Fern G. Z. Carr – Oh My Stars

Oh My Stars
by Fern G. Z. Carr

              To the cast of “Bewitched” who gave
              us eight seasons of laughter – R.I.P.

Samantha, devoted wife and witch, straddling two worlds –
colon cancer

No-Witchcraft-in-My-House Darrin #1 and 2 –
emphysema and prostate cancer

haughty Endora, forever casting spells on Darrin –
uterine cancer

the shenanigans of guffawing prankster Uncle Arthur –
heart attack

dotty but loving, doorknob-collecting Aunt Clara –
heart attack

eagle-eyed Mrs. Kravitz, Snoop #1 and 2 –
ovarian cancer and stroke

henpecked and wilfully oblivious Mr. Kravitz –
bladder cancer

debonair Maurice, Shakespearean “act–tore” –
cancer

Dollar-Signs-in-the-Eyes, Make-a-Buck Larry Tate –
heart attack

The-Women-behind-Their-Man Louise Tate #1 and 2 –
unspecified death and stroke

I-Think-I’m-Getting-One-of-My-Sick-Headaches Mrs. Stephens –
Alzheimer’s

congenial, easy-going Mr. Stephens #1 and 2 –
heart attacks

jittery, inept housekeeper Esmeralda –
colon cancer and stroke

Cousin Serena, Sam’s quasi-identical alter ego –
still couldn’t dodge the colon cancer.

With all the witches and warlocks
in this group,

it’s a wonder that a spell wasn’t cast on the cast
in an attempt to reverse this deadly curse.

Marjorie Lotfi Gill – Escape Route

Escape Route
by Marjorie Lotfi Gill

           In response to the BBC’s interactive
           Syrian Journey: Choose your escape route
           (“If you were fleeing Syria for Europe,
           what choices would you make for you and
           your family? Take our journey to understand
           the real dilemmas the refugees face.”)

There was the game of counting
               gunshots in a riot,
and buying cigarettes
               for our too-blonde mother;
the game of the school set on fire
               while we were still in it,
and counting the minutes
               until the return of my brother.

There was the game of one toy
               for the journey,
of taking my lunchbox
               and filling it instead;
the game of hiding mother
               on the way to the airport,
father at the barrier
               while we went ahead.

There was the game of turning
               your ring inwards,
giving it to the man at the gate
               to let you pass;
the game of finding your seat
               on the flight,
counting those standing in the aisle
               who got on last.

There was the game of rising too far
               through cloud,
then descending again
               over the border;
the game of picking
               a runway and landing,
our radar stripped out so we wouldn’t
               make it over.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-32057601

Jennifer Clark – Sometime After TLC Cancelled Honey Boo Boo

Sometime after TLC cancelled Honey Boo Boo
by Jennifer Clark

Pumpkin is getting ready for prom
when Uncle Billy visits, then disappears.
Honey Boo Boo and her half sisters
Pumpkin, Chubbs, and Chicadee
worry where he might or might not be.

                                                      *

Everyone eventually flees, goes into hiding, or off the air.

                                                      *

Former fans suggest searching folds of Mama June’s three chins.
Sugar Bear and Mama June, whose marriage may or may not be dissolving,
file a missing person’s report.

                                                      *

From a safe distance
we gaze at our genetic past,
at hunter-gatherer ancestors
who’ve slipped through time
to slouch on overstuffed sofas.
Fascinated and fearful, we
peer into a mirror, see those
with less reproductive success
make bad decisions, a soft-bodied
clan who fart and belch and scratch.
Our evolutionary past causes us to shudder.

                                                      *

Mama June, surrounded by stacks of Pop-Tarts and other household staples,
takes breaks from extreme couponing—which she says is better than sex
to plow Honey Boo Boo with Go Go Juice, a kind of Pageant Crack,
made from Red Bull and Mountain Dew so her six-year-old will sparkle
for the judges.

                                                      *

Uncle Poodle and Alan want custody of Honey Boo Boo
when Mama June rekindles a romance with a man who spent
ten years in prison for molesting an eight-year-old Chickadee.

When this information finds its way to the public, The Learning Channel
cuts Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, states, “Supporting the health
and welfare of these remarkable children is our only priority.”

                                                      *

Days later, Uncle Billy texts
that he is okay, he just needs
some space.            We all do.

                                                      *

Honey Boo Boo wishes she had six fingers on each hand
so she could eat more Cheetos, but she just isn’t evolving
quickly enough.                          Everyone is not watching.

Liz Robbins – The Rules of the Game (1939)

The Rules of the Game (1939)
by Liz Robbins

Out in the Sologne stratosphere, the rich are like
the trimmed trees, beautifully stuck in pristine
white boxes.

Rabbits mating, pheasants mating. The rich wear
tweed, but have the help do the shooting. The mingling
of two whims, the contact of two skins.
Field glasses
check the state of affairs.

Illusions are often more interesting than realities.

Women dress for dinner as for a harem or wake. Men
in bear suits, military garb, tuxes. Which the masquerade,
on or off stage?

Twelve animals, dead. The rich pair up and split, eat
the rabbits. The way out: sleeping pills, a train ticket.
Sex, a spiritual obligation?

The greenhouse’s warm wet. The awful thing about life:

everyone has their reasons. Here, where are children?

Iain Matheson – Inspire

Inspire
by Iain Matheson

Pirouette around the room
chanting gospel songs about
sin (how best to avoid it)

or conspire like pirates or
gasp in helpless laughter or
take turns to correspond with

a niece in Cincinnati
a cousin in Alice Springs
a sincere aunt in Perthshire.

Newspapers under the bed:
behind a wall desperate
spiders breathe persistently.

Curried mince for supper with
expensive asparagus:
dustbins outside the window,

a saltire still hangs over
the burnt-out cinema where
we first saw Cinderella.

Fern G. Z. Carr – Norma

Norma
by Fern G. Z. Carr

She is Norma Desmond –
prima donna,
bygone star of silent film

I am big. It’s the pictures that got small.

her past – a silver screen memory
her present – a delusion,
a comeback

This is my life! It always will be! Nothing else!

a descent down a spiral staircase,
arms swaying snake-like above her head –
Salome dancing the Dance of the Seven Veils

All right Mr. DeMille, I’m ready for my close-up.

crazed eyes
blinded by the cameras,
the stage lights and

those wonderful people out there in the dark

her light
fading with the sunset,
her star

No one ever leaves a star.

extinguished
along with her youth
and past glories.

* Lines in italics from Sunset Boulevard

J. J. Steinfeld – On the Set of a Minor Motion Picture

On the Set of a Minor Motion Picture
by J. J. Steinfeld

I’ve seen too many movies
in my uneventful life,
the movie-star handsome man
at the bar said to the bartender,
his words three-whiskies loud
his smile threatening
to consume his face
like special-effects
in a not-so-subtle
horror movie.

A woman three bar stools away
having already had three husbands
who weren’t half as handsome
as the befuddled barroom actor
said she prefers plays to films
unless they’re foreign films
for which she has
an almost erotic weakness
pronouncing the word erotic
the way Marlene Dietrich might have
in The Blue Angel.

What the hell’s the difference between a movie and a film?
asks an argumentative man sitting at the end of the bar
who looks like four or five of Lon Chaney’s
thousand movie or film faces mixed together
and sounds like a character played by Boris Karloff.

Then a couple enter
sunglasses and prettiness
and studied self-importance
and the bartender
and the movie-star handsome man
and the thrice-divorced woman
and the argumentative drinker
all at the same moment realize
that real honest-to-goodness movie stars
have entered the bar and their lives
but they all guess different names
even though one of the entering actors
had been in four scandals in the last two years
and if any of them had just kept their eyes open
in the tabloid-emblazoned grocery check-out line
he or she would have guessed correctly.

Bryan R. Monte – Escape from Happy Valley

Escape from Happy Valley
by Bryan R. Monte

All the art of living lies in a fine mingling
of letting go and holding on.

—Henry Havelock Ellis

Oh, Marie, I should have grabbed
your skinny arm as you picked
at your chips with a pinched face
the days I passed the Cougar Eat
on my way to German class
on the other side of campus.
I should have looked into your big,
sad, dark, raccoon-mascaraed eyes
and said: “Mangiare, bambino.
Forget about those five extra pounds
the cameras put on. They’re going
to lose all your money anyway.”

I didn’t know that then, but what I did
was that I barely registered with
the tall, handsome, red-haired guy
his freckled face unmistakable
from a five-year TV series
and a Tom Sawyer film
who ate dinner with my blonde,
bright, kind, friend, Mary Beth
in the Cannon Center cafeteria.
I tried not to look up too much
to hide how gladly I would have
climbed aboard his raft
or helped whitewash his fence
as he talked about how much
he enjoyed filming in Missouri
(Mary Beth’s home state)
and looked forward to his mission.
I didn’t say much that meal, afraid
I’d call him “Jodie” and not “Johnny”
and wreck their date before it started,
even though I knew before they left,
for wherever it was they went,
that Mary Beth never had a chance
coming from an “apostate” commune.

And up in the gay bars in Salt Lake
all three of them, I ran into Paul
(centre box “Hollywood Squares”)
both of us regularly tossed out
Paul, for getting too loud
me, for being just twenty.
“Don’t you know who I am?” he’d shout
as the bouncer poured him into
his long, black, Cadillac limo
alone or with a “friend”
in a town where two men just holding hands
could get busted for lewd behaviour
by the cops right outside the front door
constantly combing the parking lot,
copying down license plate numbers
and writing tickets for broken taillights.

It was here I first discovered
the special treatment
enjoyed by Mormon royalty
and their film-star friends
who lived far above the rigid grid
of streets in the centre of town
on winding roads in hillside homes
and back-canyon, eight-bedroom “cabins”
who inherited get-out-of-jail passes
which came in handy the morning
the prize-winning professor’s
eighteen-year-old daughter
showed up on my dorm doorstep
on a weekday when women weren’t
allowed past the front desk.
After two attempts to squeeze her
back outside through my ground-floor window
we took the walk of shame together
past Sister Jensen’s office
who came out yelling until she heard
the “young woman’s” name
then quickly sent everyone
back to their rooms.

A week later, the “young woman”
and I took Greyhound to Salt Lake
to hear Dvorak’s Te Deum
in the silver-domed Tabernacle.
How we laughed at the pink spotlight
splashed on the white rounded ceiling
above the tall, thin, gold organ pipes
for the first movement’s female soloist
which suddenly changed to blue
for the male soloist in the second.
How her eyes widened
as I hummed or sang along softly
having performed the same piece
back East with a choir at college.
When it was over, we met her father
waiting just outside Temple Square
in a big, black Lincoln Continental.
(She must have phoned at the interval).

On the way back to Provo
we didn’t say much, but laughed
about the pink and blue lights
and all the room in the backseat.
I thought: we could make
beautiful children together,
even though she thought she was bi-
(as most people are according to Freud)
and I, a 6 on the Kinsey scale, (certainly gay),
perhaps with some help from friends.

She promised she’d come visit me
in Europe on my RLDS “mission”
I was in Hanover; we’d meet in Paris.
Four months and as many letters
and not a word. Finally I received
a one paragraph with a line saying:
“I’m not well enough to travel.”
Twenty-eight years later I found her
via Internet, teaching at university.
I published one of her poems, visited
and invited her to my magazine’s
annual, autumn Amsterdam reading.
She e-mailed me the month before
“I’ll be there no matter what.”
But the day arrived, and she didn’t;
this time with no explanation.

I regret when I didn’t stop
and when I did, when I spoke up
and when I didn’t, when I went out
and when I stayed in, when I got in
and when I walked the many miles back
home alone, more frightened than wise
immune to the usual addictions:
food, alcohol, cocaine, heroine;
religious sects—my only crutch
(which I’m finally throwing away
now that I’m chronically sick)
but well enough, I hope, as all of you,
(although it’s too late for Paul)
to finally escape from Happy Valley.

Bryan R. Monte – In the Dark

In the Dark
by Bryan R. Monte

If the story of my life were a movie
it would probably be made in black and white
on a low budget and in low lighting;
a real film noir piece.
Dateline Cleveland: November 1957
A county hospital next to an oily river
My mother in the stirrups
the doctor impatient, checking his watch
the Brown’s play by play
piped into the delivery room
the crowd roars
the doctor crouches
My mother cries
bloody, blind, crying in a cold room
weighed, washed, wrapped and taken away.
My three aunts hovering over me
whispering: Remember us
My father never came to pick us up.
My mother in close up
holds me tight, tighter, tighter still.
Fade to black.

Sixteen years later
A modern high school, three blocks long
The music room.
I enter and find the contents of a love letter
written to another boy
copied on the blackboard
and all the blackboards down the hall
the multiplication of betrayal
I run to my locker
find it covered in pink ribbons and perfume.
Exterior shot
the high school recedes in background
as I look down at the pavement
searching for the trapdoor out of suburbia
I sleep overnight in a park
until a policeman taps my shoes with his nightstick
and gives me a ride home.

Six years later.
a high-rise apartment in North Beach
you want to be my rich uncle,
a doctor with a shiny black Mercedes
and the face of Ben Casey
you play your part well
I stumble with my lines.
Imagining no pleasure
in the after dinner cocktail
bottoms up
I try to think about
a warm place to stay
food in the fridge
next quarter’s tuition
all the Valium I could eat
or thirty minutes later
stroking the smooth keys
of your grand piano
the lights of the city at my feet.
As I put my hand on the doorknob
you say: “I hope nothing will be missing.”
I say: “There always was.”
I go back to my cold water, cockroach-infested flat
six all-night bus lines rattling the windows.

I sit over the monitor
in a dark room
silhouetted in the flickering light
worse than those three old biddies
who spin the thread, measure it out
and cut it off.
I run the film over and over again
hoping to see something original
but even with the best editing
or running the film in reverse
I’m still entering or leaving the same rooms
watching strangers become friends
and then strangers again
the same smiles, wilting.

David Trinidad – 9/11

9/11
by David Trinidad

              Does it really matter,
              whether we photograph the disaster?

                                                         —Susan Rich

After we broke up, Ira kept the loft
on the third floor and I took the one
on the second, where his offices had been
(he’d moved them a while back, a few
blocks west, to the tenth floor of 180 Varick,
then disbanded his agency when he
became editor-in-chief at Grove/Atlantic).
Suddenly I was living like a college student
again—mattress, lamp, desk from IKEA.
Since I would have had to bicker with Ira
to get some of the things we’d bought
together, I exited the relationship “clean,”
with just my stuff: poetry books, collectibles,
art. Isermann starburst clock. Password
(silhouette cigarette spies) and What Comes
Around Goes Around
(Liz Taylor wielding
gun) paintings. Pinkish Joe Brainard
(boy in shower). George Schneeman
(stockings on wire hanger with gem by
Alice Notley: “So may / I say that I
had a vision / last night of Heaven?”).
Hung them on pale green walls. Missed,
most of all, watching movies, so had
a 27-inch Sony Trinitron delivered from
Circuit City in Union Square. DVDs
were new; I became obsessed with seeing
movies in their true aspect ratio. I was
aware, time to time, of Ira’s movements
above me, on the high white tin tile ceiling.
More light than I was used to (it woke
me too early) and considerably more
noise, one floor lower, overlooking the
intersection of West Broadway and Spring.
I hated being closer to the push and
shove of SoHo, the madding crowd
moving, rapaciously, from shop to shop.
When the red tour buses turned onto
Spring, the heads of the sightseers sitting
up top would glide, like cardboard cutouts,
by my windows. Byron ran up and down
the stairs between apartments; Ira and I
called this “joint custody.” Twice a week
I took the Trenton Local to New Brunswick
to teach at Rutgers, and every Tuesday
night taught a graduate poetry workshop
at The New School. Sold, bit by bit, on
eBay, the bulk of my Barbie collection
to supplement my adjunct income.
Almost immediately, Ira started dating
a nineteen-year-old Dutch boy named
Marc. I was surprised that it didn’t bother
me. Yes, Ira had initiated the breakup,
and I was unsure of the future, but I’d
quickly accepted that I would be better off
single or with a more appropriate partner.
It bothered Marc, though, that Ira’s ex
was living in the same building; it became
a point of contention between them. At
8:46 a.m. on the eleventh, I was sitting
in bed, in my underwear, working on
a poem. I heard the plane go overhead
and knew that something was wrong:
it was flying too low and too fast, and
made a whistling sound, like a missile.
Then a crash, as if two cars had collided
in the distance. And people shouting.
I pulled on my jeans and, barefoot, went
downstairs. From the front steps I could see
the towers straight down West Broadway.
It looked like a small plane had flown into
the one on the right. A taxi was stopped
in the middle of the street; the driver stood
beside it, staring up. I don’t remember
smoke, just a hole, black, toward the top.
I could tell, from the sky surrounding
the towers, that it was a beautiful blue
day. The air felt mild. Ira appeared in
the doorway behind me. “I hope no one
is up there,” I said. What did I know
about the World Trade Center, or what
went on there. I was in Manhattan to be
an artist. I noticed the towers sometimes
at night, walking home a bit weary after
teaching; or full after a late meal at Café
Loup; or after an event at The Poetry Project,
disenchanted with being in the thick of it.
Pretty, lit in alternating stripes—some
floors white, some black—but somewhat
abstract—it never consciously registered
that people were inside. I’d been up there
once, eleven years earlier, when my mother
and sisters and niece and nephew came
to New York for my graduation from
Brooklyn College. I found it the most
unnatural feeling in the world. My fear
of heights kicked in with a vengeance: legs
rubbery, stomach clenched; I felt as if
I were about to be plunged into the abyss.
While Ira and my family took photographs
of each other, I waited anxiously to return
to the elevator and ride down to solid
concrete and safety. “Oh, I think people
are,” said Ira. He was going to vote, then
to his office. “Must you go?” Did I actually
say this? If I didn’t, I certainly thought it.
I watched him walk down West Broadway
and turn left on Broome. I watched a man
set up a telescope on a tripod in the street
in front of our steps. By now, black smoke
was pouring out of the hole, into the blue
sky, and rising into the floors above it. Marc
had come down, saw what was happening,
and went back upstairs to get his camera.
I stood in the doorway, tentatively, half
in and half out of the building, holding
the door open, while Marc ventured down
into the street to film the burning tower.
Traffic had all but ceased. Sirens, far-off
sounding, west and south of us, wailed
toward that desperate height—surely they
would be able to help. People passed
on the sidewalk and in the street. Some
walked quickly, without glancing back;
others paused, turned, and froze in place.
“Oh! Oh!” I looked up to see a burst of flames
in the middle of the second tower. My
only thought was that the fire in the first
tower must have caused an explosion in
the second. “It was an airplane,” exclaimed
Marc, leaping up on the steps. “I didn’t
see it,” I said. “Do you want to?” He had
caught it on his camera, held it up to me:
the two towers tiny in the flip-out screen.
I told him no. (He would ask me again
later in the day, and again I’d tell him no.)
More and more people were streaming
from lower Manhattan—most stunned
and silent. Noticed one woman crying.
And a man on a cell phone, gesturing
wildly. “They just hit the Pentagon!” he
yelled as he went by. I looked up: were
planes going to keep falling out of the sky?
When the man with the telescope said “I
can see people jumping,” I went inside.
Byron was up in Ira’s apartment; in the
stairway, I debated whether to bring him
down to mine. He was safe there, I decided,
asleep under the bed (I hoped), oblivious
to the chaos. I entered my place and turned
the television on: there were the stricken
towers, smoke billowing from both, and
that clear blue sky. A male newscaster
was saying, “This is going to change us
forever.” On another channel: a slow-
motion replay of the airplane heading
toward the south side of the second tower—
what I couldn’t see from where I stood
on the steps. On yet another: the flames
I had seen, papers raining down, screams
from a crowd witnessing the impact off-
screen. I turned down the sound and
called my father in California, to let him
know I was OK. An early riser, he was
watching it on his TV. “All I can say,”
he said, “is it’s a good thing your mother
isn’t alive to see this.” I hung up and
called Susan. She could see the towers
from the dining room window of her
10th floor apartment on Washington
Square. She had to get ready, she said,
to teach. It wasn’t lost on me that the two
people I’d felt closest to in the nineties
both reacted as if this was business as
usual. I knew enough to stay right where
I was, and be scared. I looked out the
window: the intersection was filled with
people, all staring downtown. I called
Ira at his office. “This is serious,” I said,
“You should be here.” The moment I hung
up, a terrible, collective wail came from
the crowd outside. I turned around to
see, on the soundless TV, the second
tower collapse under an avalanche of
plunging, gray-white clouds. A half
hour later: the same terrible wail from
outside, the same terrible spectacle on my
silent TV. I have no memory of what I
did in the interval. The next time I peered
out the window, the crowd was gone:
nothing left to look at except smoke
and an unexpectedly vacant sky. On
the television, thousands were passing
into Brooklyn on the bridge, behind
them an ominous, expanding brown
cloud. I pointed the remote at it, brought
up the sound. Felt a bit safer to hear
the newscaster say that Manhattan had
been closed to traffic, and to hear, at last,
Ira’s footsteps above my head. In the
afternoon, when he and I took Byron
out, the streets were virtually empty.
We walked to the market on the corner
of Thompson and Prince, M & O, so I
could stock up; we didn’t know how long
the city would be cut off. Ira waited
outside the store with Byron. I filled my
handbasket—with what? cans of tuna?
Progresso soup?—then got in line, a long
one that wound around the counter and
halfway down an aisle. As I inched
toward the front, I glanced back at the
other people in line: all were stiff and quiet
and scared—I could see it in their eyes.
The woman directly behind me—thin,
middle-aged, Italian—kept bumping me.
Normally that would have set me off,
but not today. She was nervous—I got
that. “Just get me out of here,” I thought.
At the register, after I’d emptied my
basket and the cashier was finally ringing
me up, the woman pushed her items
forward, poking me, hard, at the same
time. The cashier began to ring up
her stuff. “Those aren’t mine,” I said
flatly, “they’re hers.” The cashier (she
was wearing a white smock) looked up;
I saw fear in her eyes. Confusion as
we tried to separate the woman’s items
from mine. The woman—still pushing—
acted huffy, as if this was my fault. “If
you weren’t so pushy,” I snapped, “your
things wouldn’t have gotten mixed up
with mine.” Surprise at first, then her
face hardened with indignation: “I guess
everyone’s ugly today.” My comeback
was involuntary: “Shut your stupid mouth.”
The cashier looked freaked out. Would
this escalate into violence? bloodshed?
death? I left the store shaking, helpless
with anger, overcome with self-reproach:
why couldn’t I keep my mouth shut. Ira
had never had much sympathy for my
post-altercation regrets: he would have
told the woman off and thought nothing
more about it. Back at our building, Byron
came in with me. After it got dark, Ira
knocked on the door. He and Marc were
going to the supermarket at LaGuardia
and Bleecker, did I want to come with?
I did; I could stock up more. On the way,
a celebrity sighting: Harrison Ford. Surreal
to see Indiana Jones in a business suit,
on the day that was going to change us
forever, strolling down Prince Street with
two other men, also in suits, smiling and
relaxed—perhaps they’d just enjoyed
a good meal. In the market, the bread
aisle was bare, except for one loaf of
potato bread on a bottom shelf. This
brought to mind how, during the Cuban
Missile Crisis, supermarket shelves were
stripped clean. Nine years old at the time,
I didn’t understand how adults could be
so frightened they would panic into mob
behavior, or how grocery stores could run
out of food. For days, the air was sepia
colored. Someone (I don’t recall who) said,
“We’re breathing people.” The smell—
Jeffery remembers it as “chemically” or
“plasticy”—lingered for at least a week.
The wind would shift and you’d be reminded
it was still here. Everyone south of Canal
Street had been ordered to evacuate; we
were two blocks north, so were safe. Or
got to stay, I should say. I watched, out my
window, countless people drag suitcases
up West Broadway, hunched forward like
refugees, white surgical masks over their
mouths and noses. Houston Street was
cordoned off; every time I left SoHo,
I had to show my ID to a policeman
when I wanted to go home, to prove that I
belonged there. I remember thinking this is
probably the only time I’ll get to see who
really lives in Manhattan. The first time
I took the subway (to Penn Station, to take
the Trenton Local to Rutgers), I sat across
from a young woman. We were the only
two in the subway car. We looked at
one another, but didn’t speak. In all the
tight spaces—the trains, the greengrocers,
the streets—New York was a different place:
people were actually being nice to each
other. Maybe it was true—we had been
changed. Then Bush, worried about the
sagging economy, came on TV and said
that, as an act of patriotism, Americans
should go out and spend money. The day
after Thanksgiving, Black Friday, the crowds
came back. And soon after: street vendors
and sightseers, those mammoth red tour
buses stalled in traffic. I kept the green
curtains drawn. SoHo was once more
a hub of thriving commerce, and looked
like a trampled amusement park by the
end of each day: a place people came to
to push and shove from shop to shop,
and drop their trash. The usual ugliness.