--I KEEP STUMBLING UNTIL I FINALLY MISS
THE LAST TRAIN
…Right now there’s a blue inner tube
floating in the middle of the lake. It’s
the only thing on the water. It reminds
me of all those scenes in Breaking Bad with the stuffed bear floating in the
pool, and it’s many episodes later when the viewer learns it’s there because a
plane has crashed in a residential area.
The last eight episodes of the show are
coming up next month. I can’t wait.
…How was your Independence Day?
…Here’s something I wrote last week:
Songs of Angels
This
one is strange, odd in a good way, and it scares her.
Naked
under the sheets, he props himself up, cocking his elbow, head on chin. “So, you’re a collector,” he says.
He
studies the shelves of ceramic angels, angels on the night stand, on the ledge
behind the bed, a few others on the dingy, oatmeal-colored carpet.
“Are
you religious?”
This
one’s not from the trailer park. He’s
clean and kind. He hadn’t tried to hurt
her when they had sex. No vile verbal
abuse, no biting or kinky shit.
She
doesn’t answer, just stares at the flaking ceiling, at a sunburst water spot.
When
he asks what her real name is, she turns and says, “You gotta leave.”
She
watches his green eyes blink, becoming steady.
“Sure,”
he says. “I get it. Another customer?”
She
nods.
She
watches him dress. His body is lithe and
muscled, like a swimmer or gymnast.
He
collects his slacks and shirt from the floor where they are neatly folded. He tucks in his shirt and buckles his pants,
saying, “They’re really something,” about the angels, then “You are, too.”
He
has an easy, college boy grin and straight teeth.
He
places cash on the night stand beside a periwinkle angel playing a flute. When he bends to kiss her, she puts up her
palm. “We’re all done for now,” she
says.
He’s
surprised and hurt, yet he says, “Of course.”
As
he closes the door to her trailer, she inhales his scent—citrus and almonds—the
smell giving her a kind of high, like those first few seconds after snorting a
line.
An
hour later, a bull of a man thrashes over her, one hairy hand choking her neck,
the other yanking a fistful of her hair.
His chest and gut are slick with sweat, and he spits crude commands into
her ear.
She
remembers being sixteen, a year after her abortion, trolling garage sales with
her mother, a rare thaw that day.
“You
can pick something out,” her mother had said, “but it can’t be more than five
dollars.”
Her
father was an eye surgeon, while her mother was thrifty.
When
she picked out a bronze angel with eagle’s wings and the chubby face of a
child, her mother scoffed. “You ought to
be ashamed of yourself,” she said. “Put
that back.” she said.
Now
the man’s breath is a rancid furnace washing over her face. He bucks and punches and chuffs. His fingernails pierce her neck skin. They’re close to a vein, but not close
enough.
She
focuses on the angel with the flute. It
plays her something pretty, something hopeful, a song about strength and
renewal.
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