Let Them

Let the world

tear at me

from every side.

Let them burn me

in effigy.

Let them

hate me.

I am used to it.

Could it be

any other

way?

 

Silence,

I understand.

Taunting,

accusations,

and thinly veiled contempt,

I accept

as my usual

fare.

 

So let them.

Let them push,

and tear,

and burn,

and scowl.

I will still

be.

There is nothing

they can do

about

that.

4-6-18

 

 

The Year of Broken Promises

This was the year of broken promises,

the year of shattered illusions,

the year of systematic

pulling of the rugs

from beneath

my

feet.

 

Everything known is lost,

everything believed,

proved false.

All of the pretense

has been

stripped

bare.

 

Naked,

I stand before the mirror.

Alone,

I crumble or I rise.

4-2-15

The Torrent

A slow drip

at first,

and the groan

of bending

steel.

 

The drip becomes

a stream,

and the stream becomes

a river,

then the sound of tearing

metal

slices through me.

 

A crash,

and a torrent

of the washed up

dreams

and the shattered

stained-glass

walls

of my own broken

psyche

pour out

onto the street.

 

They slide into the gutter

and slip down

below,

with all the other

refuse.

4-25-18

Rescue 372 (Bibliomancy)

She had to stab her shaking thumb three times at the “end call” button before she successfully hit it, then almost dropped the phone trying to set it on the coffee table. She couldn’t stop shaking. I can’t believe I hung up on him, she thought, what will he do? She felt like she was drowning and wanted to claw at her throat. She closed her eyes and took some deep breaths, focusing on the out-breath while she clenched and unclenched her hands. He won’t go too far, she told herself, he might make threats, but he wouldn’t go too far. yet lately he’d gone much further than ever before.

An image wriggled in her brain like a worm. It was from a dream she’d had a few weeks back. A red apple, polished to a mirror sheen and placed on a dark altar. Associations branched through her mind like a fine web of cracks in glass, and she pressed her fingertips hard against her temples in an attempt to fend off a creeping headache.

She turned to the bookcase behind her and scanned the shelves. Her eyes moved past Herodotus, past Sartre, past even the Bard, until they found their mark. She let out her breath. Emily Dickinson. She reverently slid the book from the shelf, admiring the weight and the clean, hard cover. “The Complete Works,” she muttered. She read the words again quietly, like a prayer.

She lifted the book close to her face and fluttered the yellowing pages, inhaling the warm, musty scent of aging paper. She then lowered the book, slowly, carefully, and held it out in front of her solemnly. She paused, took a deep breath, and on the exhale she let the book fall open in her hands. When the pages settled she looked down, letting her eyes land where they would.

“This is the Hour of Lead–” she read aloud. Her voice thickened and her stomach tightened. “Remembered, if outlived…” She sunk to the floor and read the whole poem from the beginning. “After great pain, a formal feeling comes–” She read the poem over and over again, until the rhythm and the meaning and the sounds of the words came together and washed over her like waves, pulling her into resignation, and a focused silence.

4-25-18

 

The Storm

The storm

wails deep inside;

it slams against the walls

and threatens to overtake me.

I feel the ground begin to slip away;

it crumbles into the dark wind.

That wind crumbles me too.

I’ll not escape

the storm.

 

4-24-18

How to Survive

Write.

Sit down and write,

and then write some more.

Process, process, process.

Digest every last bit

life throws at you

on paper.

Vomit your truth

all over that page.

Repeat.

This is the only way I know

to survive.

 

4-6-18

I am Good for Words

I am good for

words,

that is all

I am for.

Not to be seen,

touched, loved,

understood or

cherished;

only heard,

or rather,

read.

 

In person,

I am avoided.

My time is spent

alone.

The world stands

at a distance.

I reach out my hand

to touch,

and humanity

recoils.

 

Difficult.

Emotional.

Unstable.

Unnatural.

Unsuitable

for social

life.

 

So I pass notes.

I write my soul

on little slips of paper

and I fold them up

with care,

before I scoot them

under the door

to the outside

world.

Sometimes,

people read them.

 

 

4-5-18

A Door Closes

Like bile,

the betrayal burns

up my throat.

I see the usual mess

spread out again

before my eyes;

the bitter buffet,

remnants of another attempt

to revive the dead.

 

Another door closes

silently before me.

Something more dies within.

Another sliver of my heart

is locked away

in another silver box.

 

The ground tilts again,

ever so slightly,

how long has it been

since it felt level,

steady?

 

I stare,

once more,

at the door now closed,

and with a sigh,

I turn away.

 

 

04-05-18

 

The Collision

The other children seemed to have forgotten about me for once, leaving me safe to emerge from my shadowy hiding places. I warily abandoned my cavernous apartments formed by the thorny branches of the black hawthorns and the passageways and tiny chambers under the sprawling tangles of scrub oak. I hopped, rock to rock across the stream, and made my way through the grove alongside the bank, on the other side of the garden. Sunlight broke through the canopy of cottonwoods and Russian olive trees in scattered beams of light, giving the ground the appearance of an outdoor stage covered in hundreds of tiny spotlights, just waiting for its miniature performers to arrive. I inhaled the smell of wild grass deeply, and occasionally reached out to stroke a soft silver-green Russian olive leaf. The quiet rumble of the stream soothed me, and as I watched the stray cottonwood puffs drifting languidly on the barely-noticeable breeze, my shoulders began to relax, and I started to enjoy the day.

It was early summer, school had just ended, and I could hear the other children in the distance laughing and hollering out to one another, enjoying that brief space of pure pleasure before summer’s novelty wears off and boredom begins to creep in as the hours of daylight expand along with the suffocating heat. I reached the edge of David’s backyard, just behind his fort. It was a large rectangular monstrosity that appeared to be growing right out of the brush and cottonwoods surrounding it. For the time, the fort was empty, and I worried that David might not be home to come and rescue me if I had misjudged the mood of the other children, but the lure of the wild places amid the acres of pastures, the rope swing, and all the discoveries the day could potentially hold were too tempting for me to ignore, and I climbed the few feet down the muddy bank and stepped into the icy water. I stood still for a few seconds letting it wash over me, relishing the contrast between the warmth of the air and the cool of the water before making my way to the tunnel.

The tunnel was about ten feet high and ribbed like cardboard. I remember the feel of the smooth, wet metal against the bare soles of my feet. I took a few steps forward and wriggled my toes in the fine sand that gathered in the valleys between the metal hills. The sounds of the other children were closer, but the echo from the stream muffled the noise just enough that I could pretend to be all alone for a while longer, time enough for me to gather the courage to set foot in the same general area as the others. I made my way back to the entrance of the tunnel and dug around the stream bed for a few minutes until I found a smooth matte-black rock only slightly smaller than my palm. I rubbed my thumb over the surface and felt the nerves begin to melt.

I made my way back into the tunnel, jumping a little at the roar as a car drove right overhead, then I emerged in the strange in-between space that always made my skin crawl just a little. On either side coming out of the mouth of the tunnel were steep banks about twelve to fifteen feet high, and only slightly wider than the tunnel’s opening. The opening of the tunnel was about five feet back from the chain-link fence in front of it, and the steep bank to the left dropped low again right before the fence, leaving barely enough room to slide under on my stomach where a half-moon hole had been cut and pulled out at the bottom. The right bank stayed high, giving the rope swing a nice launch pad to jump off and swing across the river.

I climbed up the right bank, hoping to use the rope swing, but Adam was there with his friend’s, and while he was alright, most of his friends were bullies who considered me their prime target. It wasn’t worth the risk of having to interact with them, so instead I decided to go exploring and see what tasty wild edibles were growing over the hill. I turned and crossed the field heading away from the stream and towards the hill. I had stopped to examine the wild plants growing up the slope, and had happily grabbed a small handful shepherd’s purse when the ground began to vibrate and I heard thunder rolling right towards me. I stood there, still half-bent over, unable to make my young mind register what was happening, and more importantly, what it all meant for me.

Suddenly the herd of horses that lived on that land appeared on the ridge of the hill right above me. It had been silent only moments before, then suddenly the sound overwhelmed me, and then they were there, right on top of me, a whole line of them coming up over the ridge like a wave come to life. It seemed like there were hundreds of them; everywhere I looked there were shades of rust, grey, and blond. White, coffee, obsidian, and caramel coats and manes seemed almost suspended in air as the horses came flying over the ridge. I’d seen them all many times, but they must have been just out of sight grazing right before the stampede when something spooked them; a fox, or a quail in the brush, maybe. None of that made its way into my mind until later, however, instead, all I could do was freeze.

At first, it looked like I’d be trapped right in the middle of the herd, but they flew past just to my left. I could feel the cool wind they made on my cheek. Thick clods of moist soil flew up in chunks everywhere, like burnt popcorn. I could hear the front of the herd crash into the stream and back out again, and I could hear the others behind them as they continued to splash through the water.

As the back of the herd approached, and fewer horses made their way past me, I caught sight of trouble. There was a young, dark chocolate foal directly in front of me, maybe twenty feet away up the hill. It was young and new and completely uncoordinated, with legs that clearly had turned against him. The poor creature’s eyes were as wide as the moon as they locked onto mine and we knew, both of us, that this was going to end badly. Twenty feet may seem like an awful lot when thinking in the abstract, or looking at a stationary object, but I can assure you that it all goes away improbably fast in a situation like the one I was faced with. This foal was trying to keep up with a spooked herd and a hilltop snuck up on him. If I’d had the time to think about it, I’d have felt sorry for the poor thing; he’d lost all ability to stop or to turn or to in any way avoid hitting the equally small human that had just materialized before his very eyes. And we both knew it.

I don’t remember any pain when he ran me down. He was young and small and it didn’t hurt, but the strangest thing was that there wasn’t any fear in me, there was awe. Awe at nature and the universe and at the small creature who had just ran me down. There was also relief. He stumbled and fell, but after a halting first attempt, he shot back up like a spring, and continued his wild flight down the hill and across the stream.

 

6-13-17

An Ordinary Café

A waitress at an outdoor cafe’ carefully refills a man’s coffee at the next table as the sun breaks through the clouds, catching its rays in the long coils of her deep red hair. It tangles itself in her mane, sending copper-orange sparks dancing. The woman turns her head and those same rays light up the porcelain skin framing her pale green eyes. Her mouth, unremarkable yet somehow perfect, opens up ever so slightly and flashes a bashful smile at me.

The waitress turns away and walks inside, returning a moment later with a fresh pot. The man at the next table takes a sip from his cup, then pulls a worn out black briefcase from beside his chair and slides it onto the table in front of him. The man’s ill-fitting grey suit, old briefcase, thinning brown hair, and far from memorable face all pull together to form the image of an average man; one who undoubtedly wastes away each day in an unobtrusive cubicle somewhere.

The waitress darts cheerfully from table to table, refilling cups and taking orders. The man clicks open his briefcase and pulls out a file with a small red label. He deftly opens the file, and with unusually long fingers, begins flipping through its contents until he finds a paper with a photo of the waitress clipped to the front. The man glances up at the waitress, then quickly down to the photo. He closes the file and places it back inside his briefcase, which he snaps closed.

The man raises his hand to his ear, says something to nobody, then drops his hand back down. He stands, picks up his case, places a few bills on the table, and walks away unnoticed. The striking young waitress with the unremarkable smile continues to dart from table to table, oblivious of everything but coffee, bagels, scones, and omelets.

Without warning, three unmarked white vans pull up to the curb, and as the doors slide open, men in bullet proof vests, black uniforms, and caps spill out with guns drawn. Similar men appear from either side of the cafe’, and within a few short seconds they are everywhere, swarming like ants on a piece of cheese.

Customers duck, cover their heads, and slide under tables. The waitress turns, plants her feet, and slightly cocks a hip. She points her chin down just a bit and raises an eyebrow, as her mouth twists into a smirk. She slowly begins to raise her hands into the air as her smirk widens into a grin. As her hands near her shoulders, she drops the coffee pot, sending it crashing to the pavement. The noise momentarily silences everyone, and it seems that time stands still for the space of three heartbeats.

Noise and movement return. Someone shouts at the waitress. Someone handcuffs her. Someone reads her rights. Suddenly there is a small explosion. Smoke strangles the air. A moment later a second explosion shakes the cafe’, this time accompanied by screams and flying debris. People are injured, some are dead. Limbs are strewn about between fragments of tables and shattered glass. Shadowy figures undulate on the pavement as sirens approach. Emergency personnel appear and set to work on the possibly living, averting their eyes from the clearly dead.

I look around for the waitress, feeling dazed and strangely concerned for her safety. She is gone. The next morning the headline reads “Gas Line Explodes at Local Cafe’.” The story is short, the explanations evasive. There is no mention of a waitress with fiery curls, or of men with their guns spilling out from white vans. There is no mention of an average man with a briefcase, walking away. A freak accident, they say. Five dead and eight wounded. No one is to blame. No one is responsible. An extraordinary accident at an ordinary cafe’.

2015

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