—SO THAT CAN REALLY HAPPEN?
It Could Be Anybody, But
It’s Not
This bartender could be anybody.
But there’s something about the
peppercorn brown flecks in his eyes, something about his pinwheel smile and
pincushion dimples that remind me of your ex-husband.
They don’t wear name tags here and so I
don’t ask. Instead, I order another,
this time a double.
The guy who could be your ex is slick,
alternating between French and Italian accents depending on the babe sitting on
the stool.
To the tittering blonde with zombie
drool sliding down her shoulder strap he says, Voulez-vou coucher ave moi? (Would you like to sleep with me
tonight?)
Blondie giggles like a drunk duck, flaps
her wing and says, You’re funny.
I hang around till closing, when it’s
just me, your ex and a dozen women waiting to see who the bartender will
choose.
I know he’s not really your ex. Your ex is in prison for all those girls he
chopped up. But I wonder if your ex
operated in a similar fashion as this guy, baiting his victims, bursting with
charm and machismo. I wonder why if, as
you say, he was evil incarnate, then why do you still keep his old pictures
stored in that shoe box in the closet, and why do you say his name in your
sleep.
THE CLOUDS BELOW ME
On the flight, the clouds below keep
their distance, treating me like a leper.
I’ve been drinking and have everything slowed down to a dull, repetitive
sandpaper mush of white noise. Even the
flight staff move like scarecrows barely bent by a breeze.
So far, I’ve seen God once or twice, but
both times he was yawning and a little dyslexic, so sidetracked and strung out
on abstinence.
Where I’m going no one looks like me and
no one knows my name. I studied the
travel brochure in advance as a pre-caution.
I probably shouldn’t even be taking this trip, but sometimes the best
way to torture yourself is avoiding suicide, waking up to another day that
hates you as much as you hate yourself.
So why not hate yourself in a foreign land?
The toddler yelping in 12A is just
another squalling kid, annoying everyone within earshot. But I recognize that sound, the ratcheted
gulps of air tucked between high-pitched squeals, and I miss it.
You and I and Jamie would have been
flying somewhere else right about now, to Disney World perhaps. Mickey, Minnie, Donald and Goofy—Jamie’s
favorites. Disney World is Vegas for
kids, everything exaggerated, on steroids, magical, yes, the happiest place on
earth, and that’s where we would have gone.
The flight attendant has a tic in her
eye when I order my sixth drink. She’s a
skinny Olive Oyl cartoon, like your sister Jen.
Like Jen, she’s thinking, Shame on you.
You aren’t supposed to outlive your
child. It’s not natural or just. You’re not supposed to kill your child
either, even if it’s an accident and the authorities don’t charge you. Don’t think I haven’t thought about that everyday
this last year and a half.
At baggage claim, the squawking kid from
12A throws a tantrum around the luggage carousel. It’d be best to ignore it, same as everyone
else, but I don’t.
I approach, bend down to her
eye-level. I reach into my duffel and
retrieve the stuffed bear Jamie always claimed talked to her, making her giggle
so sweetly.
“Here,” I tell the kid, “someone you don’t
know really wants you to have this.”
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