I'm sweeping the floor. The cat will die soon whether I feed it now or not. I'm sweeping the floor and the f**ing cat is going to starve to d**h. If I go outside with food, my co-workers will say things. They will whisper. I don't want them to whisper. The f**ing cat. I can't save it either way. I'm sweeping the floor. I can't save the f**ing goddamn cat. I want to scream. A cell phone is ringing, playing a loop from a popular radio song. Really? He's calling me now? (I hear this 8-10 times a night) I just got here and the ba*tard is calling me! What could he possibly need? What is so urgent he has to call me already? f**ing hell. I am sweeping quickly. I am sweeping like a manic f**ing douche bag. I am sweeping like this in order to decrease the amount of time I spend sweeping, to increase the amount of time I have to do other things. Things I want to do. Read, I don't know. f**ing hell. I am lifting mats, sweeping beneath them. The mats are black and rubbery. There are smudge marks on my fingers. I am sweeping with the speed and agility of an uninhibited people. I am sweeping with the speed and agility of an uninhibited people on Adderall – sweeping like a f**ing sh**-dick. I bump into Laura. ‘S-Sorry,' I mumble. She doesn't hear me. ‘S-,' I begin again. I stop myself. You are a dickhead. You wouldn't even feed the f**ing cat. You s**, bro. The floor is littered with vegetables. Onions. Green peppers. They need to be swept. I sweep them. I should beat myself with this broom until I die. I am going to k** myself right now. ‘Why are you doing it like that,?' says Laura. I don't realize she is staring at me until she asks this. Today is her birthday. She doesn't say how old she is. I don't ask. ‘You were just reading, looking tired like two minutes ago. Are you on crack?' She smiles. She smiles wanly, I think. I shrug. Continue. Don't let people get in your way. You are a robot. You are a machine. Programmed for efficiency.` I hang the broom and dustpan in the bathroom. I pee. Atoms, I think. Things are just atoms. Things are just atoms in motion. Which, technically, is the same as not-motion. The arbitrary, binary nature of the universe. I flush the toilet. I run the water for a few seconds to make it sound like I am washing my hands. (I will wash them soon, after I mop and put the mats back.) The cat is probably gone now. The cat is gone now. It's too late. I can't save it. I spray water from the hose attached to the sink directly into the mop bucket. My boss explicitly told me not to do this. ‘Spray it into a container first,' he said. ‘Not the bucket.' The f**ing cat. I pour soap into the bucket, mixing it into the water with the mop as I pour. It looks murky. (This is the word I think immediately, and sporadically, later, while mopping, driving home, and once or twice while lying in bed. Murky.) I begin mopping with what feels like finesse.
I vaguely think of something Japanese. Caffeine. Adderall. I should drink caffeine now and function at a lower level of energy at school tomorrow. A lower level of consciousness. A lower ‘plane.' This is good. I am becoming a robot. Good. Great. Neato. No problem. The mop gets caught beneath the leg of a table. I yank the mop. Soap flings upwards and hits me in the eye. I crouch and remove the mop from beneath the table using my hands. I resume mopping, more recklessly this time. I am sliding the mop in and out of corners, behind trashcans, under tables. I am practically running. My co-workers are outside smoking. This is my chance. I am alone. I am saved. I double my speed, literally running backwards, the mop slipping and sliding in front of me. I finish within seconds. I dump the water out. I roll the mop and bucket into the back room. I run around putting mats back, chairs down. I am done. I sit down and open a novel. In the novel, there are two characters named Will. It is thrilling. This novel is f**ing thrilling, I think. Thrilling f**ing sh**. I am profound. Thinking profound things. In a pizza shop. I hate working. I don't want to work. I hate capitalism. I hate not-capitalism. f** the world, f** it all. Just kidding, I don't know. I mean – I do know. f** the world; I hate the world. I hate bosses. Cops. Politicians. Parents. Teachers. (Okay, maybe not parents.) Lawyers. (Yeah, not parents.) Soldiers. I am in this f**ing pizza shop. Reading a novel. My co-workers are inside now, walking where I mopped, making it muddy again. I don't care. I hate the world. I hate myself. I am going to k** myself now. No. I will not k** myself. Not yet. I will leave, go home, shower. Check my e-mail, work on writing, eat something, drink caffeine. No. I will not drink caffeine. I will lower my tolerance, go to sleep early tonight. Self-improvement. Robot, sweeper man. The store phone rings. The cat is outside. No - the cat is gone. The cat is definitely gone. I answer the phone. (Hello, this is Uncle Mario's, how may I help you?) There is a pause, breathing. (Hello?) Click. Phewf. I turn around wildly and immediately make eye contact with Laura, who is standing right behind me. ‘Don't worry,' I say stupidly, ‘It was a wrong number.' ‘What?' she asks. The cat is still outside. Laura is looking at me. I want to disappear. I want to evaporate. I want to evaporate and rain down onto Laura as organic green tea. With agave nectar. I start to speak, then stop myself. There is nothing to say. Organic green tea with agave nectar. I am going to do things tonight. Work on writing, respond to e-mails, k** my sh**-a** self. ‘Nothing,' I say. Laura doesn't hear me. She has turned, walked out the door. My other co-workers aren't around. I am alone again. I look outside at Laura. She is talking on her cell phone, laughing.