 

“Huh. I have no idea. This guy seems like a nut job who is just typing random shit. Probably not a lot of the black market and too much black tar. I wouldn’t read too much in on it, bud.” Tim gave his coworker a reassuring pat on the back before returning to his desk for his monitoring.

Another long search came into his database, turning his blood cold. He saw the search on the screen: a single word written repeatedly. 

“ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC HAHA ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC HAHA ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC ACROSTIC”

Jim knew what an acrostic was. He quickly opened Ames’ file and looked at all the searches in a row. 

“Jazz influences of modern artists and rock music”

“Indian pornography and red circle sexy sexy”

“Metaverse article about the influence of technology and A.I.” 

“California drought figures and 2011 to 2022”

“After Hours Movie Quotes”

“Lion and witch and wardrobe” 

“Lady PGA tour leaders of the last twenty years” 

“Heroism in the military and examples”

“Electric vehicles of the future”

“Realizations of horrific news for J.D.”

He saw it almost immediately before moving towards the door of the secure facility to grab his phone: J I M C A L L H E R. J.D. was Jim Detmeier. 

He nearly toppled over Agent Russell’s massive body as he darted out to grab his phone. He unlocked the screen and saw no missed calls. “Oh, thank god,” he said to himself. He scrolled on his phone for a second to calm down. He saw a single unread text message from an unidentified number in his area code. He could only muster a short gasp before calling Maddie immediately. The single text message said the same thing as the search: “Call her.”

The phone rang five times before Maddie answered.

“Jim, I didn’t think you were going to call, I was about to–” 

“GODDAMNIT MADDIE DON’T HANG UP!” Jim shouted into the phone. “Maddie, are you OK?” 

“Jesus, Jim, can you tone it down a little?” Maddie said. “Yeah, I am good. I was getting ready to go to sleep. What the hell is wrong?” 

Jim couldn’t get the words out fast enough as he fumbled for his keys. Screw work. Work will always be there. He had to drive to see her and make sure she was OK. “Maddie, I don’t know what’s going on, but I think somebody is fucking with me.” 

Maddie sounded puzzled. “Who is messing with you? How could they know – you’re FBI.” He interrupted her. 

“Look, damnit, I don’t know.” He started the engine and nearly wrecked his car, putting it in reverse in the tight parking lot. “Maddie, has anything weird happened tonight? You didn’t say anything earlier, right?”

“Jim, I am fine. Besides the random robocalls, there’s nothing wrong.” Jim suddenly remembered the robo calls from earlier. 

“Mads, what is the number? Is it the same number? How many times did they call?”

She took a second to go through her phone and made a noise that he knew was her sour expression. “Huh. I didn’t realize it, but they are all from the same number.”

“OK, Mads! Listen to me.” Jim screamed into the phone as he drove 86 mph down Interstate 495 toward the Wedgewood apartment complex in Annandale. He didn’t care if the cops stopped him. Hell, the thought of getting pulled over might be better. He might need backup. “You need to stay put wherever you are.” 

“Jim, what the hell is going on? You’re scaring me,” Maddie said with increasing concern. 

“MADS! I hope I am. You and Janice need to lock the front door, get into a safe room, and lock that door. Then you need to call the police and wait for me. I am almost there! Please stay on the phone with me. I am almost there.” Jim saw signs for her exit.

“Oh,” she said, “that number is calling again. Should I answer it?” 

“Maddie, no! Just hang on. I am coming to you. Baby, please stay safe and get into a room and lock the goddamn door!” 

“OK, Jim, OK!” she looked at her phone. “Whatever it was went to voicemail. I’m getting scared.” 

“I am almost there. I am..” 

Just then, Jim heard three loud knocks on the door and heard a voice that sounded like his. He could barely hear it. 

“Hey babe,” the voice said. “I’m here to help. Open up!” Jim’s bowels nearly loosened from the other end of the line. 

“Oh, thank God, Jim. You’re here. Coming.” She hung up immediately. 

“NOOOOO. MADDIE!!!” Jim screamed into his phone. He was a mile away from her exit and could see her apartment from the view of the treetops. 

Agent Detmeier had the opportunity to lead the FBI manhunt in the incident’s immediate aftermath. Maddie’s phone was first analyzed at the forensics lab back in Quantico. The voicemail was only a few words. The voice on the message ran through countless samples and databases to find a source. The words haunted Jim, driving him to relative insanity…but he couldn’t let go. He could hear the words when he closed his eyes to sleep. He could hear it when he looked at old pictures of his beautiful girlfriend when she was alive. It was a constant. Those words. 

J.D. ACROSTIC. J.D. ACROSTIC. CALL HER. CALL HER. NOT IN TIME. NOT THIS TIME.  

Rocks Off – Part II

Return to In the Chat Box: Stories of Digital Love and Disdain

Read Part I

Stage Two: Anger

December 20, 2021

Alex knew he had to stop looking at his phone so much during the workday. People live their lives. Nobody waits for the perfect moment to message anyone back. It just happens organically. So Alex waited on the receiving end for the notifications to pop off each day, avoiding everything from work to his close friends and loved ones. 

He repeatedly told himself in the spaces between conversations that this monotonous dedication would pay off, eventually. While the conversations with Anna kept his pulse up daily, the other regular occurrences of Alex’s existence went back to a steady beat. After the kitchen blowup, things with Andrea cooled to Cold War levels of detente. A rhythm started again between the two: wake, word, dinner, and sleep. After Andrea collapsed in bed, it was Alex’s time. It was his ecstasy. For him, the day began around 9:30 pm each night.

Andrea and Alex got along. They even managed to have sex with each other in early December out of the blue. Andrea seemed to enjoy it well enough, even if Alex superimposed Anna’s perfect breasts onto Anna’s in his mind to help him finish. He still found time to look at the photo at some point each day. 

As if that wasn’t motivation enough, Alex kept to his word to continue writing. Short stories and even a little poetry were the easiest to write. Compared to the short stories, Anna made sure to point out how terrible that poetry was in comparison. After a few more positive comments, Alex even considered writing a short novel but decided the continued positive reinforcement from her felt more immediate and thus more essential. 

It was two weeks before Alex got another unsolicited photo of Anna. This time, it was her backside. He figured that particular shot might be coming because she kept talking about how she planned to see a tattoo artist to get a large piece done on her back. Anna told him to “wait and see” the exact spot on the backside of her body, so it was almost no surprise when she finally sent Alex a photo of her newest tattoo on his way into his office one cold Monday before Christmas. 

The pic came without warning and comment, like the first one. The only thing Anna wrote underneath the pic was “new tattoo.” It covered from the top of her head to the middle of her thigh. Alex saw a beautiful Japanese Oak Tree that covered almost the entire right side of her back. The tree’s roots stretched to her buttocks, ending in the middle of her right cheek. She was fully nude but only saw a portion of the side of her breast. Either her husband Rodney took the photo, or she set it up on a timer. She smiled at the camera, proud of the tree and the artist’s work. Alex wished he could see more of her breasts but was not mad at first glance at her ass. 

Alex thought it made sense that she would get a Japanese Maple tattoo. He remembered she told him that she planted three in the front yard of her house on the outskirts of Richmond. The message notification for the image came at a stoplight four minutes from his office in Lorton, VA. He wanted to respond before getting to work, where he would be easily distracted by it all morning as if he hadn’t already. 

Alex could message her from his car’s ApplePlay if he had her cell phone number. When he asked Anna for her number the previous week, she said, “Absolutely not.” This “thing” was only a conversation transacted through Facebook Messenger. He wasn’t stoked about that but probably thought it best to play it safe, at least for their sake. Andrea was already suspicious of what he was doing on his phone all hours of the night. She probably had a similar situation with Rodney. 

Alex just wanted a quiet parking lot with as few cars around as possible to park, what he called “thinking lots.” Every time he drove into a nearly empty parking lot, at least one car idly sat amongst the rows of empty spaces. The person inside always looked like they were contemplating the profound theories of the universe or the meaning of life. He found one a mile from work and took a few minutes to respond appropriately to what the picture deserved. He parked on the opposite end of a row of spaces adjacent to the shopping center’s ice cream shop and tax center. 

Alex felt nervous for the first time since the first conversation in November. Dizziness hit as he turned off the car’s engine. The windows rolled down to let the fresh air in despite the chilling temperatures. Had he eaten? Why was he so nervous typing to her? He’d done it hundreds of times in the month or so they had conversed. For the last few weeks, it was a nightly event. Why now?

He wrote and deleted fourteen separate message responses before finally sending what he felt was the best. Anna responded almost immediately. That was very much unlike her. It usually took minutes or hours to respond to messages during the day. 

Alex wasn’t sure what that meant. Was she sending her ass out to other people? Or her breasts? More? Was this not something special? He could not surmise the amount of time and effort spent chatting up another person. He had to know.

Alex sat in the parking lot silently for ten minutes. He stared at that last series of messages over and over again. 

“Makes me think I made a mistake…”

“I’m sorry you misread.” 

“Talk to you at some point, I am sure.” 

As much as he tried to shake it, Alex couldn’t stop rereading those final messages. When he realized he would be dangerously close to being late on one of the random days required to return to the office, Alex turned his car back on and drove the remaining mile to the building in silence. He thought about responding when he parked the car but thought better. Her status on Messenger showed she wasn’t online anyway. Or maybe she blocked him. Either way, it was best to leave it alone. 

How dare she say that. How could it not be more? How could somebody send those pics and say those things without meaning anything more? It made him feel cheap and unwanted as if everything meant nothing. Uneasy feelings swelled around his body like his skin could lurch forward unprovoked. Walking out of his car, Alex spit on the ground, jammed his cell phone back into his pocket, and walked briskly into the building to stop himself from crying. 

The phone stayed pocketed the entire workday. It came out again after work in the relative comfort of the shared apartment. Alex’s heart sank when he opened it and found zero messages. It did mean nothing, then. A short fantasy. A lucky roll of the dice. It was now gone. A digital “fuck you.” That didn’t stop him from staring at his phone for the remainder of the evening, waiting for a response. Alex barely touched the dinner Andrea prepared, which set her off. To Alex, the increasingly loud and verbally abusive accusations hurled at him felt muted and blurry to what he was focusing on, as if he was Charlie Brown and Andrea was the mother making squawking noises in the background. When he apologized later while Andrea was in bed, she said “OK” and rolled over, stifling tears. Alex closed his eyes and shook his head after that response. He even managed to stifle his tears welling up and returned to the living room to resume looking at his phone for a message that never came. So much for the closer relationship with his girlfriend. It was fun while it lasted. 

The good feelings kept rolling. Still, no messages – empty screens and empty feelings pervaded everything like a rolling midwestern storm. 

Alex continued to act like an asshole to everyone around him for the remainder of the work week before his December leave kicked in. The yearly holiday trek south to Williamsburg meant a solid week of family time. It felt needed this year. It meant distraction in a different setting because it looked grim on the homefront. He appeared visually unkempt and verbally abrasive towards his colleagues. At home, it was no better. Conversations between the couple almost became non-existent. Andrea told Alex she would sign up for a “Sip n’ Paint” art class at the center down the street on Tuesdays on top of the weekly girls’ happy hour on Thursdays. He grunted in approval. That was fine. More time to grovel alone. More time to attempt to look away from the two pics he had of her. He tried vainly to delete them but couldn’t muster the strength. 

All the while, he saw Anna was online, resisting the urge to message her. He had more pride than that, right? It’s hard to convince yourself of that truth while feeling weak continuously. Is it better to be dead than left on read? There wasn’t a mental consensus on the answer to that. 

He wanted to message her and tell her he was sorry. For what, he didn’t know, but the urge to do so and reinvigorate a conversation clung to his insides like plaster, making him more angry and bitter in the process. The idea of deleting her from his friend list also crossed his mind. The fantasy of telling her exactly why she was losing out on his friendship, or more, was the mental masturbatory emission oscillating in and out of his mind each night that shitty work week. That’s what he wanted to do. 

He did none of those things. Everything was quiet. The anger only got angrier. The bitterness felt like a clutched fist packed so tightly he could draw blood. And still – nothing from Anna.  

Alex left for his parents’ house in Williamsburg late on Thursday, the 23rd. All in all, he planned to stay there through the new year before going back to work on the 3rd of January. On the way down, Alex listened to an impressive array of depressing music. He spent the entire day before leaving, avoiding any closeouts and crafting the perfect blend of catchy and melancholy tunes, all with the common theme of sad and punishing lyrics about love, loss, and general sad-bastard behavior. 

The morning he left for the break was the first time he thought about the “L Word” about Anna. He didn’t believe it was true. There was no way anything like that would happen. It took him nearly a year of dating Andrea before saying he loved her. Did he still? Despite all the drama over the last month, he thought so. That made the idea even worse. 

That morning was also the first time he thought Andrea would or could leave him. Andrea decided to stay in town and relax. Going down to spend a solid week with his parents was never her kind of fun, anyway. She mentioned her parents might come from Baltimore. They kissed deep and hard before he left that evening. Another tear swept below their cheek as they did and said goodbye. He wasn’t sure why, but Alex did not like that. 

Driving deep in the night on I-95, the playlist covered every sad hit from The Smiths, The Cure, Radiohead, and Nine Inch Nails. He thought about Andrea, the crying kiss, and the absence of nightly textual relations with Anna. When he arrived at his parents’ around 11 pm, he stayed with them to chat about work and life. He put his family’s presents under the tree, grateful that the large gifts for his sister Tess’s kids did not break. Her clan, thankfully, would not arrive until tomorrow afternoon, leaving Alex a solid morning to brood. 

When he finally pulled his phone out, around midnight, sitting in his old bedroom, Alex saw a notification for Messenger on his phone. He nearly pulled a muscle opening the app, only to find it was his old friend from high school, Marty “Farty” Donnager. Alex and Marty worked together after high school at a fancy restaurant in town, Fat Canary, while saving money at community college. Eventually, Alex went to James Madison, while his dishwashing friend transferred to Old Dominion in Norfolk. It wasn’t who he wanted, yet Alex replied to Farty anyway. Maybe the sensation would feel like he was having his nightly conversation with Anna. 

Alex regretted the conversation almost immediately. Fuck. In what world was Farty moving past him and rocketing along the way? 

Wow. Farty was a well-to-do family man, and Alex was barely in a relationship, pining over somebody who didn’t want him. He guessed he could make it until New Year’s with his family. Without Andrea here and the nightly conversations with Anna, he focused on spending time with his mom, dad, and sister’s family before the event.

The next few days came and went. No messages. Tess’s family came for two days to enjoy Christmas, leaving on the morning of the 27th. Alex spent the next two days helping his parents with various projects around the house. He moved boxes into the dusty attic and helped his father organize the garage. His conversations with his girlfriend became shorter and shorter. Her parents came on the 26th from Baltimore to spend a few days with her. At least, that’s what she said happened. After the way Andrea kissed him before he left, Alex was never sure what would happen over the break. It did not come as a surprise when Andrea sent him a message saying she was moving out of their apartment before he returned from his parents. The parents were there with their cars to help her move everything out.

When she broke the bad news, the first thought was to freak out and scream. But it never came. The only feeling at that moment was understanding and a sense of release. Of course, there were apologies. They were both sorry. She hoped they would stay friends. Alex didn’t say that back, though. She also said she would always love him, which brought them both to tears. She planned to move back to Baltimore with her parents before deciding what to do next, which made perfect sense. Andrea planned to get everything out by the time he came back on Sunday. 

Before she hung up the phone, she asked him if there was anyone else – any reason why things deteriorated so badly. She wondered if he was talking to somebody on the phone all that time in the last month. “Maybe that would explain why you have been so vacant in almost everything else, Alex. That would at least make me feel a little bit better about all of this,” she said through muffled sobs. He decided to lie to her one last time. A sweet lie that would keep her at ease and keep him from having anything broken to pieces when he got back on Sunday afternoon.

“Of course not, Andrea. I’m just sorry things didn’t work out. I’ll talk to you soon.” 

Alex hung up that phone call on the 29th and went into the bathroom to let out a few tears and scream into a stack of towels from the closet—a throbbing headache formed in the back of his head. After wiping the moisture away from his eyes, his first thought was to check his phone. No messages. Fuck. He needed a drink desperately, finding only a few non-suspiciously out-of-date beers in the back of his parent’s fridge. It would do. Alex was ready when New Year’s Eve came around two days later. If he planned to have a few drinks at Marty’s party before the Andrea breakup happened, he wanted to get blackout drunk now. Alex booked a hotel at the Hampton Inn directly adjacent to the distillery and told his parents he wanted to be safe because of the plan to tie one on. They understood. 

Alex wrote and deleted a series of messages in his phone’s notes section to Anna the evening before leaving for Marty’s event. Marty said the place planned to have a “bitching spread,” complete with an open bar and heavy appetizers. They messaged each other and planned to meet at eight. He deleted the messages before putting on an old suit jacket he kept from high school that matched his khaki pants and headed out the door for the rideshare to check into his hotel room. No regrets. No feelings. Just alcohol. He brought a few airline bottles of Jack Daniels purchased earlier that day to down before leaving his room after he checked in just in case the party was boring. 

Copper Fox Distillery is best known for its Virginia-made craft whiskey. They are the self-proclaimed “Home of  American Single Malt” in how specific locales in Scotland held that title. It was a perfect place to decompress the previous month. He could put both behind him with enough luck and rye. Alex loved whiskey and now had a perfect excuse (his complete lack of love life/motivation/everything) and a backup plan (get blackout drunk, puke, rally, and crawl back to the hotel less than a football field away from the bar). Perfect. 

Alex felt good after a few hours at the distillery. He mixed and mingled with Marty’s friends and had a few drinks. He told Marty’s colleagues of his early work origins as a busboy and dishwasher just after high school. Everyone had a few laughs. Even Marty enjoyed having Alex around. He had a few more drinks. Alex even initiated an exciting conversation about ancient Rome with a bartender on break in the cold. The few cigarettes he bummed him were worth the conversation he stumbled through about the “Year of Four Emperors,” something he couldn’t quite remember from college. The time was 11 pm. He had a few more drinks. 

Alex was utterly hammered by 11:30 pm. To his surprise, he managed to get shitfaced and forget all of his problems, issues, and heartache. That is until his phone buzzed with a notification. It was Facebook Messenger. He clutched his phone, set his drink down, and stumbled outside to light the last cigarette bummed by Mr. Roman Empire using a small promotional box of matches from Copper Fox. He squinted his eyes and steadied himself against the cold brick wall of the building before opening the text. 

That managed to sober Alex up quite a bit—enough to be coherent. 

Alex returned his phone in his coat pocket and looked at the blanket of stars. The night was surprisingly cold and clear. He could feel the chill against his body, even with the liquor fusing into his bloodstream. The world started spinning more than usual as the focus went in and out. As the clock struck midnight, he hunched over and puked out an evening’s worth of whiskey, crab dip, and cubed cheese. 

Happy New Year. 

Stage Three: Bargaining 

January 2, 2022

After Saturday’s recovery, Alex was ready for Sunday to leave and drive outside of Richmond to the Shortpump Mall and meet up with Anna. He didn’t think she would bring her husband and kid with him, at least not after what she said on New Year’s Eve. Yet the possibility of a husband meetup and subsequent beatdown was still on the table. The risk-reward scenario played and came up heads: he would proceed. The midnight puker extraordinaire spent most of Saturday hung over, rereading the messages from the previous day while sipping on blue Powerade and eating slightly stale crackers. 

Alex said goodbye to his family around 8:30 in the morning and drove the brisk hour to the mall. He arrived around 9:50 am due to unforeseen traffic around I-64 just past Dumbarton. The mall was closed for another hour, so Alex parked near the front next to the massive Cheesecake Factory and sat in his car. Another “thinking lot,” he thought and smiled silently. 

After scrolling through his phone for thirty minutes and taking a brief nap using his coat as a blanket, the mall finally opened. He went inside, found the Starbucks near the atrium, and messaged Anna on Messenger that he arrived. He got a venti drip coffee and sipped on it until she showed up. He thought the mall was surprisingly crowded for the Sunday after the new year. There were lots of families shopping in stores, perhaps using gift certificates they received over the holidays. He got a phone notification at 11:29 am from Anna. 

Alex looked up from his phone to see Anna standing five feet away. Finally, there in front of him after all these years and the conversations. It was Anna in the flesh. She was taller than he remembered, but then again, they had not physically seen each other since they were children. Her curly brown hair sat just atop her neckline, where a flattering red sweater hugged her tight frame, especially her breasts. The black pants looked vintage and expensive. She completed the outfit with what looked like Doc Marten boots made of vegan leather. She smiled nervously and sat down. 

Alex couldn’t stop staring at her mouth. She had a brilliant red shade of lipstick that starkly contrasted her white teeth. Of all the places to look at Anna, he wondered why he stared at her lips and teeth. 

“So, how are you?” she said. Again, she tried to hide her nervousness. Her hands played with her gloves a few times before settling on her lap. 

“I’m good. A good drive up here. Should be easy-breezy for the rest of the way up to D.C.” he hated himself for saying “Easy-Breezy.” “Can I get you some coffee?” 

“Oh, no. I can get it. I just wanted to sit down before running up there. Be right back.” She got up and turned around. Alex couldn’t help staring now at her ass, thinking about the Japanese Maple tattoo that eloquently wrapped around her backside. She returned a few minutes later with a hot tea. 

“So, here we are,” she said as she sipped slowly on the hot liquid. “It’s kinda crazy, right?

“For sure. This meetup is over twenty years coming, right?” They both laughed nervously together. Perhaps more nervous than either imagined. They continued the conversation for another twenty minutes. Unfortunately, it was painfully awkward. Alex kept staring at her teeth. Anna kept fuddling with her gloves on her lap while she wrestled up conversation points. Alex gave his Starbucks cup a full body massage as he tried to talk about anything other than his recent breakup with Andrea and the next few weeks at work. There were a few awkward laughs here and there, but nothing that felt like the beginning of a Hallmark Christmas movie like Alex hoped.  

Eventually, Anna excused herself to go to the bathroom. Alex let out a deep sigh when she was out of sight. He wondered what to discuss next, googling “coffee date conversation topics” in desperation. Most importantly, he worried he was blowing this chance to engage with her. When else would the stars align with them in the same area simultaneously? He continued to mess with his phone when he received a notification. Surprisingly, it came from Anna. 

Anna came back to the table two minutes later. Alex faked like he would continue talking on Messenger before laughing and putting his phone away. They both laughed at that. Tensions loosened, and the conversation grew relaxed. They eventually managed to talk like they always had. A phone application no longer feels like a replacement or extension of their connection. It was there. It was happening at the moment. It felt real. Alex managed to look away from Anna’s teeth as requested. He did not stare at her chest, even if he joked about it once or twice early on in the conversation. Alex focused on her eyes and how they interacted as they talked. He thought that was something he could never duplicate talking to her online in the small hours. 

They managed to grab another pair of drinks. After Alex paid and picked them up at the counter, he turned to find Anna standing before him. 

“Let’s walk and talk,” she said. So they did. They took their beverages on the go, strolled around the mall, and window-shopped. He loved how she commented on the price of mundane items like puffy jackets no one would ever wear or the boutique soap store with vegan and gluten-friendly options. While they half-giggled through a Hot Topic near the end of the mall’s easternmost wing, Anna grabbed Alex’s hand to get his attention. The warm feeling that rushed up his spine was akin to his first sight of Anna’s naked chest back in November. He watched her pick a LEGO set for her son at the store.

A quick conversation at the mall in the late morning turned into an early afternoon adventure. By 1:30 pm, Anna looked at her watch in astonishment. “Oh, shit. It’s getting late. I have to get back to the fam,” she said. A slight frown appeared on her face. She touched him again now. This time, it was on his right shoulder. Her brow relaxed as she spoke. “Where are you parked?”

He didn’t want to show his disappointment. “Um. I parked towards the front near the Cheesecake Factory.” He hoped she asked him to walk her to her car at least. A few more minutes in a foreign lot would be worth it. He wasn’t doing anything anyway. What did he have to look forward to when he got back into town? A half-empty apartment? He just hoped she left the ice cube trays.  

“I’m parked back by the Dillard’s way on the other side of the mall. We are closer to your car. Can you drive me there?” Alex did not hesitate to say yes. They walked a bit longer until they reached the main entrance and walked outside. It was surprisingly warm for the new year. They got into his car and began the brief drive around Short Pump Town Center Circle to the back of the wall where she parked. Along the way, she made a few cracks about the cleanliness of his vehicle. He didn’t care much. Alex just wanted to savor the moment. After she left the car, who knew how long it would be until they saw each other. 

A minute later, they arrived in the back of the mall. The cars were sparse on this side. Most of them sat idle in tiny pockets. “That’s me in the silver BMW.” Of course, she had a vintage silver BMW. It sat in a row all on its own towards the back of the lot between the Dillard’s and the Hyatt House Richmond, a small boutique hotel located within the mall property. 

He parked next to her and idled the car. They sat in silence for a few seconds. “Well,” Alex said. “I guess this is it. It’s been a lot of fun, and I h….” Anna stopped him from speaking with her lips. The lips on the mouth he couldn’t stop staring at. The mouth he couldn’t believe he was now kissing. Her tongue came seconds later. Slow at first and then in circular motions around his. It felt like his first kiss all over again but with more experience and knowledge about the opposite sex. Anna motioned for him to turn the car off. He obliged. Nobody was around. Alex guessed this was a lot for a different kind of thinking. 

They continued kissing for a few more minutes. All the while, Alex kept scanning beyond her curly hair to see if other cars or mall security were riding about. About five minutes into their make-out session, Alex’s right hand ventured into uncharted territory for Anna’s right breast. She moaned a bit when he grabbed onto her and sucked harder on his lip. She pushed him back. 

“Does your seat go back anymore?” She began running her right hand up and down his thigh. It only took her a few seconds to feel him. She felt how hard he was in his blue jeans. He just wanted to be let out like a rabid bat in a cage. Alex moved his chair back as far as possible. 

When he finally got into place, Anna unzipped his pants to find Alex standing at full attention. She scanned the lot one last time before swallowing the majority of Alex’s hard cock in her mouth. She moved in rhythmic motions up and down, slowly incorporating her hand into the mix. Alex wasn’t sure what to do other than enjoy what was shaping up to be the best blowjob he ever had. He grabbed the left steering wheel with his left hand for control and set his right hand on top of Anna’s head to set the pace even if she knew what she was doing. 

About a minute into it, Alex could start to feel the butterflies travel down his stomach and into his crotch. That old familiar feeling. He was going to bust. Right as he was about to finish in her mouth, Anna promptly stopped, removing both her hand and mouth from Alex’s body. She had a small well of tears in her eyes. She wiped her mouth and looked down. 

“I’m sorry, Alex. I can’t finish. I…I’m sorry. I can’t do that. I like you, but I can’t do this. Forgive me. Forget this.” She wiped her mouth one last time with the palm of her hand and her tears with the back of the same before grabbing her purse and exciting Alex’s vehicle without saying a word. She looked briefly at him before getting into her vintage car and speeding away. 

Alex stood silently in the parking lot for several minutes with his unzipped pants. His penis was now as flaccid as he thought it would ever be. Leaning back and zipping his pants back up, he let out a giant sigh before turning his car on and exiting the mall towards I-64 and northern Virginia. 

“What a fucking disaster,” he said to himself as he drove off. “I didn’t ask for this. I didn’t ask for it. And now look at me. I’m blue-balled and more confused than fucking ever.” He tried to focus on anything other than what had just transpired on his trip back to the D.C. metro area. Unfortunately, nothing came to mind. As fucked as it was that it happened, he half smiled at the thought of her lips firmly planted on his. A small well of tears formed in his eyes as he approached Interstate 95. He shook it off and focused on the road head. It looked like traffic near the exit. 

Rocks Off – Part I

Return to In the Chat Box: Stories of Digital Love and Disdain

We’re all just simple fools looking for new and convenient ways to get our rocks off. At least that’s what Alex told himself when he got an unsuspecting instant message from somebody he hadn’t talked to in years. It was the middle of the fall when she messaged him, even if it felt more like winter when she entered his life after years and years of silence.

Anna Renquist.

Jesus Christ. How long had it been since they last spoke to one another? Ten Years? Fifteen? More? He thought about it a lot, but only after the first few conversations did he nail down how long it had been. Looking back at everything that happened, he should have been reading a book about the five stages of grief to better prepare him for everything that would occur throughout two very long and introspective years.

The message seemed harmless enough at First. Let’s go back to the beginning.

Stage One: Denial

November 7, 2021

Alex had a hard time falling asleep lately. That’s an understatement. Alex hadn’t fallen asleep before 2 a.m. in about three weeks. Most of the time, he sat in bed and stared at the ceiling. That never really worked. It often made him more awake because his brain would trick him out of being sleepy. He tried the more modern methods, and those all did about as well as the blank staring into the void. Melatonin did nothing (weed never worked on him, either). Sleep sounds like rain just made him have to pee for some reason. Hell, there were a few nights that he tried to close his eyes and count sheep. None of it worked.

His girlfriend Andrea kept telling him to see a doctor. “Maybe it’s sleep apnea,” she would always say. Alex didn’t think so. He wasn’t sure what it was exactly, but it wasn’t sleep apnea. He wasn’t highly fit but wasn’t chubby or overweight either. Andrea often teased about his “dad bod,” even if she knew Alex would scowl back at her for several hours before getting over it.

Alex figured the sleep deprivation/voluntary insomnia had something to do with a few things he noted lately:

  1. Lack of motivation at work
  2. Lack of motivation in his relationship
  3. Lack of motivation in his hobbies and interests
  4. Lack of motivation to see his friends and family
  5. A general lack of motivation

On the evening of November 7, Alex felt tired before 2 a.m. for the first time in a long while. The wind picked up late into the evening, with temperatures dipping into the twenties. He lay beside his girlfriend, Andrea, in bed while she snored. He thought about getting up and grabbing something to drink. Watch some TV in the living room. There was always the home office where he worked for some one-on-one time. That could put him to sleep.

No. Alex decided to stay in bed and scroll through his phone in case he might fall asleep. His eyes fluttered a few times while he scrolled through his Facebook feed when a notification popped up. Alex tapped his screen to read who hit him up on Messenger. It was a name he hadn’t heard in years. He couldn’t remember becoming friends with her (upon further inspection later, they became friends back in 2010).

He stood up in the bed to read the message. The time was 11:34 p.m.

Alex stared at the screen for a solid minute. Anna Renquist? As in, childhood friend Anna Renquist? Family friend? He was sure that she babysat him at some point when he was a baby. She was three or four years older, so it wasn’t out of the realm of possibility. Either way, it’s been a long time since they spoke.

He tried to think about the last time he saw Anna. He remembered seeing her at a get-together at her grandparent’s house at the beginning of the millennium. He remembered arguing about the Battle of Fallujah with Anna’s father as a bright-eyed college student, such as he was back then. He still had strong opinions about the War on Terror, of course, but at least he wasn’t such an arrogant prick about it anymore like he was nearly twenty years ago.

Alex wasn’t part of her family but had been a longtime friend of the Renquists long before he was born. Alex’s father, Jeff, cared for Anna’s grandmother as a young doctor back in the early 1980s, and he stayed close over the years. The doctor visitors from Ms. Renquist’s favorite general practitioner lessened, yet Alex’s father still found a way to come around. Eventually, he had a family of his own and became an unofficial part of the Renquist clan by the mid-1980s when Alex was born.

Alex cleared his throat and finally decided to respond to her. He could be cordial without wondering if it was some solicitation.

Alex felt like an asshole for being so matter-of-fact and to the point. But this was like getting an unsolicited call from a telemarketer. He didn’t know what to expect. It was too late to take it back, so he hoped she would forgive the unpleasantries. The tiny dots moved for nearly a minute before stopping and starting back up again several times. She responded a minute later. The news made him get up from the bed and stand up. Andrea continued to snore, blissfully unaware of anything else going on. Alex looked over and briefly wished he could trade places.

George Renquist was Anna’s uncle. Of the three Renquist brothers, George lived the most exciting life. Instead of following in the family business of plumbers, George chose a life as an independent general contractor-for-hire and all-around handyman. Alex didn’t know how he made his money or if it was ever genuinely reported on his taxes. Of course, none of that mattered anymore. Alex’s dad also did under-the-table doctoring for George over the years.

George was not the healthiest man. He loved to drink and eat. Mostly, though, his vice was drinking. Some of Alex’s earliest memories are sitting on George’s lap while he held a rum and cola cocktail in hand at get-togethers and other Renquiest family functions. He never drank to excess, but you could always tell her where he was in a house from the trailing scent of alcohol. Overlooking his drinking problem, George was a damn good contractor. Although he attended school at the prestigious William and Mary College in Williamsburg, VA, he was self-taught in every aspect of his business. His last girlfriend, Janice, was his bookkeeper and kept all his records straight (including late notices on payment).

Alex assumed his drinking finally got the better of him, or he had a heart attack.

Alex finally fell asleep after the message trailed off around midnight. The sleep came quickly for once. Not that it was perfect, mind you. But sleep is sleep, and Alex needed a few consistent hours to reset his body. He woke up thinking that he should thank Anna for helping him fall asleep, but immediately felt wiser not to. At the very least, a reword of his response. He awoke early that Monday morning and decided to handle the awkward conversation before getting ready for work. Andrea continued to snore.

It was four hours before Anna replied.

She was right. Alex overthought and overanalyzed everything. Alex received the message on his phone after his Zoom meeting at his work. He worked for a small communications firm called JanTec. Most of the staff came into the office one or two days due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, so virtual meetings were held on Mondays and Tuesdays the majority of the time. It was much easier that way. Regardless, Alex disliked what he did with a passion.

Alex stared at his phone in his office for a few minutes before responding. Andrea, who also worked from home in the same office, asked what he was looking at. “It’s nothing, just a message from an old friend.” When she asked who, he mentioned a childhood friend who got in contact with him about a death in the family. She looked him up and down before shrugging in disinterest. She continued to design a newsletter for one of her client’s upcoming email campaigns. Unlike Alex, Andrea loved her job. She was an independent freelancer, after all. True to his fashion and current mental state, Alex both admired and hated this about his girlfriend.

He decided to play it cool on his message back to Anna.

That last stupid comment tasted like shit in his mouth. Sure, he barely knew Anna. It had been years since any communication. He vaguely remembered seeing pictures of her kid and husband on Facebook—otherwise, just radio silence. But something easy about her demeanor made him want to talk to her more. In his therapy sessions later on down the line, he would describe this curated nonchalance as “Bitchy Manic Pixie Dreamgirl Chic.”

He thought about leaving it alone and simply going back to work. He set his phone down and started writing an email to a coworker about an upcoming project. Halfway through his outline for an upcoming meeting, he told his girlfriend he would use the restroom. Safely in his small apartment toilet and standup shower, he decided to be authentic and tell her the truth. Why did he go to the bathroom to respond to a childhood friend?

She responded a few minutes later. This time, Alex was ready for it. He was still in the bathroom, anxiously waiting for a reply. You don’t pour your heart out like that and put your phone away. That declaration demanded a response, even if it was to tell him to fuck off forever. Either way, he was ready.

Work essentially stopped for Alex for the rest of the day. Over half an hour later, he finally exited the bathroom as a person with a purpose. Was he given a purpose? Alex thought it sounded like a homework assignment. Either way, he would do it.

“Hey Andrea, guess what?” Alex was unusually chipper coming back into their small office space.

“Alex, you were in there for a long time; I don’t need to hear about how big of a shit you just took. It’s disgusting, and so are you.” She looked up to gauge his face for any sign of resentment. Sometimes, Alex thought she openly looked for ways to find it, like she got off on it. He cleared his throat and spoke up.

“No, Andrea. It’s not like that. I just wanted to let you know that I will write something tonight. Like something original.” She laughed loudly, making Alex step back towards his desk.

“You’re going to write something?” She was giggling the entire time she got the words out. “You have talked about becoming a writer for our three-year relationship. I have seen exactly one short story in that time, and it wasn’t the best.” This declaration of distaste came from a woman who reads fantasy novels about elven sexual intercourse exclusively.

“Well, I am. Either it’s a poem or a short story. But, whatever it is, I am going to do it. I am committed.” When she asked him what made him want to dust off his old hobby, he said he felt motivated by something somebody said at work. That was a bald-faced lie. The first of a few, he would tell his girlfriend over the next few months. For whatever reason, he wanted to impress Anna.

That night, while Andrea snoozed away with military precision, Alex sat on his couch with his laptop and a notebook he last used several years ago for “interesting writing ideas.” When he found it buried in a drawer underneath a large stack of his 2019 and 2020 taxes and a stack of cashed checks dating back to 2016, he hoped there would be a holy grail of information to draw from.

Nope. There was almost nothing. Only four pages had any writing, and most of it was illegible. There was a note dating back to 2016 for a “short story – hearing neighbor through walls – or poem – whatever.” Maybe he could write a short story about a man in an apartment complex who heard something he shouldn’t have through the walls of his home. Not too bad.

He started slow at first. Soon, the words came to him in the old familiar way he knew and used to love. He started the evening writing to music with headphones. He enjoyed the gentle click-clack of his laptop keyboard more and turned the music off. It was soothing, even if he made the same noises during the workday. Those always sounded annoying. This was bliss. His fingers, slow at first, kept to a machine gun rapidly after the first half an hour of writing.

He drew from a bit of his own life to help round out the short story. He figured he would use the backdrop of his rocky relationship with Andrea to create a basis for what would happen. Essentially, a single man hears a couple arguing night after night through the wall of his apartment. Over time, he got used to it and even set his evenings to the late-night yelling matches. One night, the fight began as usual, around 10 in the evening. Then, about twenty minutes after it ended, he heard a series of loud crashes and more screaming. It didn’t seem like a fight and more like a struggle. Was it an argument or a break-in? Were they in danger? The man had to decide. He left the end ambiguous and wrapped up the story’s eight thousand words around 2 a.m. He closed the laptop and strolled from the office past the bathroom to the last room down the hall. He collapsed into bed and closed his eyes. He fell asleep almost immediately.

He awoke nearly five hours later and couldn’t wait to send it to Anna.

Was he hallucinating, or was Anna being a little flirty with him?

Anna did not get back to him for nearly two days. The anticipation ate at him like a cancer. The hardest part was playing it cool and not messaging her asking if she had read “From the Walls.” It was a good thing he didn’t have her phone number. Otherwise, he would have texted for an update on his latest opus.

He kept calm, at least in his mind. When he and Andrea ate dinner that evening, she got on his case about staring at his phone every five seconds. “This isn’t like you,” she said. “I don’t know why you keep staring at your phone, but I’d like you to stop.” Alex ignored her request. Soon, though, she was fast asleep, and the “writer” spent the evening pretending not to care about his phone by doing other things. At one point, he cleaned his entire kitchen while his phone sat idly on the counter with every notification known to his iPhone on and ready to go off.

Did she not write back because it was so dogshit? Was she not responding as a non-violent form of protest against Alex’s supposed hobby? Several similar thoughts ran through his head. He settled on her being too busy or overcome with his writing quality. He knew it wasn’t the latter, but in his mind, he would accept anything to move on theoretically.

She got back to him the following afternoon. By then, all pretenses were gone. Alex was a complete emotional wreck. He almost fell out of his chair when his phone dinged on his desk. The rejuvenated writer immediately rushed to answer it in the restroom. He didn’t even pause to excuse himself in front of Andrea.

But he wasn’t sure if he was OK with it. He was almost sure of it. He closed his eyes and waited for the response. The chat bubbles seemed to flash in front of his eyes for hours. He finally got his response three minutes later. All his other work would have to wait. There was only this response at this point in his life. This moment. Nothing else. He wasn’t sure if it was a make-or-break point, but it felt like one.

“YES!” Alex yelled enthusiastically from the confines of the bathroom. Andrea did not hear him because she had her headphones on while working. He couldn’t believe it. A (relatively) rave review about something he wrote? And from somebody with some taste. That meant something, too.

Sure, she’s a mom and married with a kid and everything. But she had it. Well, at least from the recent pictures she posted on her Facebook page. Alex wasn’t sure if he was so excited because he found her attractive or because his recent conversations with her made him feel interested, wanted, and restored.

She loved something he did. Love may be a strong word. But she didn’t outright say it sucked. Andrea only had a passing interest in his writing, even if it was a poem he wrote for her that got her to go out with him all those years ago. Anna rightly guessed that it drew from real life. He guessed it was hard to hide. The words spilled out on the page. Alex wondered whether he was talking too much about his personal life with her. It probably didn’t matter. But it could mean everything. He tried to shrug it off and continue to play it cool.

Alex thought very carefully about his response. He wanted to go with his gut and be truthful while simultaneously remembering that he was in a relationship, and she was married with a kid and lived hundreds of miles away. Alex mulled it over for another thirty seconds before responding. He didn’t want to lose the pregnant moment.

There was an infiniteness to talking to Anna. He couldn’t quite explain it. Time stood still and moved too fast at the same time. Maybe it was an illusion. Feelings work that way, especially when you haven’t been given time and attention by somebody you love. Then somebody who talks to you comes along and breathes some new life into an otherwise mundane existence. He wasn’t sure what he felt, but it was something more than a casual conversation.

In whatever multiverse where Alex would shoot his shot, he did so. Fuck it. If it all came crashing down, Alex surmised, he would be down one old family friend and a Facebook contact. He didn’t even have a phone number. It would be as if she continued to not exist like the last decade of his existence. He gulped once while he sat motionless on the toilet seat in his bathroom and responded.

Alex returned from the restroom with a broad smile on his face. He let out a cheerful breath and returned to his seat to answer emails.

“Wow, must have been a good one,” Andrea said. She reached across from her desk to touch his shoulder. Alex was alarmed at first, then grabbed her hand and turned around.

“It was. It was great.” Andrea wasn’t sure she liked the smile on his face, especially after he said he just took a giant shit in the bathroom. It was a more comprehensive smile than she had ever seen in their dating years. It was an idiot’s smile. She once again shrugged it off and continued working. She didn’t hear Alex complain once for the rest of the evening. He walked around with a satisfactory grin that made her question what was happening in that bathroom. She had never been the jealous type, so why start now? Alex made sure to kiss her on the forehead before she fell asleep. Andrea thought she saw him drinking coffee after dinner. Why? He already had enough trouble sleeping, so inviting that much caffeine into your bloodstream seemed almost ridiculous. And on a work night, no less. She wasn’t sure why, but she went to sleep uneasy.

Anna and Alex talked that night. Anna initiated the conversation around 9:30 at night. It started slow initially but picked up momentum after a few interactions about what each other did during the day. Alex had nothing but positive things to say. Anna had more to say about fulfilling orders for her bakery side business. With Thanksgiving coming up, it was one of the more busy times of the year. On top of all the duties of a stay-at-home mom and wife to a working husband, she needed to figure out the rationale for chatting so late.

The conversation continued for another three hours. They talked for roughly the same length the next night. Then, the night after. In his mind, Alex knew that pursuing anything more than casual conversation was a bad idea. No. It was a terrible idea. He messaged her late into the evening for the fourth night in a row.

They talked about everything and nothing at once. Over time, and after hours of conversation, Anna’s walls crumbled. This was no easy test for Alex, but he was engaged. He was methodical. And most of all, he was committed. For what, he wasn’t sure. He found himself emotionally invested in whatever these conversations were forming into.

Anna opened up more about her personal life. Her son, whom she adored more than anything on earth, was a popular topic of conversation. The older yet unmarried/childless Alex could do nothing to agree with her musings about raising a kid. Nonetheless, he stayed interested without sounding like a prick for not having one himself. She even talked a bit about her husband, Rodney, and her current struggles with him.

Two minutes later, he found out exactly what it was. Apparently, for Anna, it was a naked photo she took of her breasts. Alex couldn’t believe his eyes. He had to blink a few times to make sure it was real. Alex didn’t respond at first. He started at the screen for a solid minute before doing anything. He could feel sweat forming on the top of his brow.

He zoomed in to get a better look at it. Although it was a reflection from the mirror and not an authentic nude “selfie,” he got the picture. Anna’s breasts looked like something you saw in old dirty magazines he stole from his dad’s stash he kept under the bed. It was not the over-inflated crap that saturated pornography online nowadays. That was all easy and readily available. But it was all the same-identical girls with the same tits making the same faces at the camera, with or without a guy giving her the business end of his over-inflated dick.

Her nipples looked like two giant erasers, sitting atop two mounds of flesh he wasn’t sure were fake or not. He didn’t care. They were perfect. To be that perky in your early 40s would be a feat of bodily engineering he could not fathom. He looked over guiltily to his girlfriend, who continued to snore away, blissfully unaware. Feeling the guilt rising and his crotch turning hot, Alex got up to go to the bathroom. It was hard for him to walk. By then, his penis was almost fully erect through his basketball shorts. He could feel the heat continue to grow like a lit ruse up his spine. The sweat grew to full-on beaded droplets coming down his face.

He got to the bathroom and locked the door. The impulse to use his hands on himself was more significant than ever felt. Despite the ever-increasing urge to touch himself, he thought it courteous to reply. After all, he just received an unsolicited gift that will keep on giving in his mind for months, if not years, to come. He screenshotted the photo just in case she recalled it before responding.

The conversation continued like she didn’t just send a nude photo to Alex a few minutes ago. Alex, who graduated with a history degree, weighed in on the 1945 Dresden fire bombings. He even recommended a book he read a while back about the end of the war and its impact on German society.

Alex could not get a read on this woman. First, she showed him her breasts; then she started pontificating on the atrocities of World War II as if she pulled all that information out of her back pocket. Even after hours of conversation on topics he couldn’t fathom remembering, she was an enigma. Not the same girl he remembered all those years ago. Alex thought that it was human nature to change a bit over time. Some do it more gradually and gracefully than others. But Anna? She was something special.

The conversation fizzled around 2 a.m. Neither Alex nor Anna mentioned the nude photo at all for the remainder of the conversation. When Anna told Alex she was going to bed, he told her to have a good night and pleasant sleep. He even wished her a good day, fulfilling bakery orders tomorrow. He then proceeded to masturbate the minute the conversation ended vigorously. The time it took for him to whip his dick out could have been a world record if there was one for such a thing. It took less than a minute for him to cum. He created a secret folder in his phone for the photo, masturbated again, and crawled into bed. He fell asleep immediately.

The conversations went deeper. Longer. Sometimes, the talks went well into 3 a.m. Yet when sleep came, it was the best sleep in memory, even if for only a few hours. They didn’t talk every day at first—maybe a few interactions here and there during the day. Soon enough, they chatted for a few hours collectively during the day and through the small hours of the evening at night.

They talked about music, art, and film. Most of their favorites only partially met in the middle. Anna knew when Alex was bullshitting, so the thin veneer of constantly agreeing with her picks stopped quickly. It took very little time for him to adjust and be truthful about his interests outside of writing. Their disagreements were few, which made each conversation feel like a refreshing oasis in a desert of daily mini-fights and micro-escalations.

He always started at his home base in bed next to Andrea each time they talked. After a half hour or so, with Andrea solidly asleep, he moved out of the bedroom into the living room to chat into the evening. Alex even lit a candle a few times to “set the mood.” Sometimes, when the conversation approached mild levels of flirtation, he would bring out his computer to keep conversing with her while he touched himself to the saved picture she sent.

God bless technology.

Alex kept telling himself he was getting the best sleep of his life. In reality, his appearance and attitude made more than a few people notice, including his girlfriend and people at work. During those few days he went into the office, some of his colleagues noted the raccoon-like ring around his eyes. Despite a chipper demeanor, Alex was mentally and physically exhausted without even knowing it.

Worse yet, he grew increasingly distant with his girlfriend, Andrea. At first, she commented a few times on his cell phone habits. Those habits were never fantastic, but now it was almost as if they were connected or sewn together. Every time she saw him sitting on the couch alone, plowing away on his phone, a renewed fight began.

It became more fodder for the conversation he would inevitably have with Anna later in the evening. Like a comedian observing people shop at a grocery store, Alex’s fights with Andrea were a great source of material. In his eyes, it was the perfect way to keep the conversation from going stale.

Alex knew that the manufactured disdain was all coming from his end. Despite her focus on work and sleep, Andrea never gave him a real reason to have so much disdain.

“Did you ever think I am sleeping so much because we have nothing to say to each other?” Andrea remarked one evening in December while they cleaned up from dinner. Alex kept loading dishes into the dishwasher for a few seconds, silently staring at her.

“Look, I don’t know why you are sleeping so much. But it’s like it’s 9 p.m., and you turn into a pumpkin.” He thought about how he could turn the knife more. “I’d love to do more with you in the evenings, especially on weekends. It doesn’t matter what day it is; I’m alone in the evenings.”

Andrea looked like she was about to cry. She looked away and sniffed a few times, holding back tears. “You know, sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night, and you aren’t there. What are you doing? Where are you doing? And most importantly, who the hell are you talking to? Are you hiding something from me?”

Of course, Alex was very much hiding something from her. The only thing he could do at that moment was deny everything. “Andrea, I’m in the living room because I don’t want to stare at the ceiling for hours waiting to fall asleep. This is a small apartment, and we have one bed. You are a bit of a loud sleeper, which is OK, so I want to ensure I am exhausted before coming back to sleep with you.” Alex used his hands to illustrate the size of their room.

“Yeah, speaking of, am I not attractive to you?” Alex thought very carefully about what he would say next. Andrea was attractive. She was beautiful. He always thought she was pretty. He remembers seeing her from across a bar in DC when they first met. For a bar called the “Ugly Mug,” she was the hottest one there. He remembered briefly telling her that joke before buying her a drink. He smiled a bit and remembered why he fell in love with her in the first place. Then he remembered the accusations and decided to lay into her.

Yes, she was attractive. But there’s no adventure in seeing her ass or breasts when she gets out of the shower. It’s routine.

“Yes, of course, I do, Andrea,” he said convincingly. Her head moved to one side as if she knew he would return with a conditional “but” to finish his statement. She was right.

“But we haven’t been hot to trot for each other in a while. Sleeping is one thing, but our lack of togetherness is another. We act like the perfect couple when we are together with our friends at a party. But at night, what are we? Are we separate people?

“What do you mean separate people?” Andrea stopped cleaning up and set a dish down. She took two steps towards Alex and made him back into the kitchen corner with the sink on the left and the dishwasher on the right. She had him cornered. “So, our relationship is solely based on how often I fuck you?” Of course, it wasn’t, but they hadn’t slept together in two or three months.”

“Of course not, Andrea,” he said with concern. It felt genuine. “It’s not like that. I worry that we aren’t spending enough time together.

“Well, look at yourself. You spent all your time glued to that goddamn phone. Where would there be time for me, sleep or not?” She had a point, and he hated it. He looked at her with a dumb look that said he had nothing left in the emotional tank to empty. She threw a dish towel at him that he caught in mid-air. “Fine, Alex. I love you, but you’ve been pissing me the fuck off lately. Do whatever it is on your phone if it makes you happy. I hope you are telling the truth about everything.”

“Andrea, I do love you, and I am. It’s just a coping mechanism. I know scrolling is bad for most, but it’s soothing for me. That’s all I am doing: a few Wikipedia articles here and there. I can also show you my Duolingo score if you don’t believe I am also re-learning Spanish. I want to be productive with my time as I deal with this insomnia, you know?” He did not have those Duolingo scores but figured he would gamble with another lie. What’s one more?

“OK, Alex. I love you. Please work on coming to bed earlier or see a doctor about it. I worry about you.” She kissed him on the cheek and went back to the bedroom.

“I love you too, Andrea,” Alex said, kissing her back. He couldn’t believe everything that just happened. How many times does that make for the stretch of the truth? There are too many to count. For a minute, he even believed what he said. Either way, there was plenty of stuff to discuss with Anna that evening.

Intro: Well, Are You?

He feels his heart beating faster. He can’t blame it all on the screen time. It’s the 21st century, after all. We are all walking automatons staring at different types of screens all day. They are all different varieties with similar heights and finishes. With the shallowly lit computer screen staring back at him, something about this moment makes his breathing more shallow and forced. Something about the words on the screen gives him pause.

It’s different from the thousands of words he usually types. Different combinations of the exact words strung together like some occupational Jenga: “We can circle back on that later” mixes well with “Please advise” and “Let’s set up a Zoom call for the afternoon of the 14th.” Different combinations are going out to the world, all with the same message: this is the vehicle to get the machinations of money moving. It is a means to an end – what end, nobody knows. But the work emails string together in utter nonsense but come out white as snow on the other side. Nobody knows how, and nobody cares how. But in this moment, the words on the screen matter.

You aren’t sending it to send it. You’ve thought about it carefully. Hell, you made several drafts. You don’t even do that for important work emails. You wrote and deleted words before coming up with the perfect sentence to send. Is it the recipient? It’s not a communication to another office drone this time. This time, it matters more. This time, there is more on the line mentally and less on the line literally. The touch and go of daily life spelled out with your fingertips. And here you are: waiting to hit “enter” to the perfect execution of your thoughts, ideas, hopes, and beliefs. All in this moment, there is nothing else that matters. You can’t tell if this will be a blip in the soundtrack to your life or if this is the song you’ll play at your funeral. So you say the words aloud as you type, retype, edit, and delete. Start over. Exit out of the screen and enter again. All to say the same word in different variations – but now it sounds like work. It feels like work, which you don’t like. You will try to detach those emotions from this seemingly emotional moment. You finally release all your feelings and anxiety and hit enter. The words pop up on the screen like the results of a game show. You smirk in satisfaction as you await a response. This is what accomplishment feels like.

All for four words: “Hey, are you up?”

Return to In the Chat Box: Stories of Digital Love and Disdain

Story Dice #1: Take Me Home (Old Country Buffet)

In which I generate five random story dice and create a short story out of it. See the full list of stories HERE.


Terry could not believe she said yes. She honestly seemed excited when he told her where they were going. When she gave him a list of what she was into after they matched online, Terry was perplexed to say the least. His match, Lisa, wanted the following out of their dinner date spot:

  • Fun, but eclectic with a “dose of nostalgia”
  • Not fancy, but clean
  • Somewhere with a lot of people (She noted her love of the sound of “busy;” whatever the fuck that meant
  • Somewhere cheap (As she said, “it’s just a first date – no need to break the bank”)
  • And finally, somewhere that will make her laugh upon reveal

Terry kept their initial conversation fun and flirty. Secretly, he stressed about what location could encompass all of those extremely specific things. To him, it seemed like a really tall order. Lots of expectations. He ended their first chat exchange with a promise to reveal their date spot a few hours before he picked her up. She lived only twenty minutes in the neighboring town, so he began looking through Google Maps and Yelp to find a spot that fit the exact description of clean, nostalgic, and cheap. About five minutes into his search, he found it: Country Time Buffet. 

The restaurant sat tucked away in the corner of a shopping center he sometimes went to for his dog’s speciality food. The reviews were okay for a buffet of its vintage. The pictures inside reminded him of going to Old Country Buffet with his family as a kid. It hit all the points that Lisa wanted and more. The gold-tinted buffet islands. The outdated menu selection with familiar favorites the whole family could enjoy. A website with only the address and business hours listed (in Courier font no less). The early-1990s carpet that probably hadn’t been replaced in years, if at all. The only thing he wasn’t quite sure of was the cleanliness. A few of the reviews on Yelp pointed to that. He hoped “not fancy” was more important than a place being ostensibly clean. 

Terry picked up Lisa at 6:30 pm. They got Starbucks and drove around for a bit to get to know one another. Terry loved her bubbly personality. She even managed to laugh at a few of his jokes. They arrived at Country Time Buffet around 7:15 pm. When they walked in, the place was almost completely empty. Lisa giggled with excitement as Terry payed in advance for their admission into the buffet. There were five separate buffet areas oriented in a giant “U” shape. Terry noticed a booth in the back with a group of kids, likely the owners’, working on schoolwork while an older woman vacuumed the aging carpet in an empty seating area near them. 

“So, yeah, I guess we can pick a booth and go at it,” he said. The half smile he gave Lisa was one of half-confidence. He would never dream of taking a first date to a three-star buffet in the back of a strip mall. But here they were, and she still had a smile on her face. That had to account for something. 

They sat down briefly in a booth near the front entrance to set their coats down. In their hands, they already had their drink cups and their first plate. The woman at the register in the front, likely the matriarch of the family business, made it a point to hand out the first plate because “they had been discouraging people to come in with tupperware and eat us out of business.” So, it seemed it was a modestly priced Buffett ($15.75 got you entrance to the good eats with all the soda, water, or tea you wanted). Coffee was oddly extra. 

After a few more careless chit-chats about their strategy, Lisa touched Terry’s arm and made her way to the salad section. Terry headed to the soup first. Growing up in the northeast, soup was a way of life for nearly the entire year. You ate your chowder when it was cold out, and you still had it in the summer to savor the best catch from the Atlantic. He grabbed a bowl from the side of the soup stand adjacent to the salad station and placed it on his first plate. He glanced over at Lisa busily arranging a series of healthy toppings onto a bed of romaine lettuce. 

He looked down at the steaming circles and saw the three soup options, all uncovered and blistering in the heat from the yellow lamp above it: broccoli cheddar, some sort of chicken noodle, and New England clam chowder. Terry thought none of the options looked good. He glanced over at the salad bar to find it empty. Lisa was already back at her seat and on her phone, waiting for Terry to return to start eating. He looked around at the other four parties seated around the large dining area. Nobody had soup. Was that a coincidence. He was about to exit the area when the woman who took his money came up from behind him. 

“What’s wrong?” She said in an elevated tone. Her brow furrowed. “Are you not hungry?”

“No, it’s not that,” he said, “I was just wondering if I wanted soup or not.” He felt that was a good enough lie to get him a quick exit out of the soup and into some healthy greens. The lady grabbed his soup bowl and ladled a large amount of soup from the third selection. 

“You do. Here, try the clam chowder. I made it fresh today.” Terry wasn’t so sure, because there was a slick of oil on the top that was so thick he thought America might invade it. The lady gave him a smile that felt uncomfortable and walked back into the kitchen. Terry grabbed a packet of oyster crackers and headed towards the table. 

When Terry got back to the table, Lisa quickly set her phone down and greeted him with her smile. 

“Shall we eat,” she exclaimed as she bit into her first few bites of salad. Terry smiled back, staring down at his soup-adjacent liquid contained in his tan plastic bowl. The bowl had a small hole on one side, just in case you wanted to chug the chunks like a hot lemon tea. 

He took his first bite as he talked to her about his job. He choked through it as he got to the point of discussing the finer parts of defense consulting. The soup tasted even oilier than it looked. The chunks of clam tasted somehow like wet pearl onions. He wasn’t exactly sure if they were even thawed from their frozen state yet. Definitely from a can. The lady was correct in saying the soup was made that day. She never said it was any good. It was not. But he continued to chat with Lisa as he politely finished the bowl. 

After they talked for a few more minutes, they realized their first course was done. Time for the main show. They walked together up to the buffet area together and grabbed a plate. This time, they both walked through the hot food section together, chatting as they selected from the usual assortment of homestyle favorites like green beans, mashed potatoes, fried chicken and meatloaf. She was heavy on the green beans. He went heavy on the meatloaf for some reason. Once again, none of it looked promising. 

Terry felt the first twinge in his stomach about four bites into his main course. It couldn’t have been the food he ate earlier. He never ate heavy on the day of a date. He did the mental gymnastics in his head and thought all that he had that day: two eggs, a cliff bar, and a small bag of chips from his work’s vending machine. No. This had to be the damned clam chowder with the barely edible clams from the Exxon Valdez spill. He cleared his throat a few times and kept eating. The lady came by and took their plates from the first course and refilled their iced tea and water glasses. 

“How did you like the chowder?” 

“It was fantastic. Just like home.” Terry knew that she knew he was fucking with her, despite his best impression of politeness. Her smile quickly turned to a frown. He thought he saw a bit of disgust.  

“Well, just a reminder, we close at 8:30 sharp, so don’t sit in here all night eating all this good food.” 

“Will do, m’am,” Lisa said with a pleasant gaze that brought back the lady’s smile. All the while, the low murmurs in his stomach became a full blown growl. By the time he finished his serving of mashed potatoes and half the meatloaf, the pain from his stomach traveled up into his chest and nearly through the esophagus. Whatever was in there wanted to leave. Now. He couldn’t tell if he was sweating or not, but he sure felt like it. 

“Will you…p..please excuse me,” he stuttered to her.

“Oh, sure. Are you okay?” She seemed genuinely concerned as she finished up her plate of vegetables. 

“Yeah, no. I am good. Just need to wash up real quick.” Of course everyone knows when you say “yeah, no,” it really just means just “no.” Also, washing up in your second plate of food was insane. He knew it. She probably knew it. But he did’t have time to explain more. He had to get to the bathroom. 

Terry sprinted towards the back corner of the restaurant to a swinging door. There was only one restroom with a single toilet and it was occupied. He banged on the door as the clam chunks began to rise. 

“PLEASE. .PL..HRRRRRR…EASE…” I need to go to the bathroom.” He banged on it a few more times. He gagged even more.

“HEY! Just a minute buddy.” It sounded like an older gentleman was in there. He wasn’t sure what the bathroom would look like. The place was relatively clean, but even relatively clean places that have bathrooms that look like the scene from Trainspotting. At this point, he didn’t care. He would blow chunks in a fucking Christmas stocking if he had one. 

Three minutes later, a short older man with thick glasses walked out of the restroom. “Here you go, asshole. Take your time, buddy.” Terry didn’t even acknowledge him. By now, the full-on flop sweat started to soak into his dress shirt. He stormed into the restroom and immediately expelled the tea, chowder, mashed potatoes, and whatever meatloaf he managed to put into his body into the toilet. It felt like hot rocks were shooting out of his mouth. He could taste everything as it came up, which made him throw up even more. He finished his vomit session with a few whimpers and spits into the toilet about three minutes later. 

After flushing away the evidence, he cleaned himself up as best he could in the mirror. Terry splashed water on his face to get some color back. It didn’t work. He stayed in the bathroom for a few more minutes to compose himself. He knew he wasn’t going to eat. He would instead ask the woman for a coffee cup. Hell, he’d even pay for it. They couldn’t fuck up coffee, right? 

He exited the restroom about twelve minutes after first entering his vomit-fest. Lisa was not there. A short note written in pencil on a napkin now sat where her finished plate of food was. Terry could only laugh after reading it. 

“Terry – this was fun, but really? A fucking buffet? I wanted nostalgic, not trashy. Don’t break the bank, but damn…not here boo. I’m sure you are a nice guy, but this isn’t it. Better luck next time, kiddo. Thanks for the mediocre food. Hope you found whatever you are looking for in there. You didn’t look so hot before you left. My girlfriend picked me up. I was texting her the minute we got in. You did make me laugh, though. Ciao.”

Terry stared at the note for a few more minutes before the lady came back around to collect the plates. 

“Are you all alone now?” She asked. There was now a smug look of satisfaction on her face he didn’t like. 

“I am. I guess it wasn’t meant to be.” 

“It never was,” she said as she walked away with the empty plates.

Terry thought about just getting up to leave when he suddenly felt the urge for some dessert. How bad can defrosted cheesecake be anyway? 

He had three pieces before heading home. The lady gave him a cup of coffee. On the house. 

A Seat at the Table

I don’t want the shallow conversation,
The one-sided silent heartbreak that comes
every time the minutes to turn hours and then days.

The petty recourse like half-warm leftovers,
Sitting alone at the table
waiting to be pushed around carelessly by a fork.

I don’t need to eat,
I just want a seat at the table.

I don’t want the whole,
I just want a piece of the process.

The muscle memory,
Eyes closed, breathing out
and waiting for the pregnant pause:

Read, but not responded.

5 Songs (For a Rainy Day)

It’s going to rain today. A lot. 

My daughter is sleeping in bed next to me, and I am staring out at the cold, gray sky through my bedroom window waiting for it to happen. There are always a few songs I put on as my go-to when it rains — a nice combination of old favorites and relatively new songs (for me) that set my mind to stare at the rain and reflect on everything. 

Bridge Over Troubled Water” – Simon and Garfunkel 

You know those rain sticks they used to sell at the Discovery store back in the early 1990s? Can’t you just visualize playing with one of those in the background while you listen to this song? There is something so comforting about Art Garfunkel’s voice. Always seen as the lesser of the two artists, I have always been a stan for Art. Don’t get me wrong, I love Paul Simon. Graceland is an absolute fucking masterpiece. But he wouldn’t be half as popular without the vocal range of Art Garfunkel. 

By the middle of the song, his voice sort of melts into the melody. The choir-like chorus effect evokes the feeling of butter melting in pain. It all kind of spreads out. The strings that come in pair perfectly with the sharp snare sound set in the background of the recording. There is a component to the song that kind of sounds like gospel music, which I love. Religious without being religious? Sign me up. 

The instrumentals for the song were performed by the famous Wrecking Crew, known for their “Wall of Sound” production. It comes through here. 

This song sounds great on a computer, but best if you have it on vinyl. And I am sure if you don’t have a copy, your parents do. Steal it. Put it on while the rain first starts falling with a hot beverage and look out the window. You will feel things, I promise. 

Listen HERE.

Lullaby” – The Cure 

I came into The Cure very late in the game. I think up until about a decade or so ago, the only Cure songs I knew were “Friday, I’m in Love” and “Just Like Heaven.” I’m not ashamed to admit it. Getting into them in the last few years makes me feel a little bit like a poser, but that’s okay. Music shouldn’t be gatekept, which I hate (even when I did it from time to time over the years). I remember listening to this album about eight or nine years ago. I don’t think Spotify was a thing back then, so I must have listened to one of those YouTube playlists that had each song strung together. This is the song that stuck out with me the most. 

It’s spooky without being overly dramatic and goth-like Sisters of Mercy (who I do not like – “Lucretia My Reflection” sounds like a goth version of the “Hokey Pokey”). It just gels well when you want to feel a little sad while it’s raining. Maybe you’re thinking about lost love or past mistakes. Maybe it’s just the fact that you have to get the paper while it’s pouring like I do. Either way, it’s one of my favorites. 

The best part of the song, and The Cure in general, is the bass playing. The clean, chorus melody and keyboard are the spooky forces of the song, no doubt. But it’s Simon Gallup who drives it through and gives the song bounce and character. As much as I like this song, without the solid bass line that locks into the drumming, it would be like a rejected Clan of Xymox b-side. It’s all about that bass. 

Do you know how some people always joke that you could fuck to a movie soundtrack when Prince did the entire Batman album? This is that version for goth/post-punk. You have Simon Gallup to thank for that. Not saying you have to do that but…you have to do that. 

Listen HERE.

Cloudbusting” – Kate Bush 

Whose up bustin’ they cloud?

As far as songs to listen to in the rain, this is of course an easy pick and quite low-hanging fruit. But I love it for one reason. There are no cymbals. Not in this song or the entire Hounds of Love album. Kate’s voice is angelic and inspiring, but the syncopating drum part is what makes it. Her voice rolls with it, which was her own stylistic choice when they recorded it. Perfection. 

There have been a few times when the end lyrics “Ohh, just saying it could even make it happen/Your son’s coming out” have made me tear up a little bit. Daddy issues? Me? No way. 

I love songs that have lore tied to them, and there’s lots of lore tied to this one. That goes double for the music video. There’s an eccentric psychiatrist and philosopher and a machine built to bust clouds of rain. Laboratories and arrests? Sign me up. 

I need to listen to more of Kate Bush beyond Hounds of Love. It’s just hard to stop listening to most of it, front to back. This song, though, as the last song on the A side of the vinyl is perfection. Put it on when the rain begins to let up. Kate Bush wanted some ethereal tones, which you will certainly feel when you play it. 

Listen HERE.

“Star Witness” – Neko Case 

As much as I like the New Pornographers, I like Neko Case as a solo artist much more. Her songs always put me in a somber mood. Not in a bad way, necessarily. But the bass in her voice makes me think of her as a modern-age indie Patsy Cline. I love it. 

This song, though, fucks me up. I (sort of) dated a girl (not gonna say what we all called dating back in 2008) a long time ago who loved Neko Case. I remember going to Borders in Virginia Beach to buy this record, listening to it as we drove down the oceanfront and through Shore Drive. I remember passing into the darkness of the trees on that road when this song came on. I never loved her, and she never loved me, but we shared a connection through music. 

Neko’s voice in this song reminds me of rain falling. It’s steady and cold when it’s chilly out and warm when the sun is shining. Just try not to think about the subject matter of the song while you put it on. 

Listen HERE.

The Sharp Hint of New Tears” – Dashboard Confessional

Ok, so there’s probably no sense in hiding it: I am an emotional bitch. If I had to think about the genesis of it, I would blame Dashboard Confessional. I had a burned CD of The Swiss Army Romance, and I pretty much made it my personality for a few years alongside The Promise Ring’s Nothing Feels Good. 

Are you feeling sad? Listen to this song. Do you want to feel sad? Listen to this song. Feeling good? Don’t listen to this song. Want to catch a vibe while it’s raining? Listen to this song. 

This song inspired me to write poetry. Was it good? No. But it did. 

I can’t say I care much for anything that Chris did beyond this record. I still listen to it, especially when I am feeling nostalgic and introspective (which is quite often). I am not yearning for that past, but am fond of the memory and (relatively little) pain it left behind. I bought an acoustic guitar when I was seventeen years old. I can’t in full confidence say it was because of Dashboard Confessional…but it was probably due in large part to Dashboard Confessional. 

We were all so dumb back then. I was an emotional bitch back then, and I still am now. Just be nice to me, or else I’m gonna take the long way home from work while it’s raining and crank this, ok? 

Listen HERE.

Honorable Mention: 

Riders on the Storm” – The Doors

The song starts with rain and thunder. It’s too easy. Even if the song is perfect for it. Most songs by the Doors are good to listen to when it rains. Or when you are doing hard drugs. I only suggest the former. Just let the song build around you when the rain rolls in. 

It’s Not Me, It’s You: My Breakup with Naval History

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In four years of working in Washington, D.C., this man scootering across 11th street near the Navy Yard was my favorite.

If anyone knows me, you know I am very serious about my job. It’s always been that way. That is, until recently.

Two days ago, a very prominent figure in the field with a penchant for very loud ties came by the office to talk to the historian. When I told him he wasn’t there, he began to talk about his many accolades, adding:

“As you know, naval historians have a stigma of being primadonnas that are hard to work with. You don’t have that problem because you’re not a historian.”

I gave him the same look I’ve given these assholes every time something like this is said to me. It’s not the first time, but it will be the last.

Me: “Why am I not a historian?”

Him: “Do you have a Ph.D.?”

Me: “No. Is that a requirement?”

Him: “Well No, but….you know what I mean.”

Me: “No, I don’t. But okay.”

He looked awkward at me before I gave him the universal “it’s okay to leave now” gesture. This little interaction isn’t the reason why I have grown to distaste the field, but it is surely indicative of why I feel no shame in turning my back to it.

He is right. I’m not a historian. And he was in his eyes. He wins. But you know what? Who the fuck cares? I know what I am. I worked in the field of naval history and did some cool stuff. I succeeded some and failed a lot, but I enjoyed it. I don’t have to tell people about it like a status symbol. So many naval historians do. The best and brightest people in naval history are also the most humble. My many experiences with the McMullen Naval History Symposium taught me that.

So what am I? Good at my job – a job that became thankless over the last year. So it was time for me to go. I think, in other areas, my career in naval history would be better (it was great for the most part at Hampton Roads), I slowly grew disenchanted with the entire genre of military history. If my ultimate goal was to bring naval history out of the hands of academics and into those of the general people, then I have to say that I failed (with a caveat of small successes here and there). Also: fuck that guy and his stupid fucking ties.

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Me at Battleship Wisconsin, c. 2009

Naval history as a whole refuses to move forward. Although there are some individuals who are doing remarkable things in the field (you know who you are), in general, I have seen an apathetic approach to moving the discipline towards the general public. Sure, they will get their fix every December 7th or discovery of a shipwreck, but the buck stops there.

For the most part, the true consumers of naval history are the ones who say that Donald Trump is doing a good job because Fox News says so. Hey. Don’t blame me. These are demographics. I have the proof if you don’t believe me.

I gave my heart and soul to naval history when I was 22. I dedicated my life to it. When my other friends partied on weekends, I made craft projects and educational programs. I am leaving NHF and naval history and going to a place that applauds that work ethic. I couldn’t be happier. I can’t wait to get back to EDUCATING THE PUBLIC, not watching the same small group of old white men jerk each other off with their publications nobody reads.

So I must say goodbye to naval history. I’m not mad, but clearly a little bitter. That will subside in time. I don’t know if it will be forever, but it will be a very long time before I see a historic photo of a battleship without cringing. We had some good years together, but like all relationships built entirely on passion, the fire dies eventually.

So, here is my exit interview. Five suggestions for the REAL historians with Ph.D.s who want to further the field for the future:

1. Listen to museums. They’re way more important than you will ever acknowledge. Trust me.

2. Get creative. It doesn’t always work (in fact, it only works a quarter of the time), but take risks in your research. There are many younger men and women that are doing this now. Recognize them.

3. Get over yourself. You don’t need a Ph.D. to be an established historian. You don’t need a degree or any of that. It doesn’t make you any better than anybody else and does nothing to further the field. All you are doing is pushing good people away. There are people in the field who recognize this (literally the most senior naval historian IN THE WORLD has told me this in person), so it’s nothing new.

4. Millenial historians are better than you were in your youth. Millennial currently studying naval history (and there are a few) are doing amazing work right now. It’s more sustainable than the stuff you did in the 1970s. It’s better overall work than you did as well. Blame it on all the avocado toast we are all eating.

5. Naval history requires a different approach to move forward. Get out of the “old way” that history is written, published, and taught and move forward before it’s too late. I truly mean this.

I still thank “naval history” for giving me a profound start to my career. It’s hard to say goodbye, but easy letting you go. Maybe we’ll see each other in another life when the fighting stops.

 

Breakup Text #3 – I Know

A new writing series highlighting the ways we say goodbye to one another. 250 words or less. Sometimes, that is all it takes. These stories are works of fiction. Some are inspired by real events. [Main Page]

“You’re stupid fucking game is CLEARLY more important than us.” Rose stared straight at him. She wore a form-fitting dress and heels. Her makeup looked impeccable. She even wore the new skimpy pair of underwear from Victoria’s Secret for a “just in case” scenario. Her boyfriend clearly forgot that it was date night.

Jim sat there, feigning interest in the conversation. He still wore the sweatpants and stained sweatshirt he put on the minute he got home from work an hour ago. Why was she bothering him? After all, these rebel scum are not going to die without the help of his upgraded Darth Vader character avatar. He already maxed out all his characters with weapons and upgrades. This was his time to shine.

“Fuck you, Jim. I hope you enjoy your game, asshole.” She slammed the door shut, rattling the adjacent wall where is limited edition Empire Strikes Back movie poster. She continued to yell in the hallway. A minute later, her Honda Civic sputtered to life, zooming to a galaxy far, far way. He didn’t need to know it was over. He could feel her hate flowing through him.

Jim paused the game and walked to the poster, fixing it straight. He knew the mistake he just made, powerless to do anything. He stared at the door and wiped away a solid tear, holding back the full emotion. He could use that in his next few rounds. “I know,” he said and unpaused the game.