The mall food court is dead by nine. Everyone still at the mall is in a store shopping, or trying to look like they're shopping. The teenagers are biding their time until the security guard asks them to leave.
I'm in the food court because I don't have anywhere to be, and I definitely don't have anything to buy. I'm sitting in a booth with my phone out. The screen is off and I'm watching girls from under the brim of my hat. There's a beautiful black girl with natural hair that works at Subway, and a cute girl with crooked teeth at Orange Julius.
The only girls worth checking out at the mall are the ones working here. I want a 20-something like me. Someone who's out of college and used to the idea of being into girls. I'm done with the giggly, squeamish ones. I want a girl who wants to fuck.
Truthfully, I can get a quarter of what I want just by staring at a girl. Because sex isn't about orgasms. I don't know why everyone thinks that. I don't really care about orgasms. If you want to come hard, do it at home, alone, with your fingers.
People talk about "wanting to get off" but if someone's looking for a hook up, it's not because they want to come. People go looking for sex because they want sex.
And what the fuck is sex? This fragile, violent thing. So obvious in our heads, so ambiguous in reality. Full of vulnerable highs and anxious lows. Why would anyone ever want that? What is the point of sex outside relationships? If it's not to strengthen some bond, to trust, to share, to love. If it's just to get off, then it's just a few defenseless hours wrapped up in another person's arms. A dangerous surrender, with little gained.
It's all the hope and fear, the 'how is this possible' head shaking, of connecting with another person, that goes out like a match as soon as you stop. Sex alone doesn't lead to anything. Except maybe more sex, if it's good. Because sex doesn't require presence. At its best, it's an out of body experience where pleasure is driving and you're just along for the ride.
So why would anyone ever, ever, ever want a hook up?
I don't know. But I want one. It's like I think it'll be shiny and new this time, not awkward and difficult to steer, like it always is.
I feel the want behind my ribs as I stare at this girl from across the food court. A pretty brunette with skinny legs that knock together at the knee. She's sweeping the floor. When she turns my way, our eyes meet. She flinches away. No one ever stares back like I stare at them.
I'll be thinking about one of these food court girls next time I come. With my fingers. Alone. At home.
I put Tinder on my phone as a concession. I acknowledged that I wanted sex, and that's it. I haven't opened the app. I see it on my home screen and it feels like the urge to drive off the side of the bridge. Just some passing, weird thought. Don't look too closely.
I leave the food court before they have to kick me out, and walk to work. It's three lit blocks, two dark ones, a quick cut through a drug store, then a half-block-long jaywalk to get to my Mini Mart. I shove my hat and jacket in my bag and drop it in the back. Now I look like every other badly uniformed Mini Mart employee. Red shirt, black pants, black shoes, and a name tag. Personality-free and ready to serve.
This is only my third night shift, so I'm still on probation. My boss, Parteek, makes me show him how I unlock and lock the register, how to read the delivery schedule, and the how to check IDs. Then he leaves me on my own until six in the morning.
My body is already getting used to the hours. I feel more awake when the sun sets, and tired when I watch it rise. It's hard to be nocturnal. You have to make the leap all at once and not look back. I did it by staying up for forty-eight hours, then crashing as the sun came up. Most people who come into the store look like they're caught in between. They're not tired enough to sleep, not awake enough to work. They're just up at one in the morning for whatever reason, staring at the single-serve cereal bowls.
I'm all instinct when a sleepy girl walks in. Seeing girls sleepy is half a step from seeing them in bed. Loose hair, loose clothes. Tired eyes and quiet faces. I'm always fantasizing about wrapping them up in my sweatshirt. We'd lay right down on the tile. It's clean; I just mopped it. We'll just rest, all body heat and slow breathing. Take a nap like stacked spoons. I'll tell them, 'You need to rest. I'll keep you safe while your eyes are closed.'
In between the customers, the window shoppers, the shoplifters, and the sleepy girls who need a nap, I'm alone. I sit behind the counter, which faces the front doors, and look out at the sidewalk. Watching people through the glass feels like watching fish in an aquarium. They're in front of me, but separate. They're the busy ones and I'm the one who's just sitting here, watching. They couldn't possibly be watching me back.
In the quiet hours, between two and five in the morning, I'm truly alone. The sidewalk is empty and when there's a pause between songs on the radio, I can't hear anything but the whoosh of the air conditioning. I walk around the store like I'm in an indie film. I pretend the world is black and white and full of jokes. I pretend this is poetic simplicity, not a waste of time for shit money. But it's hard to pretend when the radio just plays top 40 and there's no one around to laugh with me.
Parteek calls me during the quiet hours. He's paranoid because the last guy working graveyard kept falling asleep. I pick up on the first ring and try to sound wide awake. But voices are difficult things to control. I can cover up the boredom but I can still hear that lonely note under my words. The sound a body makes when it hasn't seen another body in hours.
—————
On the fifth day, I pass the quiet hours decorating a soda cup. I write, "Tips are like hugs without all the touching," on the side and set it by the register. It's like I'm working at an artsy coffee shop, without the irony.
By the seventh day, I'm recognizing the clockwork regulars. The ones who come every night. The slightly less tired ones. The people buying coffee. They're working late like me. I'm just another step in their routine.
Then there are the irregular regulars. The ones who keep coming around but always seem surprised to find themselves back in this overly bright Mini Mart way past midnight again. The college kids who never take out their headphones, like they can't get mugged. The guy with the leather jacket who always asks me to break a five or ten into quarters, and never buys anything. The girls with black-rimmed eyes hanging out with tall guys who think I'll sell them beer without an ID.
A chubby girl comes in with one of these guys. I'm sure I've seen this guy before. I might have even rejected his fake ID before. They walk straight to the liquor and he pulls out a bottle of wine. Weird choice.
As they walk up to the counter, I see the white-and-pink print on the front of her shirt that reads, "Bi Bitch!" My eyes snap to her face. She's staring at the floor. He puts the wine on the counter; I ask for ID. He produces the same bullshit ID he gave me last time. Parteek wants me to confiscate all the fake ones and give them to the cops. I was willing to let this kid slide the first time but this is ridiculous.
I take the wine off the counter because I hate having to clean up broken glass. He starts talking all the sudden, "Hey, what's the problem? What are you doing? Come on..." The girl's watching me silently. I use a pair of steel scissors that must have been around since the 70s to snip the license in half. He grabs for the ID and I step back, out of arm's reach. I hold the two halves of thin plastic between my fingers and say, "Don't ever come back in here."
He stares at me, trapped between anger and fear, and I stare back. I'll win, because I don't pick fights I can't win. This isn't the kind of kid who carries a weapon. He's all talk. Confidence is making a judgement and acting on it. I throw the pieces of his ID past him, onto the floor by the door.
He turns, cursing at me as he leaves. He's too proud to pick up the pieces on his way out. She's right on his heels but I hope she hears me say, "The fuck are you doing with that guy, huh?"
The doors swing shut behind them and I see my reflection in the glass. My hair is short and messy, shadowing my face and shining in the fluorescent light. My friends say it looks more gay at night. I agree. I think my facial expression gets harder at night too.
There's something else there—I can barely make it out in my blurry reflection—that's almost apologetic. It says, 'Yeah. I'm thinking about fucking you. Sorry.'
I'm undressing you in my head. Sorry about that. If it's any consolation, I think you're beautiful. I love all your stretch marks and I'll kiss them from one end to the other. I love your dry elbows and the way your inner labia flare outside the outer like a flower. I'll make them bloom with my tongue.
There's an endless parade of older guys, coming and going. They rarely speak to me. They look tired in that long-game kind of way. Not like they haven't slept in a while, but like they've maybe never slept, like they're never going to. I say, "Have a good night," and sometimes, "Be safe out there."
A woman in worn out pajama pants comes in. She looks hungover and sad. I sell her a pack of cigarettes and two gallons worth of milk in pint-sized containers. I say, "Be safe out there," and she walks out without a word.
They say working a service job makes you hate people. You'd think the night shift would be ten times worse—and maybe I'm just lucky—but it's making me softer, not harder. I feel like everyone's mom. Even the loud, drunk people who shoplift don't give me any shit. They stumble in and stumble out, the way drunk people usually keep to themselves on the last train of the night.
You'd think Parteek would stress about the shoplifting, but something must have happened once, because he says over and over, "Just let them go. Do you understand? You don't ever call out to them, or ask them what they're doing, or fight with them, or approach them. Just let them go. If they threaten you, hit the panic button. Otherwise, just let them go, then call the police, then call me." Right before he left me alone on my first night he stopped me again, "Do you understand what I said? Don't ever go after the shoplifters." I said, "Yes. I understand."
An old black butch comes in. Her hair is buzzed, just starting to go grey, with a pair of sunglasses resting on top. She's built short and stocky and her sweatshirt hides the curve between her breasts and her stomach. She walks with her weight heavy in each foot, like her knees are bothering her. She nods at me and I nod back.