I waded through the throng of yuppies gathering for their
evening cocktails at Sophie's, already irritated. How was I ever going to find a seat at the
bar? Louise knew I hated meeting her
here after I’d finished playing receptionist for the day, but somehow I wound
up in this yuppie hell at least two days a week. Eight
more weeks and I’ll be back in Madison, I reassured myself. Then this crap summer would be just another
memory.
Friday, 21 October 2016
Happy Hour
Nothing
I remember how something could
break every word you spoke,
make you sound like you were
choking.
I would watch your face as it
disappeared
at least one million miles into
the stratosphere,
your voice drifting alongside
like a bullet that has no mark.
Shot stray into a crowded night.
And the light halted against your back,
as you danced that frantic ballet
suspended midair
because the floor bottomed out years
before.
Now as I float alone
I remember how I
used to ride in the car,
thrust my head out of
the window.
Because it was spring.
Because it felt good.
make you sound like you were
choking.
I would watch your face as it
disappeared
at least one million miles into
the stratosphere,
your voice drifting alongside
like a bullet that has no mark.
Shot stray into a crowded night.
And the light halted against your back,
as you danced that frantic ballet
suspended midair
because the floor bottomed out years
before.
Now as I float alone
I remember how I
used to ride in the car,
thrust my head out of
the window.
Because it was spring.
Because it felt good.
Thursday, 20 October 2016
Aftermath
All
of the followers had gone, sucked into the girl’s funnel cloud and carried
off to god knew where. What remained lay
on the ground, broken. The restaurant
would not be serving again.
I
was wondering where Marietta had gone when a dishevelled figure with a lopsided purple hairdo and an old face limped over to me. We stood and looked at each other for a
while, before she said, “You think you’ve won. But the spell is broken for you, too.”
“I
know,” I answered. “But at least I can
live with myself.”
Lost
You cannot keep what you did not
know you would forever
have to hide.
Forgiveness comes cheaply outside.
In here I stand alone in a
million miles of prairie grass.
The storm is rolling in and I
am bankrupt once again.
Ghosts
When
I opened the cage and released the girl, she howled past me, a cyclone powered
by atomic pain. I crouched against the
wall and covered my ears but I could still hear her screams, the terrified
shouts of those in the lost restaurant, as she raged deadly witness against
them.
Wednesday, 19 October 2016
Unspoken
It was cold even though the rain had ended
and the sun now peeked out from behind the clouds. In Wisconsin the coldest days were always the
sunniest.
His father came up from behind him. “Farmer’s Almanac says it’s going to be a wet
winter," he remarked.
Jonah nodded, lost in an abstraction.
“It's nice, isn't it?" his father said, gesturing toward the headstone.
"Yeah. It turned out well."
"Used them for your grandparents--they did a good job then, too. Very reliable."
The two men stood silently for a moment, considering the engraving job. Jonah was about to comment on the etched flower in the corner when his father told him, "I'm moving to Florida."
Jonah looked over at him. “You are? When?”
“Tomorrow.
No point in staying here. The
realtor says I’ll make a mint on the house, and I have a condo down there. Bought it with your mother right before she
got sick.” His father cleared his throat. “Be nice if you could visit. The condo has a guestroom. You’re welcome to use it.”
“Thanks.”
His father nodded. “Okay, then.
Tell Jackie I said goodbye.”
“You’re not going to tell him yourself?”
“He’s busy tonight. Something about a poker game, and I didn’t
get a chance to tell him before that.
The movers are coming Saturday.
You mind checking in, to make sure they’re doing things right?”
“…Okay.”
“Maybe you can come in April. April’s real nice there—not too humid. We could go to Disneyworld, or Universal
Studios. Always wanted to take you boys
there when you were young, but...” His
father cleared his throat again. “Okay,
then. Talk to you soon.”
“Talk to you soon,” Jonah echoed. He watched his father shuffle off to the parking lot before he returned his attention to the headstone. Beloved mother and wife, it read. Strange how something so true could sound so meaningless at the same time.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)