“You have the best smile."
John stared at the draft message on Instagram. Was it creepy? Over forty-five years, he had learned that the line between an earnest compliment and creepy was thin enough to disappear entirely. He closed the app. Maybe he shouldn’t send it.
From the hallway came his mother’s cough, then the slow drag of her slipper toward the bathroom. John slid the phone under his blanket, muting the glow. He didn’t need her catching him up late again, “on that damn phone.” As much as he hated her, he loved her. She kept him out of trouble. Her hovering was the only thing that had.
In his teens and twenties, he’d lived on his own and couldn’t stay out of jail. Every choice seemed to tilt the wrong way. His mother liked to say, “If it was a fifty-fifty shot, you’d get it fucking wrong.” When she got sick and he moved into the spare bedroom, her routines took over where the courts had left off. He stayed sober. He kept a job. He stayed out.
Now every day followed the same order: wake up, shower and shave, dress himself and her, medication, breakfast, a part-time shift, lunch, AA, medication, bathing her, TV. He could tell you what they watched on any given night. Tuesday meant NOVA. Tonight’s episode was about wild tigers once kept in captivity, now living in a sanctuary.
He could still hear the narrator: Used to his nine-foot-by-nine-foot cage, Sasha continues to pace in a small circle despite the acres now available to him. It may take years for him to adjust to taking up more space.
The toilet flushed. His mother shuffled back to her room. John looked around his bedroom. About the same size, he thought. Did it matter whether the tiger ever crossed the acreage? Eventually there was always another fence.
He pulled the phone back out.
He had tried everything—time limits, deleting the app, deactivating his account. He always came back. Through the small screen, he could slip into other lives.
For a few seconds he was in Greece, eating dinner with Lana. Then a beach, a blonde in a bikini smiling at the sun. A poll appeared: Red or pink this week? He tapped red. She wanted his opinion on her manicure this week.
A video followed—five women dancing in a bar. The tag said Toledo. Two hundred and fifty miles away. Close enough to imagine, far enough to stay put. He watched it again, then once more, studying their faces.
They wanted to be seen. They posted the selfies, the dinners, the locations. They could block anyone. They could make their accounts private. They didn’t. He followed, liked, moved on.
It felt like being a kid at the zoo. In real life, you never stumbled into elephants or tigers. You followed the paths, stopped at the glass, read the plaques. Largest land animal. Found across three continents. Species that would never share a habitat, gathered into one enclosure.
The women had bios instead of plaques. This one swam. This one was a Scorpio. This one lived in LA. This one was a boy mom. The algorithm guided him from one window to the next. He tapped the little red heart.
Then his finger stopped.
He zoomed in. A photo from his favorite account—a girl he’d gone to high school with. He hadn’t seen her in person in decades.
Just fingertips. Hers pressed lightly to someone else’s. Pad to pad, forming a small peak.
John set the phone down and pressed his own index fingers together, harder than he meant to, trying to imagine the pressure. He had never been touched like that. Not even close.
The caption read: Soft launch 😉
His heart thudded. He scrolled the comments, then closed the app and called his sponsor without checking the time.
“Hello?” A pause. “John?”
“I—I just needed to talk.”
Silence, then a sigh. “Okay. Talk.”
“I’m lonely.”
Another pause. “You want to drink?”
“No. I just—want something. I don’t know. I’m sorry I called. I know I’m not supposed to—It's not an emergency."
“Come to the nooner tomorrow,” his sponsor said. “We’ll get lunch.”
“Yeah. Thanks. I’ll see you.”
“Love you, man. Don’t be stupid.”
“Love you too.”
John hung up and wiped his eyes. This was stupid.
From down the hall, his mother barked, “Who are you talking to? It’s three in the fucking morning!”
His stomach tightened, the same old childhood fear. “Work,” he called back. “Covering a shift.”
He reopened Instagram.
The draft message was still there.
You have the best smile.
He deleted it and typed instead:
I want a picture of your tits.
If he was going to be a creep regardless, he might as well be honest. He’d wanted to see them since Geometry. Just a soft launch. Not hard. Not yet.
He expected to be blocked.
The reply came immediately.
$100. Venmo or PayPal.
Maybe money was the key. Even the zoo let you pet the giraffes for a little extra.
Afterward, he slept soundly.
In the morning, he would be good again. He would take care of his mom, go to work, go to the meeting, eat lunch, and return to his room.
