--COUGH SYRUP AND DRUGS, BANDAGES AND GUAZE
The Unspoken
It was the unspoken which frightened
the boy most. Often the unspoken was a
riddle, a curse sifting through the air while a gray smoke genie ushered from
his mother’s dark nostril as she sucked on a cigarette, the tip orange-red and
smoldering. Sometimes the unspoken was
an empty bench at lunch time, save for the boy who was torn by being left alone
while also savoring his loneliness. The
unspoken was an empty chair at the head of the dinner table, children chewing
soundlessly, good manners on display, none of them trying to think about their
father’s stiff body hanging from a rope in the garage or why he would do such a
thing and desert them. The unspoken
could be noisy or shrill, muffled—sounds of sobbing or his mother’s scream in
the middle of the night. But mostly it
was the jar inside his head, a jangle of trapped wasps fighting for escape, the
lid screwed on too tight.
Orion
Each
night he searches the blue-black sky, sifting through a necklace of glittering
stars. She once said Orion was her best
friend, and though his sister’s been dead months now, he still whispers, “When
I am older, I will become an astronaut, float through the Heavens in diligent
search and find you.”
Something Different
His new bride
believed in those things and so when the Gypsy turned over the final Tarot card
and shuddered, they left in a hurry, him claiming hoax, she not so sure.
At
home, he found a deck of cards. “Time
for something different, something light,” he said.“What?” she asked.
“Strip poker.”
No comments:
Post a Comment