--WE BOTH DESERVE TO SEE THIS THROUGH
No Direction Home
She wants the sun in her mouth, to
swallow it whole, be scalded from the inside out. But even that would not be enough.
Her husband is a scratched record on
repeat, a smiley face written with blood.
Can’t he see the broken dinghy sinking into the sea? When will he stop trying to be Atlas, Gandhi,
Jesus, Harry Potter, Mother Teresa, Dr. Phil?
It’s cruel, yet she wishes she was
the coat-rack thin widow. Then there’d
be no instruction, no direction home, and the ocean’s arms could have her,
crush her, drown her like she deserves.
The crow picking at her plate with
its wet, yellow eyes has a reason to be here.
Everything else is a sham, a hoax, trickery with a fake, suntan grin.
Coconuts kill people. Water kills people. Yet a child is born every three seconds
anyway.
Her mother told her she was no
better than one of Manson’s girls. Her
mother wants a divorced daughter, a jailed daughter, an invisible daughter.
And here he comes, holding a drink
tray like it’s a Bible, like it’s a gun, which in a way, it is—each swig a
bullet full of dust. There’s not enough
tequila in this entire fucking country, not enough sperm, no embryos.
The taxidermied sun, the waxen marauders and the fake breast
floating devices in string bikinis—all of it is enough to make her start
de-limbing herself with a dull blade.
No one really knows why the sun
sets, why stars fall and babies die. No
one knows why a passing shadow sometimes becomes a garrote that squeezes and
squeezes, but never quite tight enough to finish the job.
The sun wants to wound us. Even the crows are untrustworthy, stealing
frites, stealing melon slices, filching a toddler from the middle of the pool
in broad daylight.
We
melt like white chocolate yet there are ice cubes in your eyes, you lips
stitched with black thread, the surrounding skin raw, red and puffy, an old
wound that looks freshly slit. When we
first started there was no masochism, no punishment and you so often purred or
hummed symphonies—Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons,” “Moonlight Sonata,” “A Little Night
Music.”
Wounds, wounds, there are wounds
everywhere. Take the obese orphan boy
for example, him with his ketchup frown, slumped like Jabba the Hut on a
barstool, raising a cheek to fart because he can now. Or the widow who wants to weave her flesh
into bone, become skull and stalk, a sign with no direction home. All this while the Hispanic activities director
dances poolside urging everyone to join along, to, “Move it! Move it!”
Does anyone see the broken dinghy
sinking into the sea? I do.
You mirrored aviators make me look
like a stranger, a felon moments before the crime. We came here because we had cried enough,
because the house kept screaming, kept repeating, kept terminating what we both
wanted so badly.
Don’t you see? The sun, surf and pool are simply actors,
ineffective placebos. None of this is
real. None of this is enough. He only balm of consequence is for you to
finally unlock the chains, remove the vest bomb and realize that it wasn’t
you. You did not kill our child. The bathtub did. He water did.
But you, of all people, are innocent.
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