Part Two: Meeting Good People Under Bad Circumstances, 3

“It’s all ego, partner.” Dallas was laying down in the bath tub, and the man was sitting between the toilet and the wall. “You’ve imagined a perfect version of yourself that you can’t measure up to. You think everyone is watching you and everything is your fault.”

“That’s right.” The guy nodded sagely. His eyes were swollen from crying.

“But no one cares about you man. They’re all just living their lives. When you can’t recognize that, where are you? Thinking a bird is mocking you, taking chirps personally? Brother that bird is just a bird.”

“It raised its crest so condescendingly. I feel like if a bird doesn’t respect me, I don’t deserve to respect myself.”

“That is the most alcoholic shit I’ve ever heard.”

“I don’t really drink like that,” the man said. “I don’t know what came over me. I never believed in that wild night shit, but-”

“Man I saw your needle.” He opened his mouth to explain himself, but Dallas held out his hand. “You talked to me about anxiety and guilt and obsessed over a cockatoo. Its a thinking problem, not a drinking problem.” The man nodded along. “I did a shit ton of drugs too, but that’s not the point.”

“Its not?”

“No man. I feel just like you do. ‘I’m such a good guy, my intentions are so good, why don’t these birds like me?’ Like I’m the main fucking character.”

“Shit,” the guy said. “Do you ever feel like, I dunno, like you’ll never be worth anything? Like you don’t deserve a second chance?”

“Every day dude.” Dallas said. “I feel like the biggest piece of shit in the world every day. That’s the malady. Ego.” Dallas stood and rubbed his back. “Come to a meeting.”

“I think I will.”

“You think?”

“I will. I just will.” Dallas held his arms out for a hug. “Man I’m covered in rice and bird shit.”

“No worries I sleep in this suit.” Dallas hugged him and held on when he tried to pull away. “Relax. Allow yourself to be comforted.” He did. Dallas released him and patted him on the back. “It works if you work it, and you’re worth it,” he told him with a grin, then led him out of the bathroom.

The man noticed Dzerassae by the window as Dallas lead him to the front steps. “By the way, what are you guys doing here?”

“We weren’t here.” Dallas stared at him hard then shut the door.

“You do Amy style therapy?” Dzerassae asked.

“No, we fucked,” Dallas said. “I’m pansexual now. He had a beautiful soul and I rawdogged it!” He did a baseball slide back to the window. “What’d I miss?”

“Men have come to greet Zengrel,” Dzerassae said.

“Jesus these guys couldn’t wait to see some thirteen year olds! Who came?”

“I’ve noticed several-”

“-both meanings of the word.”

“Several men. Some from Real Estate, one who ‘work’ in tech ‘industry.’ A researcher from University. Two from Intelligence.” Dallas was taken aback. “I can tell my kind.”

“Are they investigating him?” She shrugged. Dallas grabbed his binoculars and they watched a man pull up on a rent-a-bike, wearing a beige Italian suit with pink and yellow stripes. Short ponytail, trim beard.

“Cesare Attolini,” Dallas said. “Ponytail aside, dude’s got style. Obviously I only wear short-shorts when I bike, so that it looks even gayer, but respect.” The guards were suspicious and hostile but he had them laughing in minutes. Even from distance his mannerisms put a begrudging smirk on Dallas’ face. One of them went inside to get Zengrel without even demanding a bribe.

It was clear from Zengrel’s demeanor that they didn’t know each other, but the stranger had him chatting enthusiastically within moments. “I like twelve year olds,” Dallas mumbled, “well I prefer ’em a little younger. You’re alright buddy, come on in!” Zengrel had a guard call an Uber for his new friend. A handshake turned into a hug, then the stranger disappeared into the car. Zengrel ordered one of the guards to walk the bike back.

“We have hundreds of files on everyone connected to Zengrel; I’ve committed all their faces to memory in case I ever see one in an alley. I have no clue who that was. Intelligence?” Dallas asked.

“If we find nothing on him, then is likely. If he is new aspiring member of cabal, then he is vulnerability. They won’t protect him, he won’t protect them—we may have found weak link.”


Ellis hung his head between his knees. She seemed so nice; he just wanted a friendly acquaintance he could greet in the hallway sometimes. But he wasn’t thinking about her, he was being a boundary crossing busy-body and a white knight and now she’d avoid him and tell everyone he’s a weirdo who gets in peoples’ business.

Yo,” Sascha said.

“Hey…” Ellis rasped miserably.

She plopped down in a chair near him. “He finally shut up! Sorry about that, I’m so embarrassed.”

“I shouldn’t have antagonized him.”

“That was all him! I’m impressed you didn’t swing on him.”

“I’m sorry I didn’t go downstairs,” Ellis moped.

“Laundry room was a great idea. I think you in earshot kept him in check. He’s all about appearances, especially around other men. Hey, what’s the matter?” She scooted to the seat next to him.

“I didn’t mean to get involved in your business,” Ellis said.

“That wasn’t my business. It had nothing to do with me, I’m just the ball. Plus they did it right in the hallway. I am incredibly not angry at you. You helped in a way that a responsible stranger or a nice neighborshould have, and you didn’t escalate it. You’re good, we’re good.”

It wasn’t fair that she was cheering him up. He needed to switch gears. “Sorry. We just met and I don’t wanna be weird.” He put his hand in his pocket, and his face flushed with embarrassment.

“You had your key the whole time didn’t you?”


11:23PM. Zengrel was visited by a white man with blonde hair wearing a suit and rawhide moccasins. Shaman Aditsan Spread Eagle, previously Daniel Bauer, was an self-proclaimed Native American spiritual guide. And a self-proclaimed Native American, allowing him to legally distribute peyote. He ran a racket guiding wealthy start-up owners through expensive ‘spirit journeys’ where they mostly tripped balls in the prairie and suffered heat stroke.

“I used to respect his hustle,” Dallas said, “then Amy taught me about cultural appropriation. Now I don’t even eat tacos. Also he operates a compound linked to several disappearances. Allegedly!”

11:43PM. Zengrel was visited by a tall, rotund man in an over-sized suit and an over-sized cowboy hat. He was always slit-eyed and grinning like he found the whole world trite and amusing. Mearl Marland, the CEO of Greenway Fracking, famous for aggressively lobbying for fracking in residential districts. Dallas remembered the billboards promoting, ‘freedom to pump profit out your own backyard.’ This lead to a marked increase in polluted drinking water, birth defects, and cancer rates, particularly among children and pets. Mearl inherited the company from his father, a self-proclaimed ‘friend to the Red Man,’ who used his wealth and influence to drill on Native land. Greenway was linked to the disappearances of many Native Americans. They seemed to disappear a lot.

11:55PM. A bearded, jowly man showed up wearing a button-up shirt and overalls. He made a face while he walked like he was stuck in traffic, angry he wasn’t already where he was going. He looked ready to fight and die on any hill.

“Berty Doukas,” Dallas was shocked. “I escaped his horror-show rehab. Ego is the boogieman behind every ‘ism’, so he reckons the solution is ego death. Has everyone tear each other down. Plus he’s like the ego serial killer. Only person that’s ever made me cry.” Dzerassae gestured go on. “Well, at the time my monumental drug use basically made me incontinent. He made people call me–”

“About him, Dallas.”

“Don’t wanna hear about my shits? He moved his people into a new facility once he good and broke their self esteem. Just an apartment building bought with state grants. He knocked down all the walls, saying none them earned privacy. That’s when I bounced. Spent too much time in compounds; born in one, ran one for a little while. Heard it got real culty. I got friends inside got forced to change their haircuts. Some of my friends talked about forced marriage—but they’re burnouts, I’d take it with a grain.” Dallas fidgeted with his collar. “Hits a little close to home, I guess. Manipulating a bunch of addicts, saying its for their own good. At least I’m hotter. And I haven’t had any disappearances linked to me for a couple years! I should get one of those flip books. ‘Haven’t disappeared Anyone in X days.’”

“I was in the KGB,” Dzerassae said. “I have caused much disappearance. But we are finders now.” She put an encouraging bony hand on his shoulder.

Douka seemed displeased. He nodded his head a lot, said little, and stormed off the moment Zengrel finished talking. Zengrel laughed and lit a cigarette, wearing an expression of impish glee. The detectives understood why he had so many late-night visitors. He was using blackmail, debt, or his influence to coerce them into coming out paying their respects at an inconvenient time. It was an elaborate power move on his first night in town. A New York elite dunking on the Sincoke small fries.

“Sincoke Small Fries would be a dope team name,” Dallas mused. He put a hand on his Sincoke Grump bolo tie. “As long as they don’t change my beautiful boy—mother fucker!”

Dallas leapt at the window as Sheriff Louis “The Shepard” Arpel showed up at midnight. A solidly built bald man with a tree-trunk neck and a neatly trimmed mustache. Epitome of goon bod. He wore riot gear and brought an escort. His boys weren’t in uniform, but Dallas could smell the cop on them.

Nicknamed after a German Shepard for his aggression and hyper vigilance—and for several controversies involving K9 units—Arpel was one of the few things most Americans knew about Sincoke, reaching national infamy for his harsh and uncompromising views. He and the DA broke records on capital punishment, making Sincoke second only to Texas. He instilled an ‘us versus them’ mentality in the SPD, encouraging police to be suspicious and condescending to civilians. His motto was, “if your body cam breaks; you’re allowed to break bones,” and he rewarded officers with paid suspensions for acts of brutality. He was amassing military surplus gear with taxpayer money, making Sincokers pay to have helicopters over their homes and tanks on their streets.

He packed the streets with plainclothes officers and unmarked vehicles, which was why Dzerassae called Sincoke, ‘little USSR.’ But without a universal jobs guarantee.

Zengrel’s private security were dismissed and replaced with Sincoke’s finest.

“Mother. Fucker.” Dallas said through his false teeth.


The hallway was quiet except for the hum of the florescent lights. Tension from the fight hung over the whole apartment like thick fog.

“They aren’t always that bad,” Sascha said.

“I grew up around fighting. This is the world part,” he gestured around them to the loud quiet, The feeling of certainty it would happen again, and the uncertainty if it’d be months or minutes.

“Eh.” She shrugged. “This part is just my life. I’m used to this.”

“I’m sorry that you had to get used to it.” They reached his door. “Thanks again for helping me find my keys, and for being nice to me.”

“We still investigating your weird-ass place?”

“Oh. Yeah, if you still want. I mean, it’s probably not that weird. I don’t want to–”

“Just let me in ya big nerd.”


12:11AM. A man with a crew cut, a beard, and cold eyes stepped out of a Jeep Wrangler wearing a tight shirt showing off a toned physique. Zengrel saluted him. He handed Zengrel a bubble mailer wrapped in shipping tape.

Christopher Garcia. A member of JSIN, an organization that recruited the most violent and psychotic members of the Navy SEALs and Green Berets, headquartered in Fort Crow out in the prairie. They were trained to deal drugs, terrorize populations, and distribute arms to criminals and terrorist cells to destabilize places where America had interest. In essence the same things they did in SEALs, but independently of the pentagon with almost no accountability or oversight.

When they weren’t on tour they’d get bored and do what they did in Afghanistan right in Sincoke. JSIN members were linked, unofficially, to several disappearances. They also constantly killed one another over women, drugs, or for fun. Fort crow kept it covered up.

Dallas clocked another man in the Jeep. “Holy shit, that’s DONT ANSWER, GIRL.” Zengrel waved to him. He seemed disgusted by Zengrel and unmoved by his charm.

12:25AM. A lazy-looking, lanky man with wavy hair pulled up on a bicycle, wearing a button-up, jeans, and no shoes. The CEO and public face of Prairie Good, an organic grocery store chain trying to ‘change the way Sincoke eats.’ Also a quiet majority shareholder of Val-U Plus, a discount grocery store that undercut other chains out of business, leaving cheap, processed ‘food’ as the only option for Sincokers in the poorest neighborhoods. He was a prolific union-buster who was linked to the disappearances (and a half dozen mysterious deaths) of labor activists. He gave Zengrel a weak handshake and left quickly.

At 12:34AM the SPD caught a young man in an antiquated suit sneaking around, and beat the shit out of him.

“You need to let me in,” he yelled, “I need to find the Source of the Change! Things must Alter! Otherwise you will be unable to face your shadow with perfect courage, unable to contribute meaningfully and with proper manliness to your surroundings!”

“Friend of yours?” Dallas asked.

“Because he has Russian accent?”

“No, because you both talk like wizards.”

“He is amateur vigilante and looks like Bakunist.”

After his beating, he straightened his coat, actually shook his fist at the guards, then walked away if nothing happened—his attention only on what was in front of him.

Dallas whistled in appreciation. “Kid seems tough as nails, though.”

12:38AM. Zengrel was visited by the principal of a rehabilitation camp for troubled teens. A blonde man in a brown suit with a square face, thick brows, huge hands, and a wide jaw. His facility operated within a small, remote suburb. There were allegations of abuse and the school was linked to—say it with me now—several disappearances. Faculty convinced parents not to trust their children, they paid off the Sincoke Department of Child Welfare, and employed the majority of the neighborhood they operated in so no one would help runaways. He and Zengrel beamed at each other and embraced.

Dallas’ jaw was tight. “He’s homies with Doukas. Uses his methods on sad, crazy kids.”

“Americans treat adolescence like pathology,” Dzerassae said. “Sad and crazy is normal.”

12:48. A serene looking Asian man arrived wearing a blue suit. He was escorted by a young woman wearing a traditional Chinese dress and stark white face paint.

“That’s the Street Fighter guy!” Dallas grinned ear to ear. “Apparently he can throw fireballs, levitate, and cast cure wounds with yoga.”

“He is under asylum, like me. Internationally famous CCP critic. American government finds use in that. Anything to pretend they not already win Cold War.”

“He’s also a critic of homosexuality and miscegenation! I wish this country handled Televangelists the way China handled celebrity spirit healers in the ’90s.”

Practitioners of Hao Yidong moved to Sincoke from California when the LAPD began to investigate rumors of abuse and—you’ll never guess—disappearances linked to their compound. They refused to cooperate and lost their tax exempt status, so they slinked off to Sincoke where no one investigated anything. Sincoke’s minuscule Asian minority doubled overnight.

They lapped up public art grants to stage elaborate performances, billed as a celebration of Chinese history. These plays were anti-communist propaganda mixed with good old fashioned American conservatism. Unwitting audiences laughed politely as they suggested their off-brand Tai Chi could cure cancer and that evolution was fake, before being distracted by back flips. The posters were everywhere, as ubiquitous and omnipresent as Chinese food sauce packets.

Zengrel gave the girl a wide, lusty grin and snaked his arm around her to rub between her shoulder blades. She tensed up and forced herself to smile. He recoiled at her blackened teeth.

“She some kinda tribute?” Dallas said, taking dozens of photographs.

Dzerassae observed the young woman’s clear athleticism, her posture, and her defiant attitude. Hers was not a placating smile. It was a chimpanzee’s.

“That girl born wearing combat boots.”


“They’re all expired!” Sascha held out a roll of condoms. Ellis was on death’s door. “We figured out one thing about your brother!”

He got self-conscious as soon as they entered—what if the apartment wasn’t actually that weird? She followed him around quietly, making him even more anxious. She went dead silent in the kitchen, then started peeling the plastic off of everything, cackling and proclaiming that she needed to deflower the apartment. She convinced him to infiltrate the bedroom with a wild gleam in her eyes.

“He doesn’t fuck!”

“Must run in the family,” Ellis said. “Because uh, I’m not the kind of guy to like–”

“Lure a girl into your apartment?” She said.

“Except to hang,” he choked out.

Sascha wanted to hit him with an aw what a shame just to see him fluster. “Well we know everything we need to know about mystery brother. You want help unpacking?”

“Dallas hasn’t told me where to put stuff. But I should check that everything’s there.”

They sat across from each other on the floor going through his CDs and cassettes. Sascha had been exposed to an eclectic range of music from the weird side of YouTube, but nothing like Ellis’ confounding mix of ’30s Trinidadian calypso, bubblegum pop, and soundtracks to movies neither of them had seen. They found common interests, and the chip fell off his shoulder when he talked about music. He became sincere and articulate, and even made eye contact a couple times. Sascha was deeply charmed, she was a sucker for special interests. She let him go off about song construction and what he liked about each album, not listening very intently, just basking in the enthusiasm. They stayed on the floor until their ankles hurt. Ellis shot up and apologized for keeping her so late.

“Ti’s the afternoon for me. I woke up at three.” She wondered if her online friends were worried about her; but it was nice to be around someone in the flesh. She moved to the couch and stretched to see if he would ogle her. He looked away very intentionally. “You play guitar?”

“A little,” Ellis said. It was a bass ukulele but he felt bad correcting people. He started to open the case, struggling with the zipper. It was held together with tape and staples.

“Looks like that case died a long time ago.”

“Well, I like it,” Ellis lied.

“Do you want me to fix it?” Ellis froze. He didn’t know how to process such generosity. “I love fixing old things. Your bro doesn’t have a sewing kit, ugh men and all that, but I can bring mine next time. Unless that’ll make it less punk.”

Ellis was happy to hear next time. A bunch of lined paper covered in elaborate chicken scratch spilled out of the case. He quickly gathered them up and set them face down.

“Ooo what’s that?” Ellis tried to deflect but she slid back to the floor and flipped through them.

His jaw tightened. “Sometimes I get ideas for songs, but I don’t know how to write music. I had a cassette recorder for a minute, but it broke and the quality wasn’t good anyway, so I–”

“Did you make up your own music notation?”

“Look, who cares? I know how to read it.”

“Why are you getting huffy?” She narrowed her eyes and he lowered his head. He assumed she was making fun of him. “Hey, if you wanna record stuff I can bring my computer over sometime.”

“I don’t want to make you uh, waste your batteries.”

“Aw, are you embarrassed? All your songs about cute redheads or something? Afraid I’ll be… instantly seduced?” She made a little swooning gesture.

“I’m not embarrassed. They’re good songs, I did all the right things. But I wrote most of them for piano. I used to play one at the music store but they got a new manager who’d kick me out. There was a cool girl who worked there that would let me play, so I’d loiter around the strip mall until she showed up. Then they called the cops on me and I think she stopped working there.”

“You must have been awful if they tried to arrest you,” Sascha said. He insisted he did everything right. “Is music really about that? Isn’t it more about like, creativity or sincerity?”

“Depends on what you’re doing. If you’re tryna be real personal and spill your soul, get weird and ugly.” He shrugged. “But if you’re trying to evoke a specific feeling, set a scene, make people dance, or just get stuck in peoples’ heads, there are methods that consistently work if you do them well. Sometimes music is art, sometimes its just a trade like bricklaying; you’re just putting things in the right spots.” She asked what he did. “I come up with an idea, then I keep making small changes until its just right.”


12:58 AM. Zengrel ordered the guards inside. He looked anxious.

1:00 AM. An unmarked van pulled up and Zengrel put on his mask of casual confidence.

Dzerassae narrowed her eyes at agent White, then widened them at an old wiry man who stepped out of the back seat. He was bald and his skin was covered in big dark blemishes. He looked the spitting opposite of still, straight-backed agent White as he scrambled around with his head on a swivel, possessed of nervous energy.

Zengrel extended a handshake. White refused it. Zengrel smiled and gestured to something hidden in a hedge. The old man barked at him impatiently. Zengrel then produced a flash drive from his pocket. White snatched it out of his hands and got back in the car.

The old man ordered the SPD officers to get something out of the trunk. It looked like a powder blue coffin decorated with white frills. The detectives tried to photograph the text on it, but couldn’t get their cameras to focus before the guards whisked it inside like pall bearers. The old man made a licentious face and a crude gesture. Zengrel nodded, clearly humoring him.

“Does your spook still ask questions about me?” Dallas asked.

“He thinks you are extremist, over-idealistic vigilante.”

“If guys like him did his job, the world wouldn’t need guys like me.”

“I have seen naive idealism and ruthless pragmatism in equal measure,” Dzerassae said. “Both lead to destruction. White’s pragmatism make him collaborate with devil like Zengrel.” She helped Dallas see the camera hidden behind the hedge Zengrel gestured at.

“Zengrel’s an asset. Huh. That’s how he gets away with shit. This case just got way more dangerous. Whoops all CIA! You know the old scarecrow?”

“I have known of him since Cold War,” Dzerassae said. She noticed Agent White staring in their direction. Did he see them, or were his instincts telling him it was a perfect place for someone to hide?

Zengrel lit a cigarette and sat on his front steps after they left. Before he finished it, a smug looking young man with beady eyes and a yellow vest approached him and shoved a microphone in his face. He was accompanied a skinny bearded man with a camera. Zengrel patiently tried to dismiss them. When that didn’t work, he got a cold look on his face and had the SPD smash their equipment.

1:32AM. A hummer pulled up. The front hood was painted like a skull and a flag trailed behind it. The flag looked like a massive sheet of parchment with the entirety of the second amendment written in cursive text. There doors were painted like the American flag with crosses instead of stars—the symbol of the Prairie Patriots, an anti-government, white nationalist, Christian identity militia. They showed up at protests and strikes to escalate them into violent confrontations. They went to universities and libraries to harass and intimidate anyone ‘pushing’ inclusive practices. Several members were running for office. AIDS had photographed them cooperating with the SPD but no normal news sites would run them.

A man wearing a bulletproof vest emerged from the driver’s side. He had a rifle slung over his shoulder, seven handguns belted around his waist, and enough pockets of ammunition to make a Rob Leifield character blush. Dallas whistled in appreciation. Zengrel couldn’t mask his distaste.

“What’s good liberal Zengrel doing associating with these clowns?”

“Aiding in CIA infiltration, maybe.” Dzerassae said.

“The CIA isn’t trying to infiltrate the PP. They’re after good Communists like us.”

“You not good Communist, you are Maoist,” Dzerassae spat. Dallas grinned at her. “Melting spoons and killing sparrow instead of seizing means of production.”

“CIA is probably arming the PP so they can harass minorities and unions and distract this country’s half-assed progressive movement. Could be using Zengrel to control or influence leadership.”

Zengrel made a show of coyly shutting off the secret hedge camera. His mouth widened to a malevolent smirk, then he and the Militia leader discussed something in hushed tones.

“Or some fucked up new thing.” Dallas sighed. “New secret union from hell.”


“Its about a mouse my Mom killed,” Ellis was embarrassed.

“That’s sad and kind of sweet. What was his name?”

“He didn’t have one,” Ellis said. “He was a mouse. I think it’s arrogant for us to give animals names. They don’t care. They don’t even know.”

“Yeah. I had a hamster named Starfish when I was a kid. I was obsessed with her and I felt really stupid for being sad when she died. I think I felt ashamed for thinking my hamster mattered. She wasn’t important just because I cared about her. Arrogance, I guess.”

“Then I went and wrote a whole song about a mouse.” Ellis shrugged. “So I get it. Maybe we only care about animals when we project onto them. On the other hand, there are millions of hamsters and mice but probably one day there won’t be any, so maybe they all count. And none of them are Starfish. I’m sure there were unique things about her.”

“She squeaked real loud whenever she saw me, she had one crooked whisker, and she used to fall asleep in her food bowl like she loved her snackums so much she had to snuggle them. What was unique about your mouse?”

“Nothing. He saw peanut butter and got excited, then a clamp crushed his leg. The peanut butter was just out of reach. He kept sniffing it, because what else was he supposed to do. He wasn’t thinking about life or death—there was peanut butter. Now I gotta think about him. And anyone who hears the song. I want everyone to have to think about that mouse.”

“Can I hear it?”

Ellis felt his chest tighten. It wasn’t Just Right yet. But he picked up his bass ukulele.

His soft, practiced voice was jarring. It struck her as funny to hear such soulful, pretty sounds come out of that perpetually frowning mouth—like Kurt Cobain singing Sarah McLachlan with a completely straight face. She had to stifle a laugh. She’d never forgive herself if she snickered at him.

After the initial surprise, she got lost in his performance. The wistful song mourned the mouse’s difficult life and honored its quiet dignity. It was written from the rodent’s perspective, describing loneliness, stealing crumbs, and surviving winters. He acknowledged his lot in life without feeling sorry for himself. He didn’t have a name, but he knew who he was. The third verse described being trapped. His only wish was for one final bite of peanut butter. He struggled valiantly, then acknowledged the reality of nature and accepted that he couldn’t even have that. It ended with the mouse, who knew no one, just as no one knew him, wishing himself goodbye.

Ellis went somewhere else while he sang. He closed his eyes and swayed gently, performing like he was alone. It seemed meditative. Or maybe he was anxiously disassociating. He finished, came out of his trance and said, “Fuck I’m sorry. I should have just done the first verse.”

“What?” Sascha became very animated. “No holy shit it was great. Like did that just happen? We need to get you to an open mic yesterday.”

Ellis got visibly anxious. “I can’t, it’s not finished yet.”

“Seemed like three verses and a chorus to me.” Ellis launched into explaining everything wrong with it. He seemed stressed thinking about it, so Sascha gracefully switched gears. “Well I’m grateful I got to hear the alpha version. It fucking broke my heart.”

“Thank you for humoring me.” He couldn’t tear his mind away from the upsetting thought of performing an unfinished song, so he changed the subject. “What happened to Starfish?”

“My brother stuck her in the microwave. He said a boy shouldn’t have a girl hamster. Little did he know!”


Tyler Kimball, https://www.instagram.com/tylermkimball/

1:56AM. Dallas got a Bali Myna—a beautiful, endangered white bird with dark blue skin around its eyes—to sit on his shoulder.

2:00AM. A white and gold limousine pulled up and let out a middle aged man in a white suit, wearing a watch worth more than the combined salary of everyone at AIDS. His self-satisfied grin matched Zengrel’s. He was accompanied by a tall, prim young man with piercing eyes who walked with an elegance and gravity that commanded Dallas and Dzerassae’s attention, even as Zengrel and the older man performed an elaborate handshake full of suggestive gestures.

“Johnathon The-Blessing-Of-The-Lord-Makes-A-Person-Rich Wilson, better known as Johnny Gospel,” Dallas said. “Millionaire who runs a megachurch and has a finance podcast called The Prosperity Doctrine. Spiritual and financial guru all in one—talk about saying the quiet part out loud. At least your fundamentalists have Gothic architecture and sick iconography. We get acoustic guitars and linoleum floors. You’re lucky if you see a fucking candle.”

“Those gaudy buildings are soaked in Pagan blood. They should be torn down and replaced with concrete apartments.”

“At least evil in Europe is tasteful. We get this shit,” Dallas gestured at Zengrel’s bland home, Gospel’s gaudy car. “The kid is the special boy from the news. Gospel’s congregation thinks he can speak to the dead and cure their diabetes. Amy says that much praise—like literally they pray to him—basically constitutes abuse. I guess I have to feel sorry for him, I’m sure John’s milking it.”

Dallas imagined John tending his flock, telling them what was good for them and taking everything he could. He rubbed the bird’s neck with a finger. It leaned into his hand.

Special boy produced a miniature bible from his pocket and recited it at Zengrel. He spoke quietly but Dallas and Dzerassae could hear his voice clearly. He seemed angelic; their thoughts turned to Christ striking down the merchants’ tables at the temple. Zengrel and Gospel listened with bemused detachment—but listen they did. The Bali Myna began to peck at itself and draw blood from its talon. Gospel ushered him back into the car, with an apologetic shrug at Zengrel.

The hair on Dallas’ neck was standing up. “True believer, that kid.”

“Very useful for his handler,” Dzerassae spat.

“And maybe for us—a righteous guy on the inside who can’t keep his mouth shut? I’ve gotten tips about Gospel, I’ve wanted to investigate him for-e-vah. Special kid might be an In. Amy’ll be thrilled. She can fix him!”

Zengrel sat on his patio. No guests arrived for some time. Dallas fantasized about taking one quick shot. But then they’d never find the girls. But then Zengrel couldn’t hurt anyone anymore. But then his allies would cover their tracks. But it would feel so good.

Dzerassae intuited patterns. The hedges all grew in the direction away from Zengrel’s house, and the wind blew litter towards it. Trash comes, life flees. Zengrel seemed antsy. Even when he was being harassed by reporters and his CIA handlers, he moved with a lumbering swagger, as if not a single muscle in his body were tense. Now his shoulders were pinched and his leg bobbed restlessly. He kept checking his phone. Who was coming? Dzerassae’s chest began to swell with the anticipation. She started seeing malevolent patterns everywhere. She was drawn to the bathroom and discovered that the drunken man had opened the window to smoke. She closed it, and was able to filter data again.

Dallas’ mind started running through every open case. He resented having to do their paid work of stalking insecure rich mens’ cheating wives. Good on ’em for getting some real dick. He could solve anything fix everything save everyone if he had more time. Shoot Zengrel in the head. Al Capone style right in the open. It was like a nagging cigarette craving. But he couldn’t let his people down. They needed him. His fingers stopped dancing around the butt of his

gun

then started again when a young girl rode up to Zengrel on a city bike. She had shoulder-length hair dyed black, ripped jeans, and a black t-shirt with a graphic of a face bisected vertically. One side was a skull, the other a Cheshire grin. She was wearing a lot of eyeliner and dark red lipstick. Trying to look like a woman.

Zengrel smiled and pulled her into a tight embrace that lingered too long. He buried his face in her hair. His hands traveled from her elbow up her arm. His fingers traced the curvature of her shoulder blades before resting his palm between them, spreading then closing his fingers. He held the hug until she pulled away, like he was testing her boundaries.

He stared directly at her face while they spoke, drinking in the sight of her, the hungry black voids of his pupils filling up with whatever he was taking. She looked at the house and the hedges, nervously avoiding eye contact. She glanced back and he circled her, to be between her and the bike, then he put his arm around her shoulders and guided her to the door. He never looked away from her face and he never blinked.


Ellis thought of little Sascha crying while her small pet scratched desperately at the glass of the microwave, trying to get to her while it’s insides heated up.

“Cyrus didn’t know what he was doing. He was like, eleven, and I think it traumatized him too.”

Helplessness, children, small animals, Starfish not understanding what was happening to her, people innocently harming things,

the way it felt to realize you’d done something awful,

lonely homeless unacknowledged
desperate the indignity of your body which feels
and tastes
and holds and haves
becoming mush
Tara alone and abandoned
hurting people without knowing or understanding
what—

“I have a little shrine in my room. Mom bought me a star-shaped box—probably the most thoughtful thing she’s ever done. I keep her favorite toy and some sawdust from her tank in it.” Sascha noticed Ellis was quiet, and assumed he was tired of hearing about her dead hamster. “Anyway,” she held up a sheet of music notation. “What’s this one?”

Ellis snapped out of his head and turned red. “Can’t talk about that one.”

“Is it really horny?”

“Yes,” Ellis lied because that was less embarrassing.

“Then what’s this one?”

“A cover of Maxine Nightingales’ Right Back Where we Started From.”Ellis sung the chorus, hitting the night notes proficiently. “It’s a disco pop song.”

“Did you do like a… heavy metal version?”

“No. Straight cover. I have to adjust the pitch a little because I have a deeper voice than her.”

“Why that song?”

“It rules.”

“Care to elaborate?”

“No. What’s your thing?”

“My thing?

“Yeah like, what do you do?”

Sascha froze. It was an intimidating question from someone with an actual hobby. She stopped making videos. She couldn’t just say video games. She shouldn’t tell him about camming. Come on girl, you do stuff. She’d done web design for her friends. She had tried making games. “I’m in school for software engineering.” His face was imperceptible. “Coding, computer programs. It’s boring.”

“Are you rich?”

“What? Aha, no. Nooo. My Mom got sucked into an MLM and Madhi donates half his money to his super-AA thing. It’s online community college courses. I already know how to do it all; just need my piece of paper. Like there are any coding jobs here anyway. I keep thinking, maybe I’ll move! But like, first off to where? Silicone Valley? Ew. And also I wouldn’t be the first to try.”

Ellis was mystified. He launched into a series of questions, including: you speak computer language? (I can code in Javascript and HTML). So you can make programs, like Word and YouTube? (Uh well one of those is a website, but I can do those too). Is it green and Japanese like the Martix? (A hundred percent yeah). He had a million misconceptions about hackers, and some romantic ideas about the dark web which she shut down (it’s basically just child porn, dude). She ended up explaining some basic concepts to him; it blew him away. She eventually admitted she didn’t think it was boring.

“I think its beautiful,” she said. “Binary is a perfect language. No vagueness or room for interpretation. 1:1 communication.”

“That’s so cool. I wish I could make music like that, songs with one, explicit interpretation. What kind of programs do you make?”

“I’ve built websites for some online friends. Ooo and I’ve worked with people on indie games. They’re up on itch with like, ten downloads.” She shrugged.

“Do you like video games?”

She held her hair back so he could see her RareWare earrings. “I used to have a YouTube channel where I reviewed retro games. I really like analyzing them.”

“Have you played—hold on.” Ellis dug into his boxes and pulled out his dusty NES and Megaman 2.

“Uh, yes! Cuh-lassic. Are you a retro gamer?”

“This is the only video game I’ve ever played.” She was disappointed, then perplexed. “I used to play with Dallas. I think he stole it. Its my only memory with him. I figured when I got here we could, well, I dunno. I really expected him to be here.”

“…He put you in a weird spot, didn’t he?” Sascha said.

“I put him in a weird spot. He doesn’t really know me and he’s gotta put me up.”

“Well, his loss. We’ll just have to play Megaman without him. I have an adapter at my place. It’ll look kinda weird on the flat-screen—maybe I’ll just lug over a CRT?”

“Aren’t you avoiding your brother?”

“Awful night for brothers, ain’t it?” She said. “Be right back.”


“Pensive Cigarette,” Kenneth Steven Janes, https://www.twitch.tv/scrunklebunglo, https://soundcloud.com/kenneth-steven-janes

Every
Second


Stre
eee

e
tched

as Dallas and Dzerassae waited, knowing Zengrel was alone with a child. They knew what room; a light turned on on the second floor. The red curtains were open but they couldn’t see inside from their angle. Neither of them said a word.

Dallas resisted a calm instinct to raid the house. No sense of vengeance or hatred. Just what you do. Dzerassae ruminated about societies where neighbors are strangers. In the old country, or even in her Kruchevka in Peter, a mob would have stormed Zengrel’s home driven by the same instinct Dallas was suppressing. She missed living in places where people kept each other. They fed off each other’s energy. At any minute they might stand up, without a word, and break into Zengrel’s house. Then the girl reemerged.

Dallas scrutinized her through his binoculars. Dzerassae noticed she was fine. Creeped out, but not traumatized or injured. She was in a hurry to leave, but not fleeing for her life.

Zengrel was wearing a salmon robe. He went in for another hug. She hugged him around the waist, ducked under his arms before he could pull her into another long bear hug, then got on her bike. She was good at deflecting advances. Dzerassae knew she’d been doing it all night.

Zengrel said something and she stopped to ponder it. He planted a seed in her mind. He smirked. Just had to let it grow.

She took off on the bike.

“I’m on her,” Dallas said.

“I’ll get car.”

Zengrel’s face twisted in frustration as he watched her go. “How impolite of me,” he grinned again. “I should have had my staff bring her bike in.” He stood unmoving and unblinking. “Could have gotten stolen.” His smirked widened. “…Could get stolen.”

Dallas jogged after her, taking cover behind houses. He hopped fences and trudged through backyards, tripping over garden gnomes and showing up on Ring cameras, but he didn’t care. Young girls weren’t safe on Wild Nights. Dzerassae caught up to him in the AIDSmobile, the agency’s latest clunker. The beat up ’92 Nissan Maxima looked conspicuous among the Telsas and Cadillacs.

They followed her at a discreet distance. Another car started following her, so they ran it off the road, then Dallas got out and slashed their tires with one of Dzerassae’s knives. He sauntered away while three pockmarked little men threatened him, knowing no one who stalked young girls would fight a grown man. He remembered their license plate. He memorized their faces.

Someone tried to sell her drugs. He was being pushy, so Dzerassae hit his parked car; giving her a chance to bike away. Dallas got out to take his drugs, but he started fantasizing about taking them. He apologized for his Grandma’s driving and they took off, their front bumper now hanging loose.

She seemed lost when they caught up to her. Dallas considered giving her directions; Dzerassae was sure she’d find her way.

She arrived home in the early morning and tried to sneak inside, but a tall young man with long dark hair was waiting at the door.

“Oh good, Dude looks like the platonic ideal of a protective older brother. Archetypal as shit. Chef’s kiss.” Dallas sighed in relief. “Fucking try harder next time, man.”

“Hmm. She is wily one,” Dzerassae said. Her brother was a tired guardian. She sensed his innate leadership. The gravitas of the Medicine Man or Chieftain. Knightly Honor. The Mandate of Heaven. But he was stretched thin, not yet in his full power. “The girl slip through Zengrel’s fingertips. Her family will have difficult time if they try to hold her in.”

“She’s fucking wily alright. We literally saw her dip away when Zengrel tried to ‘hold her in’,” Dallas smiled. “I’d like this kid if she wasn’t being so dumb.”

“Young girls are known to stray from paths.”

The girl and her brother yelled at each other, then she stormed inside. He took a deep breath then stormed after her. She was safe. She never noticed the shadows guarding her.

The sun was rising. The Avia Investigative Detective Services took on missing person cases pro bono. They kept tabs on Sincoke’s villains. They fought on wherever Sincoke failed; committed—heart and soul—to helping those who fell through the cracks.

They also had bills to pay.

“Drop me off at the office,” Dallas said through a yawn. “We got some poor cuck coming in at 8:30. I’m gonna nap in the waiting room for a couple hours. You can come in at noon today, if you want. I know you old folks don’t sleep that much.”

“I have not slept through night since middle age.”

“You were alive in the middle ages?”

Dzerassae let out one of her rare cackles. “I am too haunted by past to sleep.”

“Comrade Dzerassae,” Dallas rested his hand on her arm, “you’re alright, old lady.”


The NES wasn’t working. Ellis was devastated, it was his oldest friend. “Was it in the box I dropped on that asshole’s foot?” He muttered.

Sascha didn’t question that. Windy night. “Does your brother have one of those twisty things they use to close up bread?” Ellis produced one from his pocket. “Dude, why?”

“You can use them as zippers or key rings. Also since they break easily, you can use them to tie box cutters or a bag of rocks to your belt loop if you think someone might try and jump you. Faster than taking it out your pocket.”

“They… sure are versatile.” Sascha deftly opened up the console, practically making Ellis’ heart stop. She finagled with it until it ran on the widescreen. “Wallah! It is risen!”

“Whoa. How’d you do that?”

“Magic.” She winked. “Don’t shake it too much.” The display was stretched out. She refused to accept that and messed with the settings for several more minutes.

They sat cross-legged on the couch and switched on death. Sascha worked on Ellis’ guitar case while he played. It was good she brought her sewing kit; he almost never died. It may be the only game he ever played, but apparently he played the shit out of it. On her turns she blew his mind with secrets and Easter eggs; benefit of having the internet.

Ellis talked about the game’s soundtrack. Sascha talked about game design and working within hardware limitations. Occasionally their knees touched, but by 3AM they stopped jerking away when it happened.

Ellis abruptly paused the game. “I can trust you with that binder.”

She grinned like a cat. “The horny binder.”

“Its… a concept album about Megaman. Keep it mum,” He said in a hushed tone. “I don’t want to get a copyright whatever.”

“Its three in the morning, but I need you to sing the whole thing for me. I’ll stay up all night. I’ll never sleep again. I need to hear your musical fanfic.” Sascha looked at the tiny blue man on screen, fighting another blue man with a fan for a face. She needed to hear what this absolute weirdo she found thought Megaman was about.

An admiring look came to his eyes. She knew she was in for something good. “So Megaman’s life is simple. He knows his maker and what his purpose is. Binary computer language, like you taught me. That’s why his design is so simple, he’s innocent. The first song is about his choice to protect humanity; sacrificing a perfect life without uncertainty to protect a group he can never belong to. He’s superior to us after all—he’s Megaman—and that isolates him. He fights his Own, the Robot Masters. How do you think he learned to value free will?”

“I don’t know!” Sascha was wide-eyed and smiling with her mouth open. “Please take m—I mean tell me. This is nuts. I mean that in a good way. Don’t get self-conscious.”

“Well… that’s what the third song is about. The second one is about Protoman, a really complicated figure. First man. Abraham. He’s trying to rule humans, but in a protective way, like a strict father. Dr Wiley is like the Old Testament God. He’s a doctor, masters over life and death.”

“Ok, hold up,” Sascha cut in. “You’re not anti-vaccine are you?”

“No, I think they’re good. I don’t know if Mom got me any.”

“Well, never too late. Please go on.”

“I know how this next part sounds, but I am also pro-doctors. In theory anyway. I’ve only seen them on TV. You know how they cut people open and give them medicine with nasty side-effects, but ultimately its good for them?”

“Just checking that we’re still talking about Megaman 2. Somehow.”

“Yeah. That’s how Protoman sees subjugation. Shitty but ultimately good for people. But I think Megaman admires free will because he wasn’t born with it. He experiences it for the first time when he disobeys his protocols, which is an act of will and also kind of a miracle. So the two brothers want to save people, but they come at it from different angles. Their conflict is very tragic. The best part is it conveys this entirely through music queues.”

Sascha imagined all the time he spent playing Megaman alone, role-playing this in his head. The game let his imagination run wild, and that validated a medium she was passionate about. She made a solemn vow to never to tell him about the canon. She needed to protect his beautiful mind from the wikis and Archie comics. She thought about showing him Megaman X to see if he’d have a stroke.

“What is it about to you?” He asked.

“Oh, platforming with really tight controls, hard but fair difficulty, power ups that let you modulate difficulty to a degree. Nuances like how it pauses when you die so you can process what happened, or the split second you get to scan the room during stage transitions so you don’t fucked by unreactible bullshit.” Ellis looked at her like she was soulless. “That stuff is important, dude. They didn’t have CGI cutscenes in 1988. The gameplay conveyed the story. Megaman took on overwhelming, insurmountable odds right? He suffered setbacks, but got stronger with each victory. That’s expressed through the game itself! It’s a story that happens directly to you.”

“Holy shit. Its like music, conveying things without words. To set a mood, put visions in peoples’ minds, to,” he struggled to articulate something.

“To tell a story,” Sascha said.

The wind raged outside. So did the city. Sincoke hard-boiled over as suppressed emotions were stirred by the air. That night there were 51 reported car thefts, 33 robberies, 42 break-ins, 71 assaults, 114 cases of domestic abuse, and 24 murders. 66 People went missing. Those were just the official numbers.

These two new friends enjoyed a calm, relaxing night.

Part Two: Meeting New People Under Bad Circumstances, 2

A cockroach writhed on its back in a dark corner of the lobby. Ellis’ welcoming crew. He kept glancing at it while he looked on the mailboxes for Dallas’ name and apartment number. He wanted to help it, but it might freak out and shoot eggs at him. He found his brother’s name on the mailbox for Apt 68. It was partially scratched out.

The narrow hallways and low ceiling made Ellis feel like he was in a mine. The dim florescent lights flickered like torch fire. The gum encrusted floor and peeling paint created uneven textures like the rocky sides of a tunnel. He eyed the elevator unhappily. He wasn’t afraid of heights, but the sensation of going up filled his stomach with butterflies.

The elevator smelled like body odor. Not like a locker room, like a specific individual’s.

Opening the door to Apt 68 was like gazing through a magic portal to a furniture show room. Everything was pristine and brand new, in stark contrast to the rest of the building. There was a black leather couch with perfect, plump leather cushions that shined in the overhead light like polished boots. No water rings on the coffee table or holes in the dry wall. The purple curtains looked ironed. The huge TV had plastic cling on it. The remote was on the stand, not lost like remotes should be.

Ellis froze in the door frame as if he’d sully the apartment with his riff-raffishness. It didn’t feel like a home, it felt like a set. Did Dallas even live here. Why’d they clean it so well? What had they done here?

He noticed a tiny bit of water damage on a purple accent wall near the ceiling. It was enough proper wear and tear to put him more at ease. He carefully set his luggage just inside the doorway, relieved he didn’t have to carry it anymore. He checked it to be safe, then explored the space.

The kitchen was crazy. Ellis had never seen such clean appliances; even the displays at stores had some fingerprints on them. The fridge was empty except for a collection of exotic hot sauces. All unopened. The drawers had silverware, but no spatulas, meat thermometers, or any other essentials. There were Chinese food sauce packets, but that was cold comfort. Those were everywhere.

The bathroom was very small. The shower curtain was mildew-free and the caulk around the tub was stark white. He’d never seen a bathroom with no moisture damage. He lifted open the toilet, expecting even that to be dry.

Ellis wouldn’t go in the bedroom. Too personal. There was no bedroom door, just a thick purple curtain. There wouldn’t be a lot of privacy. He’d be getting kicked out whenever Dallas had girls over.

Ellis set himself on the couch trepidaciously, like he was stepping into cold water. He didn’t want to put wear and tear on someone’s new couch so he sat on it like it was an antique, careful not to get too comfortable.

He felt monumentally lonely. He had one close friend back home, but no way to contact her. He’d have to pay someone to borrow their cellphone to say hello. His Mom didn’t want to hear from him. The night shift gas attendants, homeless dudes, the one nice librarian, the autistic kid who lent him comics, they were all far away. He missed the old men who played chess in the WinCo parking lot, the lady on his block who tied her cockatoo to her shoulder, and other people who he’d never spoken to, but knew. He was starting from scratch. There was nothing familiar.

He couldn’t trust Dallas for support. Motherfucker didn’t even leave a note on the fridge.

That lack of communication made Ellis feel restrained in the house. He didn’t know the boundaries, so he was afraid to do anything. He got up and did what he did when his old house felt unsafe. Take a walk.


“Z, I know what you’re thinking, but there’s nothing to worry about!” Dallas came out from the bathroom. There were no toiletries, just bird medicine and other supplies. It confirmed Dallas’ suspicion that no one actually lived here. Dallas knew his birds, many of these were endangered and illegal to own. Some rich guy who lived in a nicer city with real regulations needed somewhere to keep his exotic pets.

“And!” Dallas held up a needle he found in the trash. “Whoever tends these birds parties. Hard. He ain’t coming to work on a wild night.”

“Clearly he has healthy amount of disrespect for his employers. But that is no guarantee.”

“Look I don’t know what Wild Nights are. Amy is always talking about collective consciousness and infectious energy and mass hysteria and you’re always talking about that too but in more of a Jungian supernatural way and I kinda nod at you guys politely because I’m just a freaky lil monkey man but I know ONE damn thing, and it’s when when I was on this shit, I was NOT going to work on Wild Nights. Lemme tell ya.”

“If he shows, we bribe. There is other problem,” Dzerassae gestured her chin towards several cameras facing the bird cages, pointed at hanging toys or food trays.

“Pet cameras,” Dallas said. “1920’s noir motherfuckers never had to worry about this stuff. They usually notify people when the animals move or make noise.” The birds were freaking out and Dallas was constantly trying to touch them.

“Then you must control yourself and stay away from cages,” Dzerassae said.

“Eh, he could live in another time zone for all we know,” Dallas lovingly watched an African Gray maul his finger. “Otherwise, sorry but see you in jail. Not as bad as the Soviet ones at least. Just kidding, they’re torture chambers over here. Ow, fuck. Cutie found the cuticle.”

Dzerassae ignored him and the birds. She was the one who found Zengrel’s new address. It was renovated recently, three apartments converted into one large mansion. It came to her attention when the good liberal neighbors called ICE on the contractors. Renovations aren’t common in Sincoke, and they began right after Zengrel’s trafficking and statutory rape trial in Los Angeles—which got inexplicably little media coverage. He got a minor solicitation charge. She sent Lester to case it. Dallas spoke to some old acquaintances—other mostly reformed thugs and gangsters that did private security work. A couple of them had passed up opportunities to work there, being a little too reformed to work for rich people who demand ‘extreme discretion.’ They tracked some packages and stole the moving company’s records. The apartment was owned by a NYC real estate company, operated by people close to Zengrel.

It didn’t take a data interpreter or a criminal psychologist to put it together. He was hiding in Sincoke while the limited press from his court case blew over. But he wasn’t covering his tracks very well. Many rich people were very private. Most large conglomerates and finance firms didn’t have a public face. She wondered what gave Zengrel all his confidence. Dallas assumed it was money. America believed he was a narcissist. Lester figured he was just stupid. Dzerassae had a feeling there was more to it.

She had to periodically rest her old eyes. Dallas was starting to fade too. He spent most of the day stalking cheating spouses to keep the Agency afloat. Americans call people friends far too easily, but Dallas was certainly a comrade. She wasn’t sure if he was more interested in helping people or punishing himself. She could tell his mind was dwelling in darkness.

“Do not listen. You are good man, Dallas Avia,” Dzerassae said. “Awhile back you called your contacts ‘other mostly reformed gangsters.’ You are fully reformed. You are on the other side.”

“Heh. I just broke into someone’s house, and I’m stalking a guy I don’t like,” there was some amusement in his voice. “For sure I’m on the other side. But I haven’t changed.” Dzerassae nodded in solemn understanding. She, too, still lurked in shadows.

“I mean I even brought a lackey with me! That’s crimelord shit.”

“I am NOT lackey!” She frowned deeply and pointed a withering old finger at him.

“Hey don’t curse me with your witch finger!”

“I curse you!” She wiggled it. She was dead serious.

“No! The power of Christ repels you!” Dallas flipped open his wallet and held out a picture of Mao Zedong. “Oh shit—“ he gestured out the window, “there’s guys!”


Ellis was at peace in the hallways because there was nothing he could do to make them worse. He was looking for one of the kinds of vending machines he knew how to rob.

He heard a couple fighting and got excited about shaming them with a disapproving look, but they were inside an apartment. 69, directly across the hallway. He listened for a moment in case things got violent. In his experience no one took the ‘yelly’ household seriously, and he worried no one else would take it seriously if the woman screamed for help.

“Social, cosmic, individual unity! She is disordered on every level. We need to get her into a Game. Maybe even the wilderness facility!”

“Those nit-picking hawks are gonna tear her apart at that awful fucking humiliation ritual,” The woman seemed to hiss at a thousand decibels. Her voice was shrill and throaty. It came from the darkest part of her heart.

“It’s therapy!” The man yelled, “better than the self-delusion echo chamber you get with a shrink. No better than her online–”

“She needs to move some of this product with me,” the woman said, “needs some fire under her ass, learn how to make it as a woman in this world. These are the most productive years of–”

“You and the fucking product! You blew your savings, lost your job and most of your friends over–”

She started yelling indistinctly. No words, just hoarse, furious, demonic shouting.

A third voice repeated the word ‘mom’ increasingly loudly. Suddenly something big and heavy thunked into the door. Ellis saw it shake from impact. Whatever it was shattered on the floor.

Ellis braced himself to kick the door open but the woman didn’t scream, she sighed.

“I loved that thing,” she said coolly. Resigned.

“Its—these—internet—people. He’s—confused.” Silence punctuated each word. “Discipline! Responsibility! Without tradition, without roles, things—have lost—all—meaning. He’s a degenerate—who watches—cartoons. He’s given up on the world—accepted a passive role. That’s what this postmodern Neo-Marxist gender ideology reflects—a broken and confused inner psyche. Dad’s organization is full of low status males and drunks,” a huffy sound of disapproval from the first voice, “but that kind of tough love might help. Don’t you understand?”

The woman sighed. “I haven’t understood a fucking word you’ve said in three years.” The young man cursed and Ellis heard him punch a couch. “Are you going to let him act like that?” The woman said. The first man offered up an explanation so pathetic and impossible to respect that Ellis blocked it out entirely. The younger man launched into another weird speech. His family sounded sick of listening to him, and Ellis was too. He walked away.

It was comforting and confusing to know the apartment was a real place with real people. He walked past several doors that meant dozens of people living separate lives under the same roof. It was a unique loneliness.

He saw a room at the end of the hall with white tiles. A facility. Ellis loved those. Laundry rooms, kitchens, locker rooms. It was easy to pretend you had a reason to be there, so no one asked you to leave. Sometimes they had the old vending machines without cameras and alarm systems. He got closer and saw washing machines. That meant loose change.

He heard the distinct rumbling of a dryer. He walked in and saw

a cute girl. Dancing.

She looked his age, late teens or early twenties. She had olive skin and orange hair gathered into a thick mess. She was wearing a green tank top, dark sweatpants with prints of video game mascots, flip flops, and big bulky headphones. She swayed her hips and swung her arms with her eyes closed. Ellis was captivated by her long sloping nose. It started at a gentle bump between her eyes, perfect for resting glasses on. He he heard Mediterranean people were self-conscious of their noses. He couldn’t imagine why. Hers was elegant.

Ellis felt deep secondhand embarrassment. It was such an intimate, joyful moment and he profaned it profaned it walking in on it. She noticed him just as he was about to back away slowly. She gave a sheepish smile, then sat in the only plastic chair that wasn’t covered in gum or bent at the legs.

Ellis would look like a creeper if he left right away, so he acted like he meant to be there. In a laundry room, with no laundry. He went down the row staring at each dryer. He was obviously more embarrassed than she was, so she decided to rescue him.

“Looking for a good one?”

Did he need one? Ellis pretended to wipe his nose on his shirt collar, covertly sniffing it. “Wait—are some washing machines better than others?”

“I dunno man, I just come in here to dance.” Ellis gave an understanding nod, which perplexed and intrigued her. “You new here?”

“Moved in tonight.”

“Oh, very new! Cool. From what part of the city?”

Her eyes were big and bright brown, with dark circles her iris. He felt them taking him in. He stared at the ground, occasionally chancing glances at them. “Uh. Okonkwa,” Ellis said. “Its like, outside the city.”

“No fuckin’ way. You moved here? Like, from the world? I’ve never met anyone who’s been outside the city. Did you trek through the prairie?”

“This cab driver who wanted to die drove me.”

“Tell me of the outside world, traveler,” she said in an old hag voice.

“Its a complete nightmare. It’s mostly highways and stores, and everywhere you go someone hassles you until you spend money.”

“And they wonder why kids don’t play outside any more. Why’d ya’ll move to the Sinkhole? Running from something?”

“Beat a cop half to death.”

“Really?”

“Yeah.”

Ellis’ sour expression and curt responses made her nervous. She got that a lot; pretty much every time she went out in public. It’s why she didn’t. She watched the way he slumped and how the silence made him fidget, and realized he was just a grungy, feral, awkward dude. His face was probably stuck like an apprehensive animal. He didn’t disapprove of her, he was just uncomfortable. Well, she was very good at fixing that. Plus she liked ’em bashful.

“I hate the police. I used to work my uncle’s falafel truck. I can be charming when I have to, so I was a neighborhood favorite. They called me ‘Little Falafel Girl.’ Got some serious tips. The police were constantly harassing me, searching for drugs and hassling me about permits. Do I look like I know anything about zoning laws? I was there to fry chickpeas. One of them called me a ‘Fucking Arab’ and said a bunch of shit about Sharia Law and hijabs. Dude, I’m Irish and Persian. Like get your racism right. So I had to stop working there.”

“Jesus Christ,” Ellis was appalled. She was happy to see him engaged. “I didn’t know that my guy was a cop, but maybe I’ll beat the next one fully to death.”

“Please tell me more.”

“Well they have guns and they call like fifty of their friends if you reach for your pocket,” Ellis held his chin. “So I’d have to get the drop on him. I think I could knock him out with like a brick? Or if I used a roll of quarters like brass knuckles. But then I might lose some quarters.”

“Fascinating, but I meant about how you’re on the run from the law. Was he in plain clothes or?”

“He was my Mom’s boyfriend,” Ellis said. “Got violent and uh, so did I. I’m not like a violent person, I just, you know.”

“World’s a nightmare,” Sascha shrugged. “I get it. S’why I carry bear spray. Mace don’t cut it.”

Talking about violence sucked. Ellis wanted to keep talking but he didn’t know any subjects. Sascha was happy to talk to someone in person for a change. She asked what floor he was on.

“Room 68.”

“Oh my God, neighbors! I’m in 69. Nice nice, eh?” She made a suggestive face, Ellis made a sympathetic one. He must have heard her family going at it. “My name is Sascha, by the way.”

“Ellis Avia.”

She got up and asked if he hugged.

Ellis was fatally touch-starved. “I’ve never been asked.”

“Boundaries are important.” She put her arms around him. Realized he did need to do laundry. “Welcome to Sincoke, city of quantity over quality. Its like TV. A billion channels, nothing to do.”

Ellis understood she was hiding from the yelling. The dance didn’t feel private or intimate anymore, it felt lonely. He didn’t want her going back home. He invited her to hang out.

“I think that’d be fun!” She said. “I have online classes most days but I’d love to show you around a little.”

“You free tonight? I was unpacking and my apartment is weird.” She was a bit put off being invited to his apartment. He noticed. “No pressure. Its just really weird. Like, spiritually empty.”

“Haha ‘spiritually empty’? Well, no one lived there,” she said.

“…You’ve never seen anyone there? It’s my brother’s place. Allegedly. He sent some prick to bring me here. You haven’t seen him?”

“Wait, I saw a guy there months ago. Maybe a year? Time feels irrelevant. He was really hot.” She paused for a moment and went for it. “Kinda looked like you.”

“I have no idea what he looks like.” Ellis said.

Did it go over his head, or had she been deflected? “Wait,” she said, “you don’t know what your brother looks like?”

“I haven’t seen him in ten years. Suddenly he invites me to stay with him, and the apartment is like spotless. Everything is new. It’s all very mysterious.”

“Maybe he cleaned it for you. Or maybe… its his porn studio.” Ellis looked perplexed. “Dude you know. All those ‘amateur’ guy-with-camera porn sites. They’re always in very clean, mostly empty apartments.”

“Why would he let me stay there then?”

“Fluffer,” she said. He nodded knowingly, clearly had no idea what she meant. She rolled her eyes at herself for worrying. There was not an ounce of guile in this boy. “I’ll help you investigate your brother’s creepy porn studio. Plus if you’re a secret murderer my family might hear me scream over their own yelling.” He looked mortified. She set a laundry alarm on her phone, and turned her location on just in case.

He seemed more nervous than she was. They heard another crash from Apt 69. “Hey, even if you’re a secret murderer, it can’t be worse than my place!”

Philip K Dude

9:32PM. Dzerassae photographed six men as they showed up at Zengrel’s house. Thick necks, pot bellies, big arms, and fascistic tattoos. “Classic goon bods,” Dallas did a chef’s kiss. “If it were lighter out they’d be wearing sunglasses.”

They were wearing dress pants, white gloves, and double breasted black jackets. “What are they, bellhops?” Dallas said. “They look like they should be wearing anti-woke brand t-shirts. Second Amendment Cereal or something.” “I fucking hate private security. It’s all guys who want to ‘protect and serve’ but they’re too out of shape and racist to be cops. And that’s saying something.”

Their shirts weren’t tucked in and their buttons were undone. Dzerassae had affection for anyone who disrespected their employer. “Where is class solidarity?” She asked Dallas. “Private security make paltry minimum wage that make breadlines look like generosity. It is hard economy.”

“ACAB, Dzerassae. Even fake ones.”

9:46 PM. A large van pulled in. “I thought all his shit was already here,” Dallas said. “What’d he forget a couple 14-year-olds?” Dzerassae ignored him but readied her camera. That was a very real possibility.

The van had a logo for ‘Innovative Livestock Solutions.’ The security performed their theater. hassling the black drivers, giving each other hand signals, and constantly gesturing to their guns. Eventually the deliverymen unloaded large coils and huge commercial refrigerators. The goons kept haranguing them about where to go. No doubt giving confusing, conflicting instructions.

“What kind of fucked up fetish is this for?” Dallas said. “Guess he needs a lot of Dino Nuggets and Lunchables for his harem.”

They took pictures of the equipment; they’d have to do research to deduce its purpose. Watching the movers work was monotonous. Detective work was incredibly boring, even when investigating an elite sex cult. Their vigilance waned, their minds wandered. Dallas imagined anemic figures sprawled on the floor inside. Powerless, poor wretches stuck in Zengrel’s orbit. Dzerassae saw signs of doom. She interpreted patterns in the positions of the guards, and in the rhythm of the birds beating their wings. Junk data. Not everything was an omen. There was a fine line between listening to the universe and magical thinking.

Something about Zengrel’s apartment inspired dread. The deliverymen moved quickly like they didn’t want to be there. The guards watched them like hawks but wouldn’t follow them inside.

One of the guards put his hands on a deliveryman, starting a loud altercation. “Wild night,” Dallas shrugged. “Hope the dude doesn’t get shot. Be a useful photo, though.”

10:16PM. A limousine.

“Oh fuck oh fuck,” Dallas said. “Wee-oo wee-oo. Pedo’s here.”


Sascha acted amused by the yelling echoing through the halls. Ellis had enough tact not to say anything. He stood in front of his door and fumbled through his pockets.

“We can keep the door open if you want,” he said.

“And listen to them? We should soundproof it and blast music or something.”

The laundry room was a safe place; she didn’t like being right outside their door. She fidgeted anxiously while Ellis pulled cheap ear buds out of his pocket. Sascha’s Mom screamed about entrepreneurial spirit. Batteries, a rubber band, a bunch of loose change. Sascha’s Dad threatened to relapse. Half-eaten bag of Swedish Fish, taquito wrappers, a reusable straw, a student bus pass. Cyrus repeated some gibberish he’d heard online. Chinese food sauce packets, a library card from Okonkwa, Cyrus cursed at the top of his lungs, a bunch of fliers for open mics, Cyrus punched their couch—

The parents grew increasingly bewildered by their son. Being misunderstood hurt his ego and made him angrier. She was familiar with the cycle; she had to grow up with him.

“Shit,” Ellis mumbled to himself. He seemed nice and she was very lonely, but he was a stranger who walked in on her in the laundry room. Without laundry.

“FUCK!” Cyrus screamed.

“Fuck…” Ellis breathed as he thrust his hand back into his pocket.

She heard Cyrus throw something at the wall. What if he was in her room, destroying her figures and electronics? What if he found the titty figures?!

Ellis threw a wad of receipts on the ground in frustration.

“I’m actually gonna watch my laundry,” Sascha mumbled, stepping away.

He exhaled loudly. “I think I locked myself out.”

“Property manager’s number is downstairs.” Poor guy. He never answered.

“I uh, don’t have a phone.”

Cyrus punched the door and she jumped. “Convenience store might have one,” she spat.

Ellis finally clocked the vibe shift. Her whole body was turned in the direction of the laundry room. He froze, confused and bug-eyed. “Did I-” don’t question her, “sorry I-” nothing to do with you—just let her go. “Alright, I’ll go downstairs. Uh, see ya maybe.”

“Sorry, good luck with the door!” She started scurrying away when the door crashed open and Cyrus spilled out. His skin was lighter than Sascha’s but he had the same nose and eyes. The sides of his head were shaved, and the top was long and slicked back with so much gel it looked plastic. He was wearing a stark white polo. He had an enamel pin of a smug-looking toad on his lapel.

He slammed the door shut. “Normies! NPCs!” He roared. Then he noticed Sascha and Ellis. “What are you doing. Who is this beta?”


Zengrel handed his driver a fat tip. He was tall and broad like a linebacker, with a big face, wide jaw, and long gray hair. He wore a salmon polo and faded jeans. His deep smile lines were noticeable even from a distance. The employees’ mood shifted when he arrived. His big smile, self-satisfied as it was, proved infectious. He never blinked. He put his arm around the guards and movers and slapped them on the back, treating the hired help like old college buddies.

“Life of the party, this guy,” Dallas said bitterly. “Real peoples’ champion.”

“Stops people from asking too many questions,” Dzerassae said. “ I hate American performative niceness. Smile when you happy. Scowl all other times.”

“I can take or leave most of my culture,” Dallas said, “but I think its nice to smile at people and shake hands.”

Dzerassae gestured out the window. “See what niceness hides.”

They heard footsteps outside the aviary, followed by dangling keys.

Dallas got up to handle whoever was at the door. AIDS developed a system called the Sus Scale, where each member’s trustworthiness was ranked based on looks and vibes, to determine who should speak to police and civilians. America was voted least suspicious, though she argued her blackness was a disadvantage with some people. Next was Dallas. He could be charming, but he smiled like a freak and had no filter. Dzerassae was last because of her old-world mannerisms and Russian accent. Lester was banned from speaking to the public.

Dallas saw a stocky man through the peephole. Mid 30s, ratty windbreaker and cargo pants. He was holding a plastic bag and struggling to inset a key into the lock. Dallas noticed he was swaying

Dallas opened the door and said, “Howdy?”

The guy looked surprised, then awkward and unsure of himself, as if Dallas caught him doing something wrong. Dallas waited for him to talk first, hoping for a clue about who he should pretend to be. The man tried to look past him and Dallas moved to block Dzerassae from view. A bird squawked, and the man leered.

“I’m here to… to feed the fucking birds,” he stammered, visibly drunk.

“Oh man they didn’t tell you? I was gonna be here tonight, so I volunteered. They were supposed to give you the night off.” This seemed to frustrate him, like he was used to abrupt schedule changes. “Ugh. Hate it when they fucking do that,” Dallas said. The man nodded. He tried to hide the plastic bag.

A draft came in. The birds started squawking, and the man’s face reddened with rage. “Fucking birds disrespecting me!”

“Whoa there partner,” Dallas tried to put a hand on his shoulder, but the man shoved his way inside, pulling fistfuls of rice out the bag.

“FEATHERED FUCKS!!!” He tossed rice and it scattered everywhere.

Dallas dove between the rice and birdcages. “The birds are innocent!”

“He is attracting attention from across street,” Dzerassae said.

Dallas spun around the man and covered his mouth, kicked him in the back of the knees to drop him, then pulled him into the bathroom.

“Windy Night in Sincoke,” Kenneth Steven Janes, https://www.twitch.tv/scrunklebunglo, https://soundcloud.com/kenneth-steven-janes

Cyrus straightened his shoulders, lifted his chest, and raised his chin. It made Ellis think of a goose hissing and flapping its wings. Geese can’t take a hit. Cyrus turned away from Ellis as if he was sufficiently cowed. Normally that’s when Ellis would take a swing, but Sascha was right there.

“This” Cyrus gestured to Ellis, “is what I want to talk about, Sascha. Look what postmodern media—and hormone therapy—have done to your mind.” Ellis looked perplexed. “See? He doesn’t even know what’s going on.”

“No one does, Cyrus. No one ever knows what you’re talking about,” Sascha said.

“Yes—you do. You’re not connected to your evolutionary intuition. Let me explain; this beta hasn’t consciously realized it—but instinctively—he knows—we’ve established our status in relation to each other.”

Ellis looked at Sascha pleadingly, like a dog that wanted to chase a squirrel.

“What are you doing?” She asked Cyrus, deadpan.

“Forget this petty squabble,” he gestured at the apartment. “You’re not in a place where you can understand. But-”

“What are you doing talking to me? This isn’t how it works,” she said, sternly and sadly. “None of you talk to me. You yell, and I guess now whisper and plot, about me.”

Cyrus stepped towards her. Ellis stepped towards him. “That’s because you don’t listen Sascha.”

“Not with a straight face,” she said.

Cyrus twitched. “’People mock things they aren’t ready to accept,’” he quoted someone.

“You don’t need to tell me that!”

Ellis looked at their parents. A refrigerator-bodied Mediterranean man with a mustache whose posture made him look smaller. A petite middle aged white woman with weird Pilates muscles and over-sunned skin. They seemed mesmerized by their daughter’s voice, as if they’d never heard it.

“Mahdi-” Cyrus began.

“That’s Dad to you!” Their father yelled petulantly.

“You lost that status!” Cyrus shot back.

“That’s more like it.” Sascha said bitterly. “I’ll just stand here.”

“I want you to come to my meetings,” Mahdi pleaded.

“I think it will teach you some Responsibility,” Cyrus said, choking up at the word.

“There’s only one way to learn anything,” Sascha’s Mom said, “Rise and grind!”

Wow all that sounds great, guys. Tell you what, why don’t you all fucking kill each other, and whoever survives can tell me how to live my life! Sascha didn’t say. She turned and looked at Ellis, simultaneously sorry he was seeing this and annoyed he was still there. Ellis just glared at Cyrus.

“Hey,” Cyrus said, mustering as much authority as he could, “you and I already settled things.”

“Have we?” Ellis had venom in his voice. He didn’t want to meddle in Sascha’s business. So he had to make Cyrus hit him first.

“You’re trying to save face—that’s normal—but all you can do is talk.” He wasn’t wrong. If he shut Cyrus up his way, he’d be the bad guy and everyone would avoid him. The yoke of acceptable behavior was on his shoulders, always benefiting the biggest asshole. Didn’t anyone know what ‘fighting words’ were? “It’s the same for all of you—you’re all frozen, quiet—your genes recognize my dominant position.” He looked at Sascha. “And I’m finally using it to set you—on the right path.”

“You’re just making everyone feel weird,” Ellis said.

“Do you even eat raw liver?” Cyrus said. Don’t say I eat your Mom, Ellis thought. She’s right there. “You obviously eat processed foods. Sascha—if you were a real woman—your evolutionary psychology—wouldn’t permit you around a man like this.”

“I was helping him find his keys,” She turned to Ellis. “Go call the property manager.”

“See? In the presence of a real man your status plummets,” Cyrus said.

“Just go downstairs, dude,” Sascha was exasperated.

“Run along now,” Cyrus said.

“Nah,” Ellis said.

Sascha narrowed her eyes at him. “Excuse me?”

“This dude’s violent, I’m staying within earshot. I’ll finish my laundry,” Ellis stared Cyrus right in the eyes. You know where to find me.

“Excuse me—who the fuck are you?” Cyrus spat.

Ellis leaned forward and glared at him through his wild hair. “I’m your new neighbor,” he gestured to the door behind them. “Be seeing you around.” I’ll be here now. I will hear everything. You have to think about me. I’m the Mom’s Boyfriend now.

Part One: The Air is Alive in Sincoke, 1

The Wind blew through Riley’s long black hair. Wind meant trouble. Sincoke was the Still City where the hot, dry air never budged. ‘Nothing Circulates in Sincoke,’ the saying goes.

Except on wild nights.

Growing up in a dangerous neighborhood taught Riley to read the city better than most people can read a room. He sensed he shouldn’t have worked that double, shouldn’t be walking home this close to sundown. He ignored his gut because he couldn’t say no to the money.

His hair made him a target. It either outed him as an ‘injun’ or a hippie liberal, depending on who wanted to punch his teeth in. He was walking too fast to braid it so he stuffed it in his shirt collar. It was itchy but he had to get home before shit kicked up. He felt it coming. He wasn’t worried about himself, he needed to make sure his little siblings were home safe. He started feeling the call of wild nights and sneaking out when he was their age. It’s harder to resist when you’re younger.

The name Sincoke was extrapolated from the Lenape word for ‘Pregnant Land’ though it is anything but. It was always partly cloudy but it rarely rained, so the prairie grass was thin and dry. It was more like a desert with peach fuzz. No one bothered to ask his ancestors why they called it that. Riley always figured it was ironic. Trail of Tears gallows humor.

Eventually even this wasteland was taken away from the Native Americans. Their vague warnings to tread lightly on pregnant land were ignored, like they always are. They were followed by frontiersmen, then oil men, then a tidal mass of poor folk. Industrialists, middle men, and crooks swept in to reap from the vulnerable population. Oil, factories, and meat processing plants fueled the growth of dozens of little boom towns until their borders overlapped.

These suburbs with emphasis on the ‘urb’ were cobbled together during The Great Rezoning into a Frankenstein city of mismatched parts. Every town has a bad neighborhood, and when Sincoke was stitched together it inherited all those towns’ bad neighborhoods. Riley knew them all but he needed to take a direct route instead of a safe route. And it didn’t matter, no neighborhood was safe when the wind blew through it.

The Wind brought people out. They gathered under the setting sun on dilapidated porches, in the parking lots of run-down corner stores, on cracked sidewalks and beneath leaning telephone poles covered in missing pet signs. The mundane looked ominous blowing in the wind, in the light of the orange and purple sky.

Sincoke usually belonged to cars, but on Wild Nights the streets were packed with roving bands of people. The sun was setting and the energy was rising. People were playing roisterous games of Craps in the space between houses and in the courtyards of public buildings. There were people drinking or arguing on every front porch he passed. Every car that passed him was going at least fifteen miles over the speed limit, as if they were trying to clear out for the people.

Every couple blocks some guy—or a group of guys—would watch Riley. He’d stare right back. He kept his body language relaxed and confident, not picking a fight but not backing down from one. A tiny piece of him wanted one. His hair itched in his shirt collar—he wanted to yank it out and let it blow free. He knew it was just the energy in the air getting to him. He resisted it, but it stayed in the back of his mind. Nagging at him.

He was distracted by a guy on the other side of the street being chased by a woman holding a rubber mallet when a mug came crashing out of a nearby window—right at his head. He dodged it and glared in the direction it came. Just a couple having a blow-out fight. He looked down at Garfield’s shattered face. He noticed the litter on every curb and wondered how much of it was Garfield merchandise.

It always surprised Riley when people broke or threw anything out. Even before his father’s injury his family couldn’t afford to waste anything, and that was typical. Most of the factories closed in the ’90s, and most of the meat processing plants moved south of the border. There was investment in a tech boom that never happened—Sincoke wasn’t ready for the knowledge economy, and no amount of PR stunts by city leadership were going to change that. Sincoke gave away ungodly tax breaks and grants to big firms, and after that didn’t pay off it had nothing to offer anyone at all; even to the poor and desperate. People and money stopped coming to and from Sincoke. The Still City. Sincokers, or Sinkies, are stuck in a city in the middle of nowhere, with nothing to do and no money to go anywhere else.

No Circulation in Sincoke.

Shoulda listened to the Lenape.

“Well well if it isn’t my ancestral foe,” roared a deep drawl from behind Riley. “How’s the air up there Standing Stork?” It was a stupid insult but he delivered it with venom.

Riley stopped and met the gaze of a short, stocky, older cowboy. He was bow-legged, wearing nothing but jeans, a long mustache, and a ten-gallon hat with the namesake horns of a Texas Longhorn sticking out from holes on either side. He had a big hairy belly and a flabby chest, but bulky arms. His neck was incredibly thick and muscled, probably from wearing those horns around all the time.

Of course Riley cashed his paycheck earlier that evening, and he was carrying a couple hundred in cash. He didn’t want his family to have to choose between hot water and his Dad’s pain medicine again, so he thought about booking it. Other people gathered to heckle and watch. If they saw him run he could never walk around safely again.

“You been watching too many movies, pardner.” Riley said, strolling towards the man to meet him in the street.

“Don’t pardner me, you tall bitch.”

Laughter erupted. There was a crowd forming. ‘Flagpole gon’ fight Willy.’ Riley heard someone refer to him as ‘The Alfalfa Street Longhorn.’ People watched from their front steps and lawns—good people who would have stepped in and broken things up on a normal night. But on windy nights everyone loses their minds.

The man stopped just outside arm’s length and tried to act intimidating. Riley stared him down. He looked like he had been crying.

“Whoa.” Riley softened and looked concerned. “Hey man–”

The Alfalfa Street Longhorn couldn’t handle seeing sympathy on another man’s face. Before Riley could ask if he was OK, he roared and started beating his chest like a gorilla.

The man kicked out and dragged his bare foot across the cracked sidewalk, like a bull getting ready to charge.

Most Americans don’t know anything about Sincoke, but its notorious among conspiracy theorists, occultists, and true crime fans for random, explosive crime spikes. Could be something caused by the special forces and intelligence units headquartered in the prairie. Could be caused by the numerous fringe religious groups or political militias that operate in the area. Could be whatever the Lenape say the land is ‘pregnant’ with. Could be boredom. Could be a city-wide psychological event—a periodic mass hysteria.

People say it’s something in the water. Sincokers like Riley knew something was on the wind. It transferred an infectious energy that sent people looking for trouble. The itching became too much and Riley tugged his long black hair free again. He could see the pulse in the other man’s temples. If I back down and look weak, Riley reasoned, I’ll never be able to walk this neighborhood again. As if he needed any more justification, the wind blew the feather of a prairie chicken towards him. He caught it and put it behind his ear.

He didn’t need a reason suddenly.

“He Beat His Chest,” by Kenneth Steven Janes, https://www.twitch.tv/scrunklebunglo, https://soundcloud.com/kenneth-steven-janes

Lester Guerra waited outside of his ex-girlfriend’s apartment. He noticed that people were crossing the street to walk on the opposite sidewalk, which frustrated him because he was making an attempt to look less like a mean son of a bitch. He stopped shaving his head, just had a thick mane now. He wore long sleeves to cover up his deeply offensive tattoos—which was difficult because he ran hot, around 99 degrees. Sometimes 100.

He felt 101 at that moment. He was angry and appalled by the shithole his daughter was living in.

The little boom towns that would become Sincoke sprouted up organically—like tree roots or cancer growth—and when they were forced together the lack of urban planning was apparent by the jarring lack of public transit and the obtuse layout. The small government extremists who dreamed up Sincoke in the 19CE would have loved to see it. Contemporary libertarians certainly did. Sincoke was vast, spread out, and lacking everything that makes cities fun and convenient to live in. It was more like a giant strip mall. A flyover metropoless that most Americans couldn’t point to on a map.

Sarah brought their daughter to one of the thousands of awful little towns that Sincoke absorbed, kicking and screaming. No buses stopped there and Uber drivers charged extra to drive out of their way (the market at work!). The streets were in ill-repair. There were no stop signs or street signs, just the bent metal signposts they were torn away from, and the faded remnants of white lines on the road. Jesus Christ, he thought, Diega is gonna get hit by a car.

They lived in a two-story house converted into two single bedroom apartments. Diega better have the bedroom, Sarah and her new man—if you can call him that—better be on the couch Lester thought. The siding was coming off and there was a broken window covered up in cardboard. It was considerably nastier than his halfway house. Lester had hid from the police in nicer places than this. It looked like a drug den. May as well have had a red light out front.

The house was across the street from an abandoned lot overgrown with prairie grass, with a rusty old car sticking out of it, its front half buried into the ground. If Lester knew one thing, its that patches of grass in neighborhoods like this are full of needles, condoms, and ticks. They better not be letting Diega play in that grass.

Anger churned his stomach. He started counting things like Amy said, but it was too late. His face got white hot as blood rushed into it and made him dizzy. He tensed up and his stomach and throat burned like he chugged battery acid. Lester always experienced anger suddenly, violently, and physically. He compulsively threw his arm back to swing on a parking meter. With extreme effort he stopped himself. It felt like holding back a sneeze.

He grabbed his phone to check if his ex canceled on him. The screen lit up for a split second, then suddenly died in his hand. He cursed and mashed the power button but the phone felt cold and limp. It was a brick. He Gritted his teeth and squeezed it. He heard the door behind him open.

Lester always had mixed feelings when he saw Sarah. She was heavier now. She looked tired, unwell, worse off without him—he was sure. She also looked pissed at him.

“One hour. Got it? One.” She stood in the bowing door frame. Her new boyfriend mean mugged him from the top of their staircase. Tough guy, standing behind his woman. Real smug for a fucker who lived in a house with a missing ceiling tile in the stairwell and loose carpet on the stairs. Jesus, Diega could slip. What was this asshole even good for?

“Sure, sure, yeah,” he kept his back to them and talked over his shoulder. He didn’t want to glare back at tough guy and start anything. Not this time. “Little trip to the pizzeria. Some ice cream. Couple rounds on the claw game, maybe win her a stuffed animal.” Classic deadbeat Dad date.

“No claw machine. You’ll freak out and bust the fucking glass. And if I call, you answer,” she said pointedly. Pointing at him.

“…My phone, uh. My phone broke.”

“Nope,” she said, turning around.

“Holy shit, I can give you the number for the pizzeria. It’ll be fine.”

“NO!” She turned and hollered. “What happened, stubbed your toe and threw your phone through a wall?”

“Sarah!” He growled and stepped towards her, before catching himself and stepping back. She shot him a look. He knew exactly what it meant. You’re still a fucking psycho.

“Or did you throw it through someone’s head?” She hissed, before slamming the door as he stammered an apology.

He took a deep breath and tried to walk a couple blocks away before freaking out. He knew it was coming and he couldn’t stop it, but he didn’t want them to hear it. They would love that, wouldn’t they?

He angrily clutched his phone in his pocket. This was all its fault anyway. Something felt off, there was a dent. He looked at it and realized that the plastic was warped and caved in the shape of his fingers. Like it melted between them.

Cheap piece of crap. He blanked out, started running, then wound his arm up real good and spiked his stupid fucking phone into the concrete. It bounced off the sidewalk and into a house, denting the siding. It wasn’t satisfying and he kind of felt bad for it.

He just wanted to buy his daughter a slice of pizza. He was always incredibly unlucky with electronics—every computer, TV and appliance he’s ever owned just conked out, bricked on him. They wouldn’t let him use the microwave at the office. But it hadn’t happened in a really long time. Why tonight? It was so hard to convince Sarah to let him see their daughter. The wind blew a plastic bag in his face, and he began punching it to shreds.

He sat on a curb and tried everything America taught him to calm down. He counted three things he could see. The awful conditions my daughter is living in. The people crossing the street to avoid me. The empty void in my pocket where my stupid phone used to be. Three things he could hear. The sound of Sarah slamming the door on me. The judgment in her voice. The brief sound of my daughter’s voice in the background. He started to feel sad, but that made him mad. Three things he could feel. The tight feeling in my chest. Heat in my wrists. The swift breeze.

That explained it. Sarah being particularly bitchy, the relapse with his anger management problems, the pedestrians being particularly avoidant of his scary ass. It was a Wild Night. Of all the luck. A dark thought crossed his mind. After he picked up Dallas’ little brother, maybe he’d let it take him.


Sascha was doom-scrolling to distract from the tension emanating from outside her room. She had her laptop on her chest and her head propped against a pillow at nearly a 90 degree angle. It was extremely uncomfortable but she couldn’t will herself to move. The central air didn’t work and it was hot, but her skinny legs were super hairy so she kept them tangled in the sheets to stave off the dysphoria. Her mass of wavy orange hair was greasy and tangled, and her pores were clogged with old makeup. Her bedding and shirt were crusty too, more sweat and skin cells than cotton.

She had literally no reason to take care of herself. All of her friends and classes were online and she couldn’t stream anymore. She had committed the ultimate sin of being a woman on the internet who talked about video games. Also she was trans and an a-rab! Well, she was Persian-American (thanks for the dark leg hair, Dad!) which is a distinction these fucks can’t make. She was immediately chased off the internet by harassment, hate speech and people asking for feet.

She only left her room to use the toilet or to grab snacks, which she would sneak back to her room like a scavenger dragging a carcass to its feeding ground. She had to be strategic about when she bathed or did laundry. If she left her room for too long one of the Ternionmight leave literature in there, and that almost always lead to an explosion. It had been three whole weeks since their last blowout. Not their longest oppressive silence but they were gunning for the record, bless them.

She had a feeling they weren’t going to make it. She heard three sets of footsteps outside her door. Usually they settled and performatively ignored one another by the early evening. Tonight they seemed agitated. Likely trying to goad one another into a fight.

So Sascha scrolled. She needed all the dopamine her feed could give her. None of her friends were online to take her mind off of it or offer her reassurances. It made her feel lonely and isolated, and contributed to the ominous feeling of impending doom.

Suddenly she hit the bottom of her feed. The algorithm couldn’t generate any more op eds and hot takes. Impossible! Suddenly she realized friends weren’t offline, she was.

Internet access in Sincoke was notoriously bad. SinCast was the only network provider in town. They had no incentive to deliver good service, and no local talent to provide it anyway. Sascha’s phone got no reception in her windowless room. The lack of service made her suspect it was windy out.

She closed her laptop and disassociated while it went cold on her chest. She had a witchy friend in Portland, OR who believed in Sincoke’s Wild Nights. Sascha used to think magic evil wind was fake, but the Ternion were always worse when the air moved.

What was she in for.

Sascha needed a distraction. She dug her old CRT TV and a Sega CD out of the closet. It was under a pile of boots with broken zippers that she kept telling herself she’d fix. There was a video capture card hanging from it, a remnant of her streaming days. She plugged it into the over-burdened surge protector under her desk and emerged with dust and a loose coin stuck to her arms.

She bought all of her old consoles secondhand and broken, and resurrected them with household objects and a little ingenuity. With manic energy, she jury-rigged a replacement power plug using a dirty fork from under her bed and replaced frayed wires with a bread tie. It took an hour. She held her hands together in prayer while waiting for it to boot up. Come on, my little zombie! And it started. She built a big throne of pillows on her floor and settled in to warm her heart with some retro games.

The nostalgia wore off in fifteen minutes and she started ruminating on the footsteps again. They grew louder, more frantic, more agitated. It sounded like they were wearing tap shoes. She could identify them by their footsteps. She tried to focus on gaming but kept getting swept up by the ominous feeling. A blow out was looming.

Whatever was coming would be a relief from the tension at this point.

Suddenly, something fell over. There was a soft thud. One of her Mom’s endless racks of leggings. Her precious ‘products’ that covered the whole house. Everyone had to navigate around them like a labyrinth.

There was a ‘these fucking things,’ and then a, ‘watch it!,’ then a clothes rack went flying across the apartment and crashed into her door. It scared the hell out of her and she froze.

Things hadn’t escalated that quickly in awhile.


“What’s the last thing you noticed?”

America MacCabee was on a video call with a patient. She looked at herself in the upper right hand corner of her screen. The lighting and position of her camera were arranged to accentuate her high cheekbones, so she looked attractive and capable. Her expression was focused and impassive. The light made her skin look a little brighter. It helped sometimes with white clients.

She tried not to move because it made her background glitch. She stole the image of a sunlit, tidy office with plants and bland beige decor off of Pinterest. It masked a sparse old townhouse covered in piles of dusty records and reports. Her bed and kitchen counters were stacked high with stained manila folders and old hardbound textbooks. Half evidence, half patient records, almost no personal belongings.

It was all very well organized though.

Her patient was extremely poorly lit, like he was video calling from a black hole. His eyes were empty. “I was just thinking the stuff we used to do. Parks, arboretums, friends. And like after he went crazy—I know it’s problematic to assume that. I know it took two. But everyone noticed he changed.”

“The last thing you noticed is that his behavior changed?”

He thought for a moment and his eyes lit up ever so slightly. He glanced to the left, which was associated with pain from the past. “I used to do things.”

“I want you to notice that. Don’t think about it, don’t judge it, just notice. Ready?”

“Never,” he said. She laughed professionally then turned on the balls. Two little footballs bounced around the screen. Up and down, side to side, corner to corstopping. Abruptly. Then

staying

.

still

.

Then mov i n g s l o w l y

America carefully watched his eyes as he processed his trauma to deduce where his body was storing it. She got caught up and followed the balls herself, then started thinking about the open file behind her. Coming up with a psychological profile of their target had been extremely difficult. She spoke to a lot of people with missing kids. She also spoke to surviving victims, so she knew exactly what was happening to their sisters and daughters.

She somehow managed to keep a straight face. Focused and impassive. When the balls stopped, her patient was crying. He looked directly into the camera. His eyes were very lively and he said,

“I have nothing. I feel dead.”

Nearly all of her patients expressed this at one point or another. She nodded empathically. “OK. Good. I want you to notice that.”

“How can I not?” He threw up his arms. “I fucking leave here at 5AM to get a parking spot for work, I pack boxes all day, then I come home and play fucking video games for like an hour. I used to have a partner. I used to have a life. Now I might as well be fucking dead.”

“Drudgery and loneliness can cause trauma.” Most of her clients were suffering from years of stress and boredom. Poverty in Sincoke was rampant. People worked long hours for little pay, or didn’t work and got a pittance from public programs. There was nothing most people could afford to do. “It’s called chronic trauma.” Ego death by a million cuts, one missed payment or weekend alone with Netflix at a time. It was happening to everyone, and she could only help the ones with insurance.

“What do I do about it? And what if he needs me?”

“Right now we’re just going to notice these feelings. You need to process. Focus on—”

“Fuck that!” He said. “This is all fucked. I had a life.” Before she could tell him to notice that,he signed off.

Not a terrible session, considering his issues with repression. And she wrapped up early! She had ten minutes before her 8PM patient. She got up to stretch, then turned on her phone to read some advice columns. They used to be her guilty pleasure but now she wrote for one, so it was technically market research. Turned her only hobby into a side hustle. Tsk tsk.

When she turned her phone on it buzzed for a solid minute as dozens of missed messages poured in. Clients. The messages were dire and weird, even from people she’d been making progress with.

She felt overwhelmed as more and more came through, but she lost it when a selfie came through from Dallas. She was still so mad at him. He was grinning like a jackass in a dark room across the street from Zengrel’s mansion, with the accompanying text, ‘here at neverland ranch 2.’

She chucked her phone onto her couch and exhaled deeply. Must be great to wave your gun around and make stupid jokes. It’s just a regular ol’ western revenge thriller when you don’t have to talk to grieving parents. Her phone buzzed with more messages and she put her head in her hands. She was one woman and there were hundreds of thousands of people in her city. She could only help one person at a time. And even then she could only help them cope. She couldn’t actually change anything.

There were limits to the individual approach towards mental health. But it’s not like there was a collective solution. Society wasn’t changing anytime soon.

She put herself together and picked up her phone. She swiped Dallas away, but she instinctively noticed his eyes were positioned slightly to the left. She ignored it—his appointment wasn’t until Thursday at 7AM. He had plenty of her time, and other people needed her right now. She scrolled through to find the most urgent and dire ones, and noticed a message from a contact she had named DO NOT RESPOND. DO NOT EVEN READ, GIRL.

She thought about it. Why not? She was always little miss perfect. Always level-headed, always responsible. Why shouldn’t she be a messy bitch for once?

The thought seemed to come from outside of her. It felt alien, something within her mimicking her inner voice. Another voice—her own this time—said: because too many people rely on you, Amy. As an empty gesture, she opened her window for some fresh air. She was surprised when she actually got it.

That’s why she was off her game. Sincoke’s wild nights were mass psychological events. People feeding off of one another, group dynamics. The wind was incidental. It triggered unusual behavior because people believed in it. Or maybe just because it felt different. She was worried about her patients. She was worried about her fellow detectives, and Dallas’ little brother, and whatever was going on with DO NOT RESPOND, DO NOT EVEN READ, GIRL. Another bitter voice carried on the wind asked who’s gon’ worry about you, Amy?

I am, she said, in a defiant inner voice. She sat down, looked at herself in the upper corner of her screen, and logged on for her 8PM.


He wasn’t there today.

“Rebecca.”

So what are y’all into?

“Bex!” Rebecca’s Mom snapped. She was a thin, petite, intense woman with angry, anxious eyes. Her hair was bleached so she could dye it however their guest liked it. She was wearing expensive yoga clothes so that no one could accuse her of relaxing unproductively. Her clothes were all new, without so much as a worn waistband. “Head in the game!”

Rebecca Beckster snapped to attention. She and her Mother were facing one another in an empty room. Her Mom was in an office chair, Rebecca was in a small folding chair designed to torture her. Her butt hung over the sides and the cold metal dug into her thighs. She was a big young woman, tall with wide shoulders and hips, a bit of a belly, and a head too big for hats. The chair was part of her training. It forced her to shrink.

The movers, shakers, and innovators of this era were optimizers, minimalists. Highly disciplined professionals, academics, and entrepreneurs that put every calorie and every movement to good use. Their distaste for Rebecca’s generous peasant body wasn’t about aesthetics or femininity, it was about efficiency. They liked people who were like consumer electronics. Small and smooth. Size was decadent and wasteful. Rebecca learned to sit demurely and act in ways that made her seem tiny. She was good at it. People never noticed she was tall unless she stood next to them, so she tended to stay seated or stand far away. The boy in the park (who was so tall!!) hadn’t notice her height until their dogs pulled them next to each other. He seemed to like it. She rewarded her poodle later with table food.

She had a printout of their mark’s Wikipedia article on her thighs. Her Mom had flash cards with things he was interested in. She held up one that said ‘effective altruism.’ Her mother raised her eyes, expectant and impatient.

“Uh, it’s like–”

Uh?!” Her Mom said. She leaned forward. She was always leaning towards Rebecca. Like she was always ready to lunge.

“It’s like–” she cringed and started over. “It’s using logic and reason to optimize the effects of your good deeds.” Her Mom watched her expectantly. “It involves… Thinking Globally.” Her Mom looked approvingly at this, but expected more. “Putting money into wisely selected charities, neutralizing existential threats, prioritizing people in the future,” AKA using hypothetical people who don’t exist yet as a justification for ignoring people in the present, “setting your emotions aside and approaching moral conundrums with a cost/benefit analysis.”

“Sell me on the fact that you believe in Effective Altruism.”

Rebecca froze and looked around self-consciously under her Mom’s gaze. She felt really pressured, and suddenly very fed up with Effective Altruism, a concept she found pretentious and tedious. “If there was a kid drowning I’d let it, but then I’d sell their organs to pay for lifeguards.”

She surprised herself. “Can I just act fascinated?” she asked, before her Mom could chastise her for being snarky. “Wow! How do you know what’s going to happen in the future? That sort of thing.”

“Rebecca, this man is a Billionaire. Billions. He earned that money, and that’s why we trust people like him with it. You should be happy that someone like that is trying to maximize the good he can do with it. He knows how to best spend his money, that’s self-evident.” Rebecca just nodded. Her Mom was doing a great job pretending she’d internalized Effective Altruism. “Don’t you want to be around people like that? Important people don’t come to Sincoke very often Rebecca. Don’t you want mentorship? Opportunities? Don’t you want to matter?”

“Yes,” Rebecca said automatically. She held up the papers with a determined expression. “I’ll read more.”

“You better.” Her Mother stood up to leave the room. She turned and walked to her daughter as an afterthought and ran her fingers through her hair. “This is our chance, sweetie. You’ve got this.”

Her Mom exited into the hallway, mumbling about what they should rename their dog to suit their guest’s tastes. The hallway was empty, gray and tan. They’d lived in their home for years but it looked like contractors just flipped it. No pictures, decorations, no personal items. It was a blank slate they could decorate to suit their guests, then tear it all down after dinner.

A breeze, and something with it, came into the room through the open window. Rebecca tried to focus on her Wikipedia pages but she was distracted. She tried to imagine what she would put on the walls.

Rebecca ran into Riley during a stroll through the heavily manicured Memorial Park in Center City. She was wearing jogging gear to fool her Mom. She couldn’t get caught going on a stroll. For what, fun? Everything had to be enriching and serve a purpose. Memorial Park was designed with that in mind. A lot of research and effort was put into maximizing nature’s effect on Wellness. The result was a stressful, bland place where a lot of people with email jobs walked to signal their virtue.

That’s why she was so surprised to meet him. He looked out of place, like a big, comfy sweatshirt on a rack of boring gray suits. He was the only other person who didn’t look like he had somewhere to be in ten minutes.

She was walking their unnamed poodle, he was walking a shaggy black mutt named Sitting Dog who never sat still. He approached her. He said he almost never came to Memorial Park, but he showed up on a whim. Then they started ‘running into each other’ daily. They both knew it wasn’t an accident.

He had a ton of interests in art and niche media, and he had a big fun sounding family. Rebecca was trained to be a great passive conversation partner. She knew how to keep the ball in the air, when to raise her eyebrows, when to laugh, when to say wow! She always learned just enough about whatever she was supposed to talk about so that she could fake engagement. She didn’t know anything about tokusatsu or sword and sorcery, but he talked about it in such a cute, enthusiastic way that she enjoyed herself. He didn’t over explain things. Here was a skilled active conversation partner, someone who wanted her to enjoy listening to him. And she did. She didn’t have to fake it.

And then he fucking ruined everything by asking her what she was interested in. Her training failed her for the first time. Being asked about herself felt like falling off a horse. It knocked her out of character. She didn’t realize she was in one.

She knew what the last dozen people her parents had entertained liked, but she couldn’t answer for herself. Ever since then her brain had been mush. It didn’t help that Theodore Zengrel was like if you put all of her parents’ marks into a blender and poured the off-white, flavorless paste on top of unsweetened porridge. Works in finance—whatever that means. Patron of the arts and science—aren’t we all?

All of her parents’ marks owned somethingtech and made an i-something, or had a plan to disrupt something with an app that did something. Or they worked in finance, which means they got rich by moving richer peoples’ fake money around. She started flipping through the packet looking for his company name, a benefactor for his philanthropy, his hometown, anything she could bring up to prompt him to talk more—as if he wouldn’t just do that on his own. There was nothing her brain could latch onto. He was working on ‘big things’ and came from ‘humble origins.’ No one was this nebulous.

She realized, with horror, that she was. What did she do? Who was she?

So, what are y’all into?

Right now it was Effective Altruism. For as long as her family needed her to woo this mark. But her eyes glazed over it all. She just couldn’t pretend to care. Why was the packet so thick if no one could name what this guy did? She skipped ahead and her eyes lit up when she realized 60% of it was the ‘controversies’ section.

Her potential mentor. Rebecca did not like this.

Deanna Littner, https://www.instagram.com/deannaerislitt/