You
think you know. You can never know. You will never know anything other than a
name that means nothing to you. You are
trapped in the network. The hallway has
no exit. The bicycle has no wheels. If you step outside of the red lines there is
nothing to stand on. You will fall. You will fall, and you will not even remember
how to scream, but it won’t matter.
Because no one would hear you if you did. You are a story I sold for a million howls of
laughter. For a million screams of
pleasure. You are nothing. You were just one more born to serve a
purpose, and now you are used up. No
wonder you question living. You know
there is no purpose left for you. I tore
you into tiny pieces and gave bits to any who asked. I did this because you are useless. No one cared then, and no one cares now. You are a piece of lint to be flicked away,
blown into nowhere.
Tuesday, 13 September 2016
Monday, 12 September 2016
Encroachment
I
bumped into the memory man
(we’ve
been crossing paths often
lately)—
I
listened to small things
which
gave me small reactions.
But
when he arched his eyebrows
as
if asking was I ready?
I
decided I wasn’t in about
one
second
and
I left memory man
where
I found him and
conveniently
forgot where
that
place happened to be.
The
only thing is that
he
knows how to find me
he
finds me every day
and
every day he asks the question
and
every day I say, “No thanks.”
One
of these days, I guess.
It
will be one of these days.
Sunday, 11 September 2016
Tomorrow and tomorrow
The pen bothered me. So I asked him about it. “Where’d you get this pen again?” It was fat and full of multi-colored ink cartridges.
The
strange animal character on the screen jumped over a crumpled brick wall with
an appropriate bo-ing sound. “I found it,” he answered.
“Oh. Okay.”
I walked into the hallway. But I
wanted to know more, so I asked, “Where?”
“School, I think,” he shouted from the other
room.
“Okay.” But I still didn’t remember. I knew I remembered at one time—and that was
the worst part.
Saturday, 10 September 2016
Through a Glass, Darkly
The clock
I must keep
unwound
Predictability
is
a lucky thing
A
coin with two heads
or
two tails
as the case may be
And
yet too late
just
one second too late
maybe
The
joy was in
the
terror of
the
box
Friday, 9 September 2016
1994
“This
is where Mommy and Auntie grew up,” Joan tells the kid. He is obviously unimpressed, but he’s only 4
years old.
“Was
this neighbourhood always so ugly?” I ask Joan.
“Wasn’t that hill bigger?”
Ryan
laughs. “It’s funny how much bigger and
better everything seems in our memories.”
“They
cut down all of the trees,” I inform him.
“And the siding is hideous.”
He
nods. After a while, Joan says, “We have
to get back before 2:00 so that I can make the turkey in time.”
Thursday, 8 September 2016
Reflections
They
found it, separately. Sometimes one at a
time, sometimes in small groups. They
all instinctively shied away from each other, accepted without argument that
certain hallways would remain locked to them.
What did they want to see each other for, anyway? They didn’t.
They didn’t, and they wouldn’t.
Once
they had all arrived and found themselves their own shadowy corners, the teenage
boy appeared. He went to a courtyard in
the middle, surrounded on all sides by brick walls with windows that opened
from the inside. On a white sheet spread
out on the concrete ground he very deliberately started placing red plastic
drinking straws. No one watched him and
he paid no one else any attention.
Over time the straws began to form an intricate pattern. Those hiding in the brick building did not want to look at it, and when they did, they pretended not to understand. Was it a formula, they asked? The kind you needed to be a math genius to understand, perhaps? They were not math geniuses, so they would never understand it. Satisfied, they slid away from the windows.
But
the group of pirate boys living in the trees overhead did not leave. They watched from the tree house they built
high in the branches. They knew what the
red straws on the white sheet meant.
They knew it was a key. A key to
a map that would lead everyone in the building to the one place no one wanted
to go.
No
one, that is, but them.
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