Whisper it to me
while no one is listening
tell me I am a fool
tell me I am not
tell me something
that makes sense
and then prove it
|
Wednesday, 9 December 2015
The life within
Tuesday, 8 December 2015
The glass darkly
And when I choose
to come here again
will it snow how
it did in my dreams
will I be
a story worth
telling
because the
sadness—
it crackles in the
night
for you
the mistake worth regretting
the
faraway voice filled with belonging
Monday, 7 December 2015
The path not taken
“Alturis told me about
his brother," Megan said. "How you shot him during a raid."
Andy nodded a little.
“Did you know what was going on?”
“Not until the Bergens. Even then we didn't know it was him until
someone tipped us off that what happened wasn't some random thing. But I thought he’d come after me—I never
thought in a million years that he’d go after you.”
“Well, he didn't really. He was just confused. He said good henchmen were hard to find.”
Andy managed a grim smile. “I guess so.”
“It’s not like you can advertise for
them.”
“No.”
“But are you going to be all right about the
Bergens? Because it wasn't your fault.”
Andy’s smile faded.
“Don’t let it ruin your life,” she told him. “They wouldn't have wanted that.”
“Yeah,” Andy said.
His eyes darted around the room. “Anyway,
don’t worry about me. You just worry
about yourself.” He paused. “I guess you’ll sell the house.”
“Yeah, but it was time, anyway. Hopefully it won’t take too long. A friend of mine who’s an agent says that
everything that happened will only make it more attractive to potential
buyers. I guess there are people out
there who like houses with a back story.”
“People are strange,” Andy said, and
rolled his eyes. For a brief moment Megan
thought of Alturis, smiling at her as he talked about how Andy stood on her
street corner at night. But Andy,
looking in the opposite direction and fiddling with his car keys, did not
notice the change in her facial expression.
“So will you stay in town, though?”
“Well...I have a friend who’s a principal in Madison
and they just had a teacher suddenly retire due to illness, so she’s offered me
the job. I think I might take it.”
“Really?”
“That’s right. Moving forward—it’s the only way.”
“Yeah,” Andy said, grinning at her reference. “Well, good for you. I hope it all works out.”
“Me, too.”
In the silence that followed Megan
wondered again about the cat who Andy had released all of those years ago. She wondered if he even remembered it now, or
if he had moved forward from all of those memories, too. “So, anyway,” Andy said, “I just wanted to
stop by, because I’ll be heading off to Chicago tomorrow.”
“ Does that you mean you've made a
decision about the FBI?”
“I talked to my boss when he was
here. We have everything worked out.”
“That’s great,” Megan said. She smiled
at him. “Good luck with everything.”
“Thanks. And, Meg—it was good to see you again.”
“You, too.”
After a brief hesitation Andy turned
toward the door. Before he reached it,
he said to the wall, “So I guess you’re going to hate me forever, huh?”
“Oh, no. Not at all.”
“You sure?”
“I'm sure.”
“You’ll let me know if you ever need
something?”
“You can be sure of it.”
“Good,” he said. And without daring to meet her eyes, he let himself out
of the hotel room.
Explosions in time
This sea filled
with raging suspicions
polluted by the
debris of 1000 amazing inventions
not one in which I could believe
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
Sunday, 6 December 2015
Waiting
The bus began to pull away. Ignoring the kids throwing paper airplanes around him, Jonah pressed his face
against the glass. As his mother waved
at him he gripped the edge of the windowpane, willing himself not to cry. Someday, he told himself. Someday I will never have to do anything I
don’t want to ever again.
Saturday, 5 December 2015
Friday, 4 December 2015
Truce
May 27, 2014
I am
tired.
May
29, 2014
Had a funny dream
last night. I was outside somewhere with
Matt and the kids when I realized there were four kids with us: 2 girls, 2
boys. I felt confused, like I couldn't make sense of it. So I asked Matt how
many kids we had and he said three. I
then asked him their names and he told me.
I realized the one little girl I’d been talking to wasn't actually one
of our children. She was dark-haired,
probably around 8, and she seemed unhappy.
I was trying to be nice to her and I did feel sorry for her, but her
presence freaked me out. It was as if
she were a ghost—no one else appeared to notice her. I woke up shortly thereafter and nearly woke Matt
up, I was so spooked. I was able to go
back to sleep, though. I can’t remember
at all what the little girl and I were discussing.
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