Monday, 12 October 2015

What cannot be mended


“Just before your friend Andy came back here,” Alturis said, peeling an apple with meticulous attention, “he shot and killed someone.  Did he tell you that?”
            “No," Meg answered through gritted teeth, "he didn't."
            “Well he did.  Even more unfortunate, that person happened to be my brother.”
            Meg just looked at him.
           Alturis paused to cut the apple into slices.  Once he finished this, he went on, “Apparently your Andy had never killed someone before.  It disturbed him.  So he took a leave of absence and retreated to his family home.  Which is where we found him.  And you,” Alturis added graciously, as if it were impolite to not mention her place in his diabolical scheme.  “Bad information led me to—what was their name?—the Gergens or the Bourbons or whoever.  It’s hard to find good help nowadays.”
            “I wouldn't know," Meg returned, trying to block out the memory of the Bergen's dead bodies lying in their living room.  "I'm not in the market for henchmen.”
            “And a good thing for you, too.”
            “But that doesn't explain what you want with me.”
            “Doesn't it?” Alturis asked--and smiling, he popped an apple slice into his mouth.

Conversation with George, Pt. 2

I could ask what you were made to do,
I reply.
But I don’t think I want to know.

That’s not a secret, he says.  I was
made to think.
And I do think.  I tell you things,
sometimes, when you’re half-asleep,
or not afraid or interested or
desperate.
I wish you were more interested.
I would tell you more.



I know enough, I answer.

But you don’t, he insists.
You really don’t.  I could tell you
about the oceans and why the
rivers flow and what makes
you not want to wake up.
I could tell you so much.
The boys come, scale the walls.
They whisper things to me,
so that I know why.
Sometimes I escape,
but this is my home.
And the dolls with knives
chase me.  Dolls as
big as you are.
I don’t like them very much.

No, I say, they don’t sound
very nice.

They aren’t, he answers.
They shout things at me from
the other side of the
walls.
“You, boy,” they say,
“you shut up, or we’ll cut
you!”
You wouldn't think a doll
with blonde hair and
pig tails could be so
vicious.

Sunday, 11 October 2015

Alive

In this lexicon of sorrow
I am too tired to speak for myself
if you saw miracles spring from darkness
I saw only memory
swathed in charcoal dusty
dream

Hiding in plain sight


“Where are we going?” Kitty asked him.  “The King just said the Window was nearby, not where it actually was.”
“It is in a field next to an extremely large building,” Jaguar replied.  “Beyond that I am afraid I cannot be more specific, as I confess I have not taken the time to learn the building’s function.”
“Huh,” Kitty answered, puzzled by where he could mean.  Her town was not exactly a thriving metropolis: the only large buildings next to a field she could think of included the police station, which bordered a meadow on the other side of town, and the liquor store, next to a vacant lot about 5 miles away.  She was desperately hoping the King hadn't miscalculated the distance and that she wouldn't need to walk there when Jaguar came to a stop.  “We are here,” he said, but Kitty had to do a double take before she trusted herself to answer, “The high school!  You must be kidding!”
“I am afraid not.  Is this where you are receiving your education?”
“Unfortunately, yes,” Kitty said, stunned to think she had been this close to the Last Window all of these years and had never known it.  Her mistake in trying to guess the location from Jaguar’s description had been in her interpretation of the word field, because Jaguar hadn't meant the kind with wildflowers and hornet’s nests.  He had meant the kind the junior varsity football squad practiced on.
“Do you see the Window?” he asked her
Kitty peered into the darkness.  “Oh my god, yes,” she exclaimed, because there it was, shimmering in the moonlight, just in front of the goal posts.  She wondered how on earth she could have missed it before now…until she remembered that she hated organized sports and avoided all practice fields like the plague.

Saturday, 10 October 2015

What remains


I slipped inside of the
oily puddle today.
Even though I knew it
was there.

The twig you threw was good
enough to save
itself, barely.
Still, it was the strangest thing.
While I was waiting,
suddenly I had this tree.
Not much moves me,
but I had to move for the roots.
They were so big.

It burned inside, I know it.
The petrol had to burn the
branches inside,
had to leave scars that
never turn white.

The explosion would have
horrified you,
had you waited to see.
Oil does that—
it explodes.
And then there is nothing left.
Not even a twig.

Convictions

were you caught
in the fire storm of a million
conversations
or lost
in a dying admission
because just one thing I can show
and that is I am here
without you
alone

Friday, 9 October 2015

Committee Meeting notes, March 4, 2008, 12:25 a.m.


All members present and accounted for, except for the monkey, who is already bored and feels his presence is not required.

Melvin would like to point out that Marissa still looks very bulky yet ate several sweets today.

Marissa responds that she is quite aware.

Melvin is also worried that Marissa is a bit full of herself at the moment, which, he believes, is never a good sign.

Mike suggests that Melvin is a jerk.

Mirabella, as usual, has nothing to say.

Minnie is tired and wants to pet the cats.

Melinda is sure the world is about to come to an end.  Not even the monkey is interested.

Melvin gives his permission for certain stories to be told.  Marissa is fine with that.  Melvin remarks yet again on Marissa's bulky appearance and on her "loose" grasp of reality.

Marissa is annoyed and calls the meeting to an end.