ISSUE № 

12

a literary journal in multiple timezones

Dec. 2024

ISSUE № 

12

a literary journal in multiple timezones

Dec. 2024

The 37

The South
Illustration by:

The 37

I had never ridden a bus before, not a city bus, not a bus where you stood at a bus stop and buses came and you had to know which one to get on and where
to get off. I had once ridden a bus from Jackson, Mississippi to Denver, Colorado to see the Pope at Strawberry Park. That was the Pope before this Pope
and it was a long time ago. I was no longer Catholic, was no longer anything. I recalled other buses taking me back and forth to daycamp as a child and how
I had not liked daycamp, though I’d preferred it to overnight camp. At overnight camp I cried and got my period and made the nurse call my parents to come
get me. There had been other buses as well, tour group buses, buses that took you from the airport parking lot to the airport. But those were shuttles.
Mostly, I had ridden shuttles. You couldn’t get on the wrong one.

I was living in a city now, a city with many buses that could take you many places you might want to go and many places you would not want to go and I had
to figure them out because I was afraid to drive for the same reasons and some additional ones: I didn’t know how to get to where I was going or where to
park once I got there or if I’d have the right parking pass, if one was required, or whether the meters were active, if there were meters, and whether they
took coins only. And I’d just discovered that campus parking was particularly fucked up because you had to back into the space instead of simply nosing in
headfirst. You had to put your blinker on and stop traffic and back into the space, all without hitting the cars on either side of you or the bikes flying
down the hill. I watched as others did this, easily, with awe and horror. A lot of them appeared to be freshmen. Their tags said Illinois and Arkansas and
New York.

I was ready to give up and move back home even though I’d left everything behind in a way that would not allow for my return: I had dropped out of my Ph.D.
program, broken up with my boyfriend, and moved out of my house, leaving my roommate in a bit of a bind. There was nothing to return to except my mother. I
could always return to her and she would be happy to have me. I also had a father; he lived with my mother and I loved him, too, but it wasn’t the same. We
had gone out to lunch before I’d left, just to the two of us, and he’d made the waitress cry and I was pretty sure she’d quit because the manager had begun
to wait on us at some point and my heart had cracked a little. It was small things like this that did it.

It was August, well over a hundred degrees. I stood and then sat on the hill. It hadn’t rained but my ass felt slightly damp. I was wearing a dress made of
very thin cotton; it was like nothing. The tops of my breasts were exposed. Why had I worn this dress? It had been a mistake. There wasn’t a bench at the
bus stop I thought I should be at but wasn’t sure of, only a pole in the ground with a picture of a bus on it, big windows like eyes and a lot of numbers
that meant nothing to me.

I was in tears by the time I called my mother. I’ve been sitting on this hill for an hour, I said, over an hour, and I’m about to lose it.

Okay, she said, panicked. What can I do?

I’m about to freak out. I have to get home.

Okay, she said. Let me help you.

Look up bus routes, I said. And tell me what to do. She was in Mississippi. I was in Texas. I didn’t have a phone that had internet access but a phone that
could text and call only. I waited while she looked up the information. I was pretty sure she had never ridden a bus at all, not even a sightseeing bus,
though I vaguely remembered one in Paris. I was pretty sure we had been on a bus together in Paris, our heads in the open air, or maybe New York. No, it
was Paris, but it hadn’t been an open-air one. Our heads had not been exposed. I had been to some places by that point. I had decided to go to some places
and had gone to them. The first time I went overseas, I cried in the airport because I was scared to go so far away, to fly over an ocean, not knowing what
to expect once I got there. On the plane, I stayed awake the entire time while the people around me took off their shoes and slept soundly until the plane
had reached its destination. Then there was Heathrow. I didn’t even want to think about Heathrow.

I didn’t really cry all that much but only thought about crying. I was simply recalling the few instances in my life in which I had; they were all coming
back to me at once.

You need to take the 37, she said. The 37 should drop you off a block from your house.

But they all say 37, every one of them!

They can’t all say 37, Mary, she said.

Well I’m pretty sure they do.

How’d you get there this morning?

I took a cab—I already told you that! But I can’t just be taking a cab every time I need to go somewhere.

No, she agreed, you can’t. That could get very expensive.

Cabs also made me uncomfortable. Some of them didn’t take credit cards, only cash, and I never carried cash. Who carried cash? And some of the cabbies were
overly chatty. I didn’t like that, but I also didn’t like it when they were taciturn or spoke in a foreign language on the phone the whole time. I liked it
when they said a few words of greeting followed by a polite question or two, and then were silent until it was time to pay with a credit card.

The first time I took a cab I was twenty-one years old, in Atlanta for a Phish concert. I remembered other things about that weekend: other firsts. The boy
I was with had taken a lot of pictures and I hadn’t seen them in many years—perhaps I had never seen them—but I could picture them just the same. There I
am the morning after, sitting on a motel bed in my terrycloth Abercrombie & Fitch dress.

I kept her on the phone. She talked about the lunch she’d gone to at my aunt’s house and who had been there and what they’d eaten and who had asked about
me and what these people’s children were doing even though I already knew from Facebook. They were getting pregnant for the second and third time and
buying houses in the same neighborhoods in which their parents lived. The ones who had gotten divorced had done that years ago and were already remarried.
The ones who weren’t married were opening restaurants or making six figures. She only told me about the girls, the women. I was in graduate school again.
Still. I had boyfriends who would not become husbands.

She asked if I wanted to go to a cousin’s wedding in Memphis and I asked how I would get there and whether she would pay and if I could have my own room.
Meanwhile, other buses passed. They said 1 and 17 and 43 and other numbers that were clearly not 37. I must have missed four or five 37s at that point and
they must have gotten backed up because there really had been a lot of them, a glut. And then a 37 came, and, seeing me on the hill, slowed. I ran down the
hill and hopped on. I showed the man my ID, which I’d been told would allow me to ride for free.

Swipe it there, he said, indicating where to swipe it. I swiped it. It beeped an angry beep. Swipe it again, he said, slower this time. I swiped it slower
and it beeped a more pleasant beep and flashed green. He nodded.

I sat in the nearest vacant seat and tried not to look around. My mother was still on the line. I told her I was fine, thank you and goodbye, which was the
correct thing to do. I learned that it was rude to carry on private conversations on the bus. On the bus you looked at your phone or put on your headphones
and tried not to make eye contact with anyone because they were also in a transitional space, a quiet space, and one person could throw the entire thing
out of balance. Only during South by Southwest was this not the case and then the locals were pissed off and irritated and in most places you shouldn’t
take the bus, anyhow, because you could walk faster.

The driver made a loop where there weren’t any bus stops at all, at least none that I could discern, and continued on his way. Later I would find out it
was for day laborers, though in all my time taking that route I never saw a single day laborer get on or off; it was just a detour we all accepted without
question. Day laborers, I imagined us thinking, poor people, followed by a grudging acceptance.

Everything except the immediate few blocks around the house I was renting from a different cousin was unfamiliar. This other cousin was working in Los
Angeles and was renting her place to me for cheap. All I had to do was mail her her mail every few weeks and water her plants but I hadn’t watered the
plants yet. I had been there a week. The plants would die. The magazines I would keep. Was I supposed to mail every coupon and pamphlet? I read Rolling Stone, Psychology Today, Real Simple, Time, and read about things I never would have read about. I stored my stuff in the guest bedroom
and slept in my cousin’s room, the king-sized mattress absorbing the weight of my body. It was the foam kind and I wasn’t used to it; it made me sweat a
lot, but the guestroom was small and made me feel small and I came to enjoy the sweating.

I got off at the wrong stop, but the right street, and walked. I watched the bus stop at the stop I should have gotten off at. The next time I would know.
I was thinking about my boyfriend who was no longer my boyfriend and how he wanted to move out here with me but I had decided I needed a clean break, a
fresh start. Why had I decided that? I would call him and let him tell me how much he missed me.

I let myself into the house and lowered the air conditioner, turned on the TV and put a bag of popcorn in the microwave, everything humming and working and
saying hello and welcome: we’re glad you’ve returned! I would figure this out, I thought, and I would. I would soon be backing into parking spaces and
tooling around the city. I would nearly hit a very attractive young man on a bike and he’d skid and fall but would catch himself before hitting the
pavement. He would be angry but no harm done. He would not ask for my number or become the love of my life, like he would in a good story, in a story I
couldn’t write. I would become a vegetarian, swim in cold springs with elderly people before everyone else woke up, hike up a pink hill in the wrong shoes.
I would know when things opened and closed and how to get there and where to park and what to order and I would have new boyfriends I would not marry. But
all of this would come later and take time, and perhaps it would take me longer than it would take other people but there were some who never left home,
who never went anywhere at all.

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Mary Miller
Mary Miller is the author of a story collection, Big World, and a novel, The Last Days of California. Her stories have appeared in McSweeney’s Quarterly, American Short Fiction, New Stories from the South, and Mississippi Review, among others.