1452 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
1452 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
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Angst
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Volume One, Number One
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Angst is electronically-published by Michael Dennis Shawn Heacock with no
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assistance from any government organization. The E-Zine appears bi-monthly.
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Copyright (C) 1994 by the contributors. June/July 1994.
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Subscription rates: free as of this and next issue.
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Submission payments: none as of this and next issue.
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Send all submissions to uh186@freenet.victoria.bc.ca OR
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an221@freenet.carleton.ca.
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Introduction
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Angst, a metaphor on anger and frustration. Dread, hurt, pain,
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turmoil. Hopefully, this will become our personality, what our poetry
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and stories will rally around. If not, then I suppose we'll eventually have
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to come up with a new name, for now let Angst stand. We will let
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your submissions mold the personality of this small beasty.
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As you can see, this first issue contains three stories (one regular and
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two postcard) by moi. This will not become regular, so don't fear that
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I'll start using this 'zine as a vehicle for my own literary meanderings; we
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had need of filler for this our first issue, and an idea of the direction we
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might like to travel, though that will be left up to all of you.
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Our reader base is at a whopping 85 registered subscribers (I think my
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first goal is to attract two hundred subscribers). I'll be posting only this,
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our first, issue to some of the newsgroups around the net to try to
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generate some more interest. After the freebie introduction, this thing'll
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only float word of mouth. Let's all make crossies (and tell two people).
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Submission-wise, this 'zine will concentrate on short stories (less than
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5000 words, though I might consider a few serials), postcard stories
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(less than 500 words; extremely strict on this), and poetry. For the first
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few issues, this 'zine will not be able to reimburse authors making
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submissions. Our hope here is that we will gather a bit of a following,
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enabling us to charge small subscription rates, allowing us to reimburse
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submitting authors for their efforts; ideally this thing will one day be
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strictly non-profit, all moneys taken in going straight back to the
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submitters. Let's rub the lamp and ask our favourite djinn to make
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everything work out.
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I'll again delve into the wonderful topic of formats. Three formats exist
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for this rag. The first is simple text, nothing fancy, no bells and
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whistles. Next is Word 2.0 for Windows, with many bells and whistles.
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Colour. Page formatting. Fancy fonts (True Type). Word format will
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be sent out zipped and UUE encoded. Finally we come to PostScript,
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which has all the bells and whistles of Word format. Postscript will be
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sent out as straight text or it can be zipped and UUE encoded. As for
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sizes, I've noticed that if Angst is 100K in Word format, it will be
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approximately 80K in Text and 400K in PostScript. Hopefully
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everyone's mail handlers can handle this. If not, please get in touch with
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as soon as possible and we'll change your format and get another issue
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off to you.
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Your editor,
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Table of Contents
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-----------------
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Short Stories
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-------------
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Lost Horse
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Heather MacLeod and Michael
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Heacock
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The Key
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Michael Gibbons
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PostCard Stories
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----------------
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Second-Person Car
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Crash
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Michael Heacock
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The Sunday Ritual
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Michael Heacock
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Poetry
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------
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canal in spring
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E. Russell
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Smith
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The man who tattooed the giant butterfly on
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Cher's butt
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Michael
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McNeilley
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Not all suicides are fatal
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Michael
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McNeilley
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The Smartest Thing She Ever Did
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Dan
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Siemens
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<untitled>
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Virgil
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Hervey
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layers
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Virgil
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Hervey
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Lost Horse
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by
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Heather MacLeod and Michael
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Heacock
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Pen in hand, crisp white sheet lies before me, and I try to write my
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father a letter. It has been so long, but I swallow hard and start off:
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Dear Daddy. Far too nice. I try: Dear Dad. No, that is too polite. I
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think about Dear Father, but that seems too stiff. In a moment of
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anger I write YOU in huge scrawling letters, then I add "I think you
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know why I'm writing" and I sign my name.
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I'll never mail it, so it lies on the floor, next to my chair, a
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crumpled ball, two others lie with it. Another crisp white sheet stares
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me down, ninety-six of its siblings lie underneath, eagerly awaiting their
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turns. I keep working on the letter, the salutation really. I don't know
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how to begin. YOU is a little impersonal. I scratch the underside of my
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right breast, my bra is making it itch. I reach up into my shirt and undo
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the clasp. That's better. The fuzzy inner side of my sweatshirt is
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ticklish. I turn my attention back to the blank page and try to write my
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father a letter.
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I get bored with it after a while, only to return in a few days,
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twisting and turning greetings and wondering how it is that a child can
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be raped by her daddy. Daddy. This is the key word; the child calls the
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father, Daddy. Such a warm, loving, gently-killing word. I hate it.
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Daddy.
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I don't know how to electrocute myself. Or maybe I should say
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that I do, but I don't like the feeling of electricity. When I was young,
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my brother tricked me into putting a battery in my mouth. I didn't like
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how it felt, not at all, and that was only a few volts. What's a toaster in
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the tub going to feel like?
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My therapist thinks that I should take anti-depressants. I gave
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her my full attention and then, of course, said no. She pushes; she is
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very persistent. One of her finest traits. I think that maybe I should tell
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her this, but I never do. I admire her steady determination toward the
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drug, but I will do in the end only what I want. I have always done
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exactly what I wanted, ask my mother, brother, or grandmother. It has
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been my theme since I was a child. I always said, "I'll do what I want."
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To which they responded "We know." They act as if it is a terrible
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thing when, really, it is so honest, so pure, so wonderful. My one small
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strength and no one could ever be even remotely supportive of it.
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My father has cancer. The doctors say he has at most one
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month. My mother and grandmother are very depressed, they are
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finding it difficult. They can't bear to see him in the hospital like that,
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all those wires and tubes running through him. My brother is
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peacekeeping, I don't know how he is feeling; I haven't talked to him in
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a very long time. I think that maybe I should phone my therapist, tell
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her that maybe she should give me a prescription for those anti-
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depressants, and then I'll send them to my mother and grandmother.
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But, of course, I don't, I wouldn't be able to tell her what I'd done with
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the pills, she would think I took them, that she had won a small coup.
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Besides, I am not feeling as sorry for my mother and grandmother as I
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should be. It is my father's fault and I hate him for it.
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I am glad that I live over a thousand miles away from my family.
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At least I don't have to explain why I won't be coming to the hospital
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today.
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I really should write my father. But what would it prove. It
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happened so long ago and he's so near death. Also, why put my mother
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and grandmother through more than they are already going through.
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There's the possibility, too, that they might not believe me. They are the
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only family I will have left. I'm not sure if I need them, but I would like
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to keep my options open.
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I rarely speak to my brother anymore, he grew up looking like
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my father--not like my father, understand. My brother doesn't know
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about Daddy and doesn't understand me, thinks I'm denying my
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heritage. I don't explain.
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Heritage? Makes me laugh. I'm some kind of half-breed.
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Daddy's Inuit. Mommy's Blackfoot. Maybe my brother is right, maybe
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I am trying too hard to deny my heritage, to live in the white world.
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White people don't know who I am, they don't know the difference.
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They don't care. To them I am just another chug.
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I wish I could have remembered all about Daddy and what he
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had done sooner, but life conspired against me. I read somewhere that
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traumatic events can hide themselves in the sub-conscious, all but
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forgotten they are buried so deep, but that they can still affect the
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conscious-level without the trauma ever making an appearance. When I
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told my therapist this, she agreed and said that it explained my lifelong
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fascination with death. She's wrong. I'm fascinated with killing myself.
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There is a difference.
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Lately I've been spending a lot a time talking with God. Last
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week I phoned him; I was going to do it collect, but at the last minute I
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chickened out. I wonder what my phone bill will look like. I phoned
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the operator and asked for rates, but she acted as if I was crazy.
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When I was seven I tried death by pussy-willow. Obviously, I
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failed. It is tragic being a failure, especially something so simple as
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suicide. I stood outside on a warm summer day, naked; I pushed the
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willow's silken pellets into my nose--hoping that I would suffocate. I
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didn't.
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When I was eight I tried slitting my wrists with a paring knife. I
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was in the middle of doing the dishes, just pulled it across my wrist. I
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stood watching the blood, I forgot the other arm. There really wasn't
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that much oozing from the cut, must not have pressed hard enough.
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My mother came into the kitchen, caught me, thought it was an accident
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and bandaged me up most properly. Pulled me onto her lap and we
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drank hot chocolate. I felt sorry for her.
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All the knives in my house are dull. I should invest in some
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razor blades. Good, strong, straight lines. Maybe phone that one-eight-
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hundred number, order the Ginsu World Class; do the job properly.
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Anyway, death is merely another living experience. Fuck,
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sometimes I'm so full of bullshit I amaze even myself. Maybe there's a
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small hint of truth in the statement. I have always felt that death is but
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an option, the one choice that is and always will be mine. I've chosen
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death enough times, but I find that I never end up being dead.
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Sometimes I will find myself staring at the veins that criss-cross
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through my wrists and I will find myself thinking of severing them. Life
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giving as they are. Often times I will think that things, life, living,
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friends, crap, bullshit, the day-to-day existence is going as well as I can
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expect; then I will notice myself staring at my wrists.
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I talk to God at such times. I always initiate the conversation,
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because during my suicides I am quite unapproachable. I will talk to
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him aloud, explaining life, its miseries and its joys. I think it is
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important to be accurate with God; he always knows if you are leaving
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things out, whether you are making things seem more desperate than
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they really are. I try to convince him that it will be all right if I die.
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That I don't mean to shove my life down his throat, I merely want to
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explain that I've had enough of it all and if he wouldn't mind bringing
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me home early. He never has none of it. I change tact and discuss
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karma with him, I tell him that I'd be willing to come back and repeat
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my life over, that all I need is a short holiday from it all. But I am lying,
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and he knows it. I don't think he holds much faith in Hindu theology.
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So finally I am stuck with my veins intact. Then I think about slicing
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them anyway, just for old time's sake. But the thought of me dialing
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nine-one-one, spending days in the hospital (maybe even the mental
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ward), explaining to everyone that my suicide attempt wasn't really a
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suicide attempt, that it was a. . .rehearsal. I don't think that would fly,
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especially with my therapist.
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Like I said, I never end up being dead.
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Afterwards I think of my brother--my father's son. I can
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remember one summer when he christened me and my cousins with
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Indian names. It was all so solemn. My brother was fourteen and I was
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nine. He was old enough to be taught by the elders, I'd never felt
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jealous because he'd always come from the teachings showing or telling
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us something he'd learned. It was as if I was old enough too. When he
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came to the oldest of the female cousins, he got a wicked look in his eye
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and said earnestly, "You are known from now on as Eager Beaver." It
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had taken a few years before I had understood and been able to laugh
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about it. When he came to me he said, "You are known from now on
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as Lost Horse." Fitting, I suppose.
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Would you believe that the strongest drug I have is aspirin and I
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only have three of those? Until last year I used to take a lot of drugs. I
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was trying to kill myself by accident. I failed, obviously. Who was it
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said, "Try, try again"?
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I am obviously in pain. I can tell because when I'm really
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hurting my jokes are better.
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I have, of course, tried eating myself to death. Really, what is
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the use. Besides, I detest being fat. Maybe I should consider starvation.
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Hmm. The thing is that it would take so long, so time consuming.
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Constantly being aware of food. Of course, I am a few pounds above
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where I'd like to be; starvation might be good for me.
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Burying myself alive is really out of the question.
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If my car would start I could plummet to my death or crash into
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a big rock. My car's pretty wimpy, I'd probably bounce off the guard
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rail. If things did work out, there's always the chance that I would live
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and be worse off than I am right now. No, death by car is definitely
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out.
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Death by car exhaust. I quit smoking. This would be like taking
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it up one last final time. Why ruin a perfect record? It stinks too much
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anyhow. Too bad I don't have a gas stove, not much I can do with an
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electric. I can't see how I could burn myself to death using stove
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elements; besides, too painful.
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I hate being alone. I've been alone for too long already.
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Sometimes I think if I had someone, everything would be all right.
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Tomorrow I will do some running around, odds and ends, then I
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will pack up my belongings, get on a plane and fly away. Fly away.
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Maybe the plane will crash. I can almost see it now. I look out the tiny
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window in time to see the wing shear off. I smile and calmly check the
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In Case Of Emergency card in the seat pocket in front of me. I read
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that an inflatable life vest is stored beneath my seat. I laugh. Small
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comfort as we take the 30 000 foot, fiery plunge toward earth.
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No. I will not fly away tomorrow. I'd probably live. I can
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imagine all the nightmares that would plague me. My therapist has her
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hands full dealing with all my bullshit now, I wouldn't want to overload
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her, force a nervous breakdown. Then what would I do. I love my
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therapist. She is my only friend.
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What if I went to a big city, took a dive off a skyscraper. Like
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the World Trade Center in New York. Again, I'd have to fly. Nope,
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out of the question.
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I live in a mobile home, jumping from the roof wouldn't do me
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much damage. Maybe if I landed on my head.
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I think that I'd like to try sky diving. With parachuting, the
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choice is so laid out before you, pull the chord; don't pull the chord.
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Either way the view's great.
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I should probably write my father. I wonder if it's possible to
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die from a paper cut. Ugh. It would probably be a real shivery feeling,
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like listening to someone scrape their fingernails across a blackboard.
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That time I phoned God, I talked to him about my father. I
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wanted to make sure there would be no confusion. I didn't want Daddy
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slipping through the pearly gates because of some divine screw-up.
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God spoke to me of forgiveness, but I was having none of it. I started
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shouting at him; I called him "a bastard for creating my father, a bastard
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for leaving me." God drew a blank and I didn't think to explain; I was
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in such a kerfuffle. If God hadn't left me, would Daddy have slid into
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my bed all those nights?
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It's nice to scream at God, let's him know that he is not perfect,
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that everything he does is not always perfect. I forgive God. I forgive
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him for leaving me.
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Is God against suicide? Is it a sin? I don't want God to be angry
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or upset if I die. I want to die in peace, I want to die. I want to die. I
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want to die. I want to die. I want to die. I want to die. I want to die.
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If he is mad at me, maybe I'll tell him a funny story--cheer him
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up. There's one that always makes me laugh whenever I think of it.
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Back when I turned eighteen, my brother took me drinking--finally
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legal. Two in the morning, the bars closed, and both of us pissed and
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wobbly, we slowly made our way home. At the front stoop my brother
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misstepped, broke the heel off his cowboy boot, and fell into the dust.
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He picked himself up, looked at the broken heel, and sang to me, "You
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picked a fine time to leave me loose heel." God is omniscient, though;
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he probably already knows the story and wouldn't laugh as I'd expect
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him to.
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I don't think hanging by the neck until dead dead dead is an
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option. I'm not especially keen on rope burn and I heard on TV that a
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person's bowels will empty everywhere. Mother's are always telling
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their children to wear clean underwear in case they get in some kind of
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accident. Hanging causes a helluva lot more mess than the basic skid
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mark; and it usually has to be done on purpose. I would imagine it
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being somewhat hard to hang yourself by accident.
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The letter:
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Dear Daddy,
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God tells me that I should forgive you. I can't.
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Your Daughter
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I'll wait until tomorrow, then decide whether I mail it or not.
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I don't like to be alone. I like to think that there will come a time
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when someone shall lie down with me and let me feel safe; just for a
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moment. Just one moment of feeling safe--I could have a nap in the
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afternoon sun. A small, gentle, peaceful sleep. I would like to feel safe.
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I hear that drowning is a peaceful way to go--very pleasant. I
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wonder, if I died would I feel safe? Next time I talk to God, maybe I'll
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ask.
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canal in spring
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by
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E. Russell Smith
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empty husks lie deep at the feeder
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as the last snow melts;
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sunflower seed junkies
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slate-coloured prodigals
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hungry now between seasons
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after seven months of charity
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peck through the leavings
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for the bits they wasted in winter
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a squall at dawn
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||
|
draws snow across April
|
||
|
like a coroner's sheet
|
||
|
an east wind hides broken floes
|
||
|
in blind bays of the waterway
|
||
|
carnival rubbish fouls the mud
|
||
|
and shabby mallards forage
|
||
|
till the flushing
|
||
|
|
||
|
on one bank black ice festers
|
||
|
on the other sunchicks blister
|
||
|
like new paint on undried wood
|
||
|
old houses look at new
|
||
|
across the half-full ditch; a line
|
||
|
defines the form on either side --
|
||
|
under tension, like a green stick
|
||
|
bends, until it breaks
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Second-Person Car Crash
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Michael Heacock
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
You don't know how to feel. Strange thoughts keep running through
|
||
|
your brain. It might have been your girlfriend. It might have been you
|
||
|
two weeks ago when you took the risk and drove home from the SUB
|
||
|
Pub loaded on twelve ounces of alcohol. You might have killed your
|
||
|
friends that night, or the driver of the car you hit. Though little damage
|
||
|
was caused and no one was hurt, it still eats at you--it caused you to
|
||
|
reevaluate your drinking habits. This new situation hardens whatever
|
||
|
resolve you'd set yourself to.
|
||
|
You're at home, been home for an hour. You feel sober in spite
|
||
|
of the three pitchers of draught. When you arrived at the house there
|
||
|
was a message waiting; your girlfriend, in Vancouver for the weekend,
|
||
|
needed you to call her immediately. Her message was shaky and
|
||
|
scared. You didn't understand at the time, but you wanted to hear her
|
||
|
voice, you miss her, you called.
|
||
|
Your best friend has been killed in an auto accident. Your other
|
||
|
three friends--passengers--are all physically okay, minor bumps and
|
||
|
bruises. The driver was drunk, his jeep rolled; your friend was killed
|
||
|
instantly. You're not sure whether to feel relief that he went quickly,
|
||
|
bearing little pain, or to feel angry because he was denied a fighting
|
||
|
chance, a chance at life. Your other friend, the driver, you feel a certain
|
||
|
amount of remorse for him too; his life has become shit, lifelong guilt
|
||
|
and a prison term for vehicular manslaughter. It wasn't entirely the
|
||
|
driver's fault, the passenger's should have never gotten into the vehicle.
|
||
|
You curse yourself for trying to find fault, for rationalizing a
|
||
|
tragedy. These are your friends. It all comes flooding back again and
|
||
|
you begin choking on tears, anger, and anguish.
|
||
|
The world will be worse off not having your best friend around,
|
||
|
everyone will be worse off. Little comfort thinking that at least you got
|
||
|
to know him, that you were a lucky one. Small comforts, but it will
|
||
|
have to be enough, you guess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
<untitled>
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Virgil Hervey
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
the clock face is about two inches
|
||
|
from my nose
|
||
|
the second hand sounds like my cat
|
||
|
scratching at my door
|
||
|
wanting to be fed
|
||
|
my head and my dick feel about the same
|
||
|
throbbing, aching
|
||
|
for one pudpulling moment i can't decide whether
|
||
|
to do something about this pisshardon
|
||
|
or not
|
||
|
but doors are slamming throughout the house
|
||
|
and it really is the cat
|
||
|
she is relentless
|
||
|
i start to drag my ass out of bed but
|
||
|
i can't stand the prospect...
|
||
|
the alarm, the alarm, oh
|
||
|
the fucking alarm
|
||
|
i grab the clock and smash it against the wall
|
||
|
electric clock bowels
|
||
|
separate from the plastic casing
|
||
|
but the fucker keeps ringing
|
||
|
my head hurts, my back aches
|
||
|
maybe i'm sick
|
||
|
i didn't go to work yesterday
|
||
|
doubt i can pull that off
|
||
|
again, today
|
||
|
heat's coming up -- steam in the valves
|
||
|
radiator's banging
|
||
|
shit, it ain't even light out
|
||
|
and i hear the paper boy
|
||
|
smack of the "times"
|
||
|
as it hits the side of the house
|
||
|
garbage trucks, lawn king
|
||
|
there's a tightness in my chest
|
||
|
don't know if it's a heart attack
|
||
|
or too much oregano on the pizza
|
||
|
last night, maybe it's stress
|
||
|
maybe anxiety
|
||
|
last night a woman with a foreign accent called
|
||
|
it was very late
|
||
|
she wanted to know if i was awake
|
||
|
at least i think she called
|
||
|
or was it a dream?
|
||
|
something real did happen during the night
|
||
|
don't know where
|
||
|
don't know what it was
|
||
|
but it happened without me
|
||
|
and i'm sad that i missed it
|
||
|
i'm writing my life down
|
||
|
on toilet paper
|
||
|
flushing it in this place
|
||
|
i don't need a vacation
|
||
|
i need a bullet
|
||
|
in the head
|
||
|
the noise outside is unbearable
|
||
|
i open the window
|
||
|
and throw the clock
|
||
|
at jerk with the leaf blower
|
||
|
he yells up to me
|
||
|
"you crazy motherfucker,
|
||
|
i ought to call the cops!"
|
||
|
i doze, in my dream i smile, amused
|
||
|
there's a fat lady in a lawn chair
|
||
|
flower print dress, string of pearls
|
||
|
big sun hat, lots of lipstick
|
||
|
her handbag is next to the chair
|
||
|
it's got wheels
|
||
|
it tries to get away
|
||
|
she reins it in on a leash
|
||
|
like an errant pup
|
||
|
and i wonder how my mind could paint this
|
||
|
with such vivid detail
|
||
|
have i been here before?
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man who tattooed the giant butterfly on
|
||
|
Cher's butt
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Michael McNeilley
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man who tattooed the giant butterfly on Cher's butt
|
||
|
has large, soft hands. The backs of his hands
|
||
|
are covered with tattoos of stars, the moon, planets.
|
||
|
Around his fingers are tattoos of rings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The dad of the man who tattooed the giant butterfly on
|
||
|
Cher's butt once accused him of gilding the lily. "Dad," he said,
|
||
|
"man, that's entirely silly, to think of a butt in terms
|
||
|
of a lily." Then he thought on it some more.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When the man who tattooed the giant butterfly on
|
||
|
Cher's butt crosses the street, cars stop for him.
|
||
|
Men who know of his claim to fame come up to him
|
||
|
and ask to shake his hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(That evening he sat there for hours, carefully inking the lines
|
||
|
of most intricate butterflies, ribbons and flowers, smoothing
|
||
|
and stretching the skin, as though bringing up something deep
|
||
|
from within, articulating his canvas as no painter thinks to do.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
If the man who tattooed the giant butterfly on Cher's butt talks
|
||
|
to you, don't listen. He's a man who can convince a cat
|
||
|
to fly. You'll find yourself listening more than hearing,
|
||
|
and discover later you did whatever he told you
|
||
|
|
||
|
(without remembering why) and there on your arm you'll find
|
||
|
a red and blue filigreed heart, with your ex-lover's name
|
||
|
wrapped around on a beautiful ribbon, never to come off,
|
||
|
because tattoos are forever and you can't turn back time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The man who tattooed the giant butterfly on Cher's butt stands
|
||
|
all but naked on an L.A. cliff at dawn, looking out across the city.
|
||
|
His tennis shoes are laced through to the very top eye.
|
||
|
Across his own butt is a tattoo of his own hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not all suicides are fatal
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Michael McNeilley
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The ward is against me,"
|
||
|
jokes Crazy Dave, unable to change
|
||
|
the channel on the
|
||
|
Lawrence Welk ward TV.
|
||
|
"The ward is not against you"
|
||
|
answers the serious psychologist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dave had been in the ward
|
||
|
before, plenty of times,
|
||
|
always on the borderline.
|
||
|
Drugs brought him close to the
|
||
|
edge. Love pushed him
|
||
|
over.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crazy Dave got back inside
|
||
|
trying to off himself with a
|
||
|
single-edge razor blade --
|
||
|
woke up on a mattress
|
||
|
soaked with blood,
|
||
|
clothing clotted, stinking,
|
||
|
Morrison still singing "The End"
|
||
|
over and over on the turntable.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crazy Dave gave up his life,
|
||
|
threw out his art,
|
||
|
and part of his life
|
||
|
came back, unwanted
|
||
|
but his art
|
||
|
didn't.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She would never hear him,
|
||
|
never did hear him, and they
|
||
|
could never understand,
|
||
|
never understand things
|
||
|
they would not see, and with
|
||
|
his art gone, Crazy Dave
|
||
|
couldn't see
|
||
|
those things himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The art bled out of Crazy Dave,
|
||
|
and what was left
|
||
|
of his long hair turned grey,
|
||
|
and 20 years later now
|
||
|
he plays guitar
|
||
|
in the one-man ward band,
|
||
|
|
||
|
takes requests, and knows
|
||
|
the ward is not
|
||
|
against him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Key
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Michael Gibbons
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The two young men walked quickly across the quadrangle of the small
|
||
|
New England college. Their boots crunched the frozen snow. It was
|
||
|
bitterly cold with a sharp north wind that frosted the glasses of the taller
|
||
|
one so that he had to peer from under the hood of his wool coat and
|
||
|
over the top of his glasses to follow the path. Yet as they neared their
|
||
|
destination their gait became slower and more deliberate. The shorter
|
||
|
one was bundled in a dark blue ski parka, a blue woolen hat pulled
|
||
|
down over his ears and a red woolen scarf wrapped around most of his
|
||
|
face. As they neared the dormitory, the light from one of the windows
|
||
|
revealed his pale blue eyes, gazing apprehensively up at a second-floor
|
||
|
room. On the steps outside the doorway the two kicked off the snow
|
||
|
that had stuck to the bottom of their boots.
|
||
|
"Don't worry about a thing, Sean," the shorter one said, as he
|
||
|
opened the door, pulled his hat off and unwrapped the scarf from his
|
||
|
face, revealing a square thick head, crew-cut brown hair, a fairly
|
||
|
handsome face that contrasted the lean, angular face of his taller friend,
|
||
|
whose black horn rim glasses made him look the more studious of the
|
||
|
two. "I'll handle everything . . . Did you bring the money?"
|
||
|
"I know I don't have anything to worry about because I don't
|
||
|
fucking need it," Sean said, wiping his frosted glasses with a
|
||
|
handkerchief he got from his pants pocket. "It's just that it's twenty-five
|
||
|
dollars. I can't really afford it, Larry. It's a week's worth of food
|
||
|
money."
|
||
|
"But you're gonna get fifty dollars this week from the papers you're
|
||
|
writing for Billy and Mac. Don't forget it's finals in two weeks. After
|
||
|
seeing that Psych paper you wrote for Hitch, half the football team will
|
||
|
be knocking on your door. You could probably make a few hundred
|
||
|
dollars the next two weeks."
|
||
|
"I know that. But writing papers for dumb jocks is a lot easier than
|
||
|
what you've got in mind. And a lot less dangerous."
|
||
|
"I'll give him the fifty bucks now," Larry said, "and you can give me
|
||
|
twenty-five next week. How's that?"
|
||
|
"Okay."
|
||
|
The two walked up the concrete stairway, casting long echoes deep
|
||
|
into the building with each step. They paused outside the door marked
|
||
|
225, and looked at each other nervously. Larry knocked twice as
|
||
|
prearranged. The door opened quietly and a pale face with the receding
|
||
|
blonde hair of an older graduate student peered through the opening.
|
||
|
"Shhh! My roommate's sleeping," the graduate student said, in a
|
||
|
loud whisper.
|
||
|
He let Sean and Larry in and then walked over to the bedroom door
|
||
|
of the two-room suite and closed it.
|
||
|
"We can talk now," the grad student said. "But keep it down. I don't
|
||
|
want to wake my roomie."
|
||
|
He switched off the ceiling light leaving only his desk lamp to
|
||
|
illuminate the crowded, small study room, then got comfortable in his
|
||
|
swivel desk chair. Dressed in white tee shirt and beltless khaki pants, he
|
||
|
stretched back in his chair, clasped his hands behind his head and placed
|
||
|
his stockinged feet on the desk. Sean half-sat on the sleeping
|
||
|
roommate's desk, unimpressed with the arrogance of the young man
|
||
|
now checking him out most carefully. Sean looked at his huge shadow
|
||
|
being cast against the wall and ceiling by the solitary light. Larry sat
|
||
|
uncomfortably in a wooden chair that looked incapable of giving
|
||
|
comfort.
|
||
|
"Have you met Sean?" asked Larry, breaking the uneasy tension.
|
||
|
"He's my partner and you can trust him. Sean this is Gil."
|
||
|
"Hi, Sean, a pleasure," Gil said, without attempting to get up and
|
||
|
shake hands.
|
||
|
"Gil," Sean said, imitating Gil's harsh whisper, and looking at his
|
||
|
pale face in the gray shadow. He already disliked the cocky grad
|
||
|
student. Through some innate sense, he found he could quickly pick up
|
||
|
on personality types; seldom did he find himself wrong. He wanted the
|
||
|
business taken care of as quickly as possible.
|
||
|
"You got the money, guys?" the grad student whispered. "Sorry I
|
||
|
can't offer you a beer."
|
||
|
Thank God, thought Sean, thinking of numerous insults he might
|
||
|
heap on the weasel if they were to sit around and drink a few beers.
|
||
|
"Yeah." Larry pulled five tens from his pocket and placed them on
|
||
|
Gil's desk.
|
||
|
Gil leaned forward took the money and opened his desk's center
|
||
|
drawer. He took out a small tin box, opened it and handed the shiny,
|
||
|
worn key to Larry.
|
||
|
"There it is in all it's glory," Gil said, smugly. "Test it tomorrow
|
||
|
night and if you have any problems let me know as soon as possible. I'm
|
||
|
graduating in two weeks and then I'm out of here. History. So you'll
|
||
|
have to settle any problems before I leave."
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
Larry and Sean walked solemnly back to their dorm. Their mood was
|
||
|
mostly a reflection of Sean's funk. They quickly stopped at the food
|
||
|
truck for hot-dogs and coffee. The Methodist Church's bell across the
|
||
|
street peeled two a.m.
|
||
|
"I didn't like that bastard," Sean said.
|
||
|
"I didn't either. But we probably won't be dealing with him again.
|
||
|
Fingers crossed."
|
||
|
They entered the dorm and went to Larry's single room, took off
|
||
|
their coats and boots and settled down at the desk to eat and plan for the
|
||
|
next night. Larry placed the key prominently on top of his desk and
|
||
|
starred hungrily at it as he ate. Larry was elated, but in deference to
|
||
|
Sean's moodiness, played down his good feelings.
|
||
|
"Cheer up, Sean, the key's ours. We did it."
|
||
|
"You got any beer?" Sean asked.
|
||
|
"Hahahaaa," Larry laughed, got up and walked toward the room's
|
||
|
only window, opened it, and grabbed a six-pack from the sill.
|
||
|
"Oh shit, it's frozen," he said, placing the six-pack of Rheingold on
|
||
|
the radiator behind his bed and closing the window. "It's a good thing
|
||
|
you asked for a beer. I'd forgotten about it. The bottles would have been
|
||
|
cracked in a few more hours. Hate to waste beer. Even if it's the cheap
|
||
|
shit."
|
||
|
"Piss, you mean," Sean said.
|
||
|
They both laughed. Then the radiator started to clang and cough as
|
||
|
it did every night when the heat was turned off.
|
||
|
Sean said, "The heat's going off. It'll take forever for the beer to
|
||
|
thaw. I'll run hot water over them in the bathroom. That ought to do it."
|
||
|
Sean got up and left the room. Larry finished his hot dog and
|
||
|
fingered the bronze Yale key with the delicacy one would handle a
|
||
|
precious gem. The key to his success was now in his pudgy hands. He
|
||
|
knew he could graduate with probably a C-average, but he would have
|
||
|
to study his ass off and not much time would be left over for the social
|
||
|
life, the wild frat parties, that he loved. And the money he would make
|
||
|
with the key would allow him to chase the most desired of the coeds.
|
||
|
But he was a little concerned about Sean. He knew Sean didn't really
|
||
|
need the key but he did need the cash. He was sure Sean would never
|
||
|
tell anybody about the key. He listened for his friend's returning
|
||
|
footsteps.
|
||
|
"Dum di daaa. I've done it. Where's the church key?"
|
||
|
Larry opened a desk drawer, pulled out the opener and flipped it to
|
||
|
Sean, who opened two bottles, handed one to Larry and sat down on
|
||
|
the bed with the other.
|
||
|
"Gil told me he made two thousand dollars in the two years he had
|
||
|
it," Larry said, absently fingering the shiny brass key. "He told me he
|
||
|
bought it from another grad student, the one who supposedly made it by
|
||
|
copying a master key from a janitor in the Chem building. How he got
|
||
|
the key from the janitor is still a mystery. Whether or not he bribed the
|
||
|
janitor, nobody knows."
|
||
|
Sean pulled his room key out of his coat pocket, took the key out of
|
||
|
Larry's hand and placed them together.
|
||
|
"Let me see your key," he said.
|
||
|
"I've already compared them," Larry said. "Give me the two keys."
|
||
|
He took his key and placed it on top of Sean's.
|
||
|
"You see the difference between our room keys," he said holding
|
||
|
them in front of his desk lamp. "Your key has one higher tooth . . .
|
||
|
here . . .you see?"
|
||
|
Sean leaned over Larry's shoulder and looked at the keys. "Ya. I see
|
||
|
it. So all the keys from this dorm would almost be the same. One higher
|
||
|
or lower tooth, here or there, would be the only difference."
|
||
|
"But you see with the master," Larry went on, "all the teeth, except
|
||
|
for the two at the front and the three at the back are gone."
|
||
|
"Ah, huh." Sean paused in thought. "So we have to decide . . . wait
|
||
|
a minute. We could make as many masters as we wanted by filing down
|
||
|
the all the middle teeth of copies of our own keys."
|
||
|
"You got it. But do we want to? The more keys, the more problems.
|
||
|
The fewer who know, the better."
|
||
|
"Well, we better make at least one copy. You never know what will
|
||
|
happen when you give it to your stupid frat brothers. That bozo Clef.
|
||
|
He could really fuck it all up."
|
||
|
"Don't worry about them," Larry said. "I'll see that they don't fuck it
|
||
|
up. They know that it's the only way that most of them will ever
|
||
|
graduate."
|
||
|
"But if they're not smart enough to graduate from this college,
|
||
|
which isn't very difficult, are they smart enough not to screw up with
|
||
|
the key?"
|
||
|
"Sean, it might not be hard for you, but everyone isn't as smart as
|
||
|
you. You hardly even study and you've been on the Dean's List for the
|
||
|
last . . ."
|
||
|
"Four semesters."
|
||
|
They finished the beer in silence and then made plans to go out the
|
||
|
next night at nine. Sean returned to his room and went to bed but he
|
||
|
couldn't fall asleep. He tossed and turned and finally gave up, put on his
|
||
|
bathrobe, lit a cigarette, and watched the cold winter sunrise beam into
|
||
|
his room. I don't need this, he thought. But then again it's the caper that
|
||
|
fills my need. Something interesting to do. Some excitement to alleviate
|
||
|
the wretched boredom of this institution. This college is a fucking joke.
|
||
|
If my parents had more money I could have gone to Harvard, or at least
|
||
|
Brown, some place that would have been challenging. But I do like the
|
||
|
existentialism of it all. To cheat and not have to cheat. To consciously
|
||
|
do what others would not approve of. To do the wrong thing and enjoy
|
||
|
it. The same reason for writing the history and government papers for
|
||
|
Larry's dumb friends. For that and the extra cash which makes this
|
||
|
desolate existence a little more comfortable. Get to take a girl to the
|
||
|
movies and out for a few beers after. Not much a young man can do
|
||
|
with a five-dollar-a-week allowance from home. And, of course, it's
|
||
|
such a big thing for Larry and it puts him in big with the jock fraternity
|
||
|
and his own fraternity. He'll be the big shot that he wants to be, and I'll
|
||
|
be his intellectual front man. What a team. The short high school
|
||
|
football player, not good enough to make the college varsity, and his
|
||
|
coolly reserved friend.
|
||
|
Seven a.m. and finally blissful sleep came.
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
They met at nine the next night in Larry's room. Sean entered the room
|
||
|
and was a little surprised to find Larry, head leaning on right elbow, in
|
||
|
fake study pose.
|
||
|
"Studying for an exam," Sean guffawed.
|
||
|
"Shhh! Wait a minute," Larry replied, not looking up.
|
||
|
"Got any beer?"
|
||
|
"No drinking tonight. We don't want to screw this up."
|
||
|
"Doesn't look like you got much sleep last night, either," Sean said.
|
||
|
"I missed three classes today," Larry said, intently studying a rough
|
||
|
sketch he had made of a floor plan, and talking to himself in a quiet
|
||
|
whisper.
|
||
|
"I didn't bother going at all. But this escapade is more fun than
|
||
|
listening to Prof Ditmar's lecture on why the Russians beat us into
|
||
|
space. Well anyway, Larry, I slept for most of the day so I'm well
|
||
|
rested. What's the battle plan for tonight?"
|
||
|
Sean walked toward the window.
|
||
|
"History is the most important subject of all," Larry said, looking up
|
||
|
from his desk at Sean. "History exams will be the biggest prizes. Adams
|
||
|
Hall is our first target."
|
||
|
"Yah, all you dumb bastards are history majors," Sean said, smiling.
|
||
|
"What we've got to find out is the times the night janitor punches
|
||
|
into those little things . . . you know . . . those thingamajigs on the wall
|
||
|
by the fire extinguishers on each floor."
|
||
|
"I know what you mean," Sean said. "The janitors stick some kind
|
||
|
of key in them periodically. They're called time clocks. Interesting
|
||
|
expression isn't it?"
|
||
|
"What?" said Larry.
|
||
|
"Time clocks. Aren't all clocks, time clocks?"
|
||
|
"That's them," Larry replied. "Well, Gil told me it was once an hour
|
||
|
on the hour from eight o'clock until two in the morning in most
|
||
|
buildings, but he never went into Adams. I've got a copy of the
|
||
|
schedule from Gil for all the other buildings that we need, although we'll
|
||
|
have to check them at least once to make sure."
|
||
|
"Jesus, Larry, you're a fucking genius at scheming. If you applied
|
||
|
yourself to studying with as much gusto as you're putting into this caper
|
||
|
you'd get straight A's."
|
||
|
"But why not put some adventure into our lives," Larry responded,
|
||
|
lying with a false bravado.
|
||
|
"Bullshit. Now you're stealing my lines," Sean said. "You need this
|
||
|
much more than I do, and you know it."
|
||
|
"Cut it out, Sean. I still got some studying to do."
|
||
|
"Larry, why do you suppose people always get such a big charge
|
||
|
out of doing what they believe is wrong? Am I the only person on earth
|
||
|
that gets a charge out of being a bad guy?"
|
||
|
"It's just because your a Catholic. You need something to confess to
|
||
|
Father Cronin, don't you? You don't want Father Cronin to think you're
|
||
|
some kind of a saint. But you better not tell that pervert a fucking thing
|
||
|
about this."
|
||
|
"Me? Go to confession? You're getting a little edgy, Larry. I haven't
|
||
|
been to confession since eighth grade. For me, this caper is the most
|
||
|
artistic, most existential approach to scholastics that I've ever thought of,
|
||
|
excuse me, that we've ever thought of. We should write a fucking thesis
|
||
|
on alternate ways to make it through college. We'd get an A-plus.
|
||
|
They'd give us our degrees. Summa Cum Laude. After all, what is
|
||
|
college really about? Creative learning. This is intelligence doing it's
|
||
|
best work."
|
||
|
"What are you talking about?" Larry replied. "We're not the first
|
||
|
guys in the world to do this."
|
||
|
"You're right. But I think that if this institution is really interested in
|
||
|
higher learning, we should be able to walk into the Dean's Office, lay
|
||
|
the plan on his desk and walk out with degrees."
|
||
|
"You forgot one important thing," Larry said. "Make that three
|
||
|
things. Number one: we, or I, make that, don't want to study; I want to
|
||
|
party. Right? Number two: what else are we going to do? We get our
|
||
|
degrees and then what do we do? Go to fuckin' work? We're too young
|
||
|
to go to work. Number three: we'd get arrested, kicked out of school,
|
||
|
black marks on our records for life."
|
||
|
"We'll get arrested, kicked out of school, and have black marks on
|
||
|
our records if we get caught stealing history exams so you're dumb
|
||
|
brothers can graduate."
|
||
|
"We're not going to get caught, Sean. Get those negative thoughts
|
||
|
out of your head. We can't have any negative thoughts when we go into
|
||
|
Adams."
|
||
|
"I'll try my best." Sean smiled impishly.
|
||
|
Larry was silent for several moments before he spoke again: "You
|
||
|
know Gil said that this key would open every door to every building on
|
||
|
this campus, except those built after nineteen sixty, which rules out
|
||
|
Science and Tech, and the new girls' dorms on the hill. That's it. We
|
||
|
can even get into the administration building if we want."
|
||
|
The walk to Adams Hall took only ten minutes. They walked
|
||
|
quickly and confidently in the bitter cold night. The campus walkways
|
||
|
were nearly deserted. The light from the huge library windows
|
||
|
illuminated the bundled pair as they walked past.
|
||
|
"Look. You can see Roy inside putting the make on . . .Can you see
|
||
|
who it is?"
|
||
|
"Naw," said Sean. "But it does look cozy and warm in there."
|
||
|
"The library's only good for one thing."
|
||
|
"I think it's just as lonely in there trying to make it with some chick
|
||
|
as it is outside in this cold."
|
||
|
They approached Adams Hall, scraped the snow from the bottoms
|
||
|
of their sneakers, the footwear they had decided upon as best for the
|
||
|
cat-walking required, and walked up to the front door which should be
|
||
|
locked by now. It was ten-forty-five by the library clock. Larry shook
|
||
|
the door handle.
|
||
|
"Good, it's locked. Well here goes nothing."
|
||
|
He placed the master key into the lock and turned it. They heard the
|
||
|
correct clicking sound and looked at each other. The door unlocked.
|
||
|
"Smooth as butter," Sean said, smiling. "But my feet are freezing in
|
||
|
these sneakers."
|
||
|
As soon as they entered the building Larry pulled an old tee shirt out
|
||
|
of his coat pocket.
|
||
|
"Let's wipe clean the bottom of our sneakers," Larry whispered as
|
||
|
softly as he could and still be heard by Sean. "We don't want to leave a
|
||
|
trail through the corridor."
|
||
|
"Jesus, Larry, is there anything you don't think of?"
|
||
|
"Shhh! Keep it down. I thought it would be a good idea. The janitor
|
||
|
must polish the floors at night. They're always slippery when I come to
|
||
|
my eight o'clock class."
|
||
|
"Which can't be very often," Sean whispered.
|
||
|
"Shhh!"
|
||
|
They had just finished cleaning their sneakers. Larry had put the tee
|
||
|
shirt back in his pocket and they were standing just a few feet inside the
|
||
|
front door when they heard the door opening behind them. They
|
||
|
jumped. They were both startled by the sight of a grad student entering
|
||
|
the building and they nervously exchanged mumbled hellos. Had they
|
||
|
forgotten to lock the door behind them? To their relief they saw the
|
||
|
grad student putting his key back in his pocket. He fortunately appeared
|
||
|
preoccupied and hardly gave them a glance even though he returned
|
||
|
their greeting with his own mumble before disappearing into the first
|
||
|
floor corridor.
|
||
|
"I guess we'll have to get used to these surprises," Sean sighed. "If a
|
||
|
janitor or grad student happens upon us, we'll have to pretend we're
|
||
|
grad students. We'll have to exhibit the appropriate air of superiority
|
||
|
that obviously distinguishes a grad student from a mere undergrad."
|
||
|
Larry said, "But the janitors can't possibly know all the grad
|
||
|
students, can they?"
|
||
|
"If anybody asks, and I don't think they will, we could say we're
|
||
|
Gov grads over for a little late hour work in the library. The grad
|
||
|
students have keys to get in, don't they? The one who came in just after
|
||
|
us obviously did."
|
||
|
"Shhh! I hear somebody," Larry continued in a whisper. "It might
|
||
|
be the janitor. Let's hide in the bathroom down the hall."
|
||
|
They walked quickly down the first-floor hall to the bathroom, went
|
||
|
inside, turned the light off and held their breath as the footsteps clunked
|
||
|
and clacked toward them with deliberate purpose.
|
||
|
"Do you think it's the janitor?" Sean whispered, nervously.
|
||
|
"Shhhhhh!"
|
||
|
The footsteps stopped. Their hearts thumped wildly. Sweat rose on
|
||
|
their foreheads. They heard a metallic clicking noise; then a long silence
|
||
|
before the footsteps retreated slowly away. Larry took a flashlight from
|
||
|
his coat pocket, turned it on and looked at his watch.
|
||
|
"Eleven o'clock," he whispered. "He was right on time, if that was
|
||
|
the janitor."
|
||
|
"It had to be," Sean whispered back. "The sound of the key. He was
|
||
|
clocking in on the hour. It must be the same as the other halls Gil
|
||
|
mentioned. What do we do now?"
|
||
|
"Mac Hugh's office is on the second floor just down the hallway
|
||
|
from the stairs on the left," he replied. "We'll test run his office. The
|
||
|
janitor won't be back until midnight. Let's go."
|
||
|
The two tiptoed like frightened cats, Larry in front of Sean, out of
|
||
|
the bathroom, up the stairs and along the corridor wall until they
|
||
|
reached Mac Hugh's office, room 207. They paused in front of the
|
||
|
heavy-looking wooden door and looked around before Larry slid the
|
||
|
master key in the lock and opened the door. Larry had been in Mac
|
||
|
Hugh's office many times to case it in anticipation of getting the key,
|
||
|
even asking the seated professor what his grade was so he could see
|
||
|
where he kept his grade book. He knew the office as well as his own
|
||
|
dorm room. They entered and Sean closed the door quietly behind
|
||
|
them. Larry flashed his light to the professor's cluttered old oak desk.
|
||
|
"His grade book should be in here," he said, carefully pulling out the
|
||
|
top right drawer. "Yup. Here it is . . . Good . . . Look. His grades are
|
||
|
entered in pencil. Phew! I'm set in this class."
|
||
|
"Anything else?" Sean asked.
|
||
|
"Exams. They should be in this cabinet."
|
||
|
"Isn't it locked"
|
||
|
"It wasn't the last time I was in here. Some of the drawers were half
|
||
|
out. If it's locked, I know his keys are in his middle drawer. I've seen
|
||
|
them."
|
||
|
While Sean held his breath, Larry pulled at the top drawer of the
|
||
|
cabinet as slowly and quietly as possible. It slid open. "Here they are,"
|
||
|
he said, smiling nervously as he ran his fingers through the stack of
|
||
|
exam papers.
|
||
|
"I wonder why the cabinet isn't locked," Sean said, whispering a
|
||
|
little louder than before.
|
||
|
"Why?" Larry said, softly. "I don't think it's ever occurred to Mac
|
||
|
Hugh that anyone could, or would, even think of rifling an exam from
|
||
|
his office."
|
||
|
"Let's get out of here," Sean said. "I'm getting the creeps."
|
||
|
On the way back to the dorm, Sean had a sudden thought.
|
||
|
"You know what?" he said.
|
||
|
"What?"
|
||
|
"We forgot to turn the bathroom light back on."
|
||
|
"I don't think it's a big deal," Larry said. "Anyone who went in there
|
||
|
might turn the light off without thinking. I don't think we have anything
|
||
|
to worry about."
|
||
|
And so went each night for the next week. Seven test runs to the
|
||
|
Chemistry building, to Botany, Government, Economics, English, back
|
||
|
to Chem and finally back to Adams. Everything went according to plan
|
||
|
with no hitches. They had been in the offices of each of Larry's five
|
||
|
professors for that semester. Sean, reluctantly, agreed to go to the
|
||
|
offices of two of his Professors. In all seven cases, the grade books were
|
||
|
easily located, but in only two offices were exams found. In every hall
|
||
|
the routine of the janitors was the same. Hourly, on the hour, clock ins.
|
||
|
The only disagreement between the pair was which was the best time to
|
||
|
sneak in to the different offices. Larry was in favor of early forays,
|
||
|
between ten and eleven o'clock. Sean favored after midnight. Larry's
|
||
|
argument for the earlier time was that there were more grad students in
|
||
|
the building then and the two of them would not stand out when
|
||
|
entering the building or walking down the corridors. They wouldn't have
|
||
|
to sneak around like alley cats afraid of making too much noise. Sean
|
||
|
favored the later time because nobody but the janitor would normally be
|
||
|
in the buildings after midnight, and most likely he would be sleeping in
|
||
|
some basement closet, waking up only for his hourly rounds. And if
|
||
|
they somehow screwed up, if one of the professors suspected
|
||
|
tampering, there would be no witnesses to identify them. No one could
|
||
|
say that they thought they saw two guys, a tall one and a shorter one,
|
||
|
who they didn't think belonged in the building. So they agreed to vary
|
||
|
the times of entry during the test runs to between the hours of ten and
|
||
|
two p.m.
|
||
|
For Sean, the absurdity of tampering with grade books was realized
|
||
|
when, after Larry had upped his exam results by one grade three
|
||
|
different times, he adamantly insisted that Sean do at least one himself.
|
||
|
Standing terrified in the office of his analytical chemistry professor,
|
||
|
Larry trained the flashlight on the blue exam book while Sean turned
|
||
|
the pages. He thought he had aced the exam, but one problem had
|
||
|
bothered him. He reluctantly changed the final equation to that problem,
|
||
|
more to bond with Larry (blood brothers in crime; to make them equally
|
||
|
responsible in all aspects of the caper, which seemed so important to
|
||
|
Larry) than because he thought the equation was wrong. When he got
|
||
|
the results two days later, he got an A-minus instead of an A. The only
|
||
|
mistake was the equation he had changed. Stupid, he said to himself,
|
||
|
when he learned the result.
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
One week later, on the eve of Professor Mac Hugh's final in Ancient
|
||
|
Civilizations, Larry and Sean were in Larry's room anxiously watching
|
||
|
his clock tick-tock away the time until five to eleven, the agreed upon
|
||
|
departure time, when they would steal their first exam. Sean was not at
|
||
|
all comfortable because the exam was not for him, but was for Larry
|
||
|
and nineteen of his fraternity brothers. What if they screwed up? Got
|
||
|
caught cheating? He would be implicated and thrown out of school. He
|
||
|
might be bored with school, but he didn't want to suffer the disgrace of
|
||
|
expulsion.
|
||
|
Yes, the thrill of the caper was gone for him, although he hadn't told
|
||
|
Larry. He knew Larry would be very upset if he did; it meant too much
|
||
|
to him. Sean still felt stupid about the one exam he did change. Two
|
||
|
nights later, he had the chance to change the grade book of his physics
|
||
|
professor. He stood there dumbly over the grade book. He didn't make
|
||
|
a change even though the grades were entered in pencil. He looked at all
|
||
|
the grades and chuckled when he discovered that his were the highest in
|
||
|
the class. What to change? The thrill of cheating was gone.
|
||
|
There was a knock on the door.
|
||
|
"Come in," Larry said.
|
||
|
In walked Tom Fortier, one of Larry's frat brothers, average height,
|
||
|
taller than Larry, but a tad shorter than Sean. He was a nervous, fidgety,
|
||
|
senior who couldn't sit still for more than a couple of minutes. His face
|
||
|
was dark and round, his hair dark and short, and he wore thick, horn
|
||
|
rim glasses.
|
||
|
"Hi, guys," he said, in husky baritone. "All ready to go?"
|
||
|
"Are you going, too?" Sean asked, incredulously.
|
||
|
"No," Larry answered. "Relax, Sean. When we get the exam we're
|
||
|
giving it to Tom and he'll give it to the brothers."
|
||
|
"Three's a crowd, Sh, Sh, Sean," Tom stuttered. "I, I, I'm not
|
||
|
going."
|
||
|
"Relax, Sean," Larry repeated.
|
||
|
"It's your stupid brothers I'm worried about, Larry," Sean said,
|
||
|
tapping a cigarette on his lighter and then lighting it.
|
||
|
"Jesus, you're jumpy tonight," Larry said. His look was a worried
|
||
|
one.
|
||
|
"You'd be jumpy if you were in my shoes," he said. "I've got
|
||
|
everything to lose and nothing to gain."
|
||
|
"You know the only reason we're not getting any money is because
|
||
|
it's for my brothers. Everybody else pays. Okay."
|
||
|
"Yes, boss."
|
||
|
"When are you going?" Tom asked, timing his question to end the
|
||
|
squabble.
|
||
|
"We're leaving in five minutes," Larry said. "It's ten to eleven now.
|
||
|
Ten minutes to Adams. We want to get there at five after, just after the
|
||
|
janitor has done his thing, and be out by twenty past, if all goes right."
|
||
|
"Knock on your head, Larry," Sean said, and all three shared
|
||
|
nervous laughter.
|
||
|
"What do you want me to do?" Tom asked Larry.
|
||
|
"You wait here until we get back. Better still go buy a six-pack and
|
||
|
then wait here. And save us some beer."
|
||
|
Larry gave Tom his room key and all three left. They parted outside
|
||
|
the dorm as Tom turned away toward the bar across the street.
|
||
|
"Good luck, guys," he said.
|
||
|
"We'll meet you back in the room at eleven-thirty, or a little later,"
|
||
|
Larry said.
|
||
|
It was a clear and starry night, but without the bitter cold that was
|
||
|
typical of northern New England in late January. The winter thaw had
|
||
|
melted what snow remained on the walkways. As they walked along the
|
||
|
familiar path to Adams Hall, Sean mentioned how they wouldn't have to
|
||
|
worry about tracking in the snow's moisture. They walked past the
|
||
|
library just as the clock struck eleven. Closing time. Only two students
|
||
|
could be seen through the huge window. Then past the administration
|
||
|
building to Adams Hall.
|
||
|
They entered, tiptoed up to the second floor and gingerly walked
|
||
|
along the lighted hallway toward Mac Hugh's office. They hadn't heard
|
||
|
a soul. It was deathly quiet. Larry slowly inserted the master key and
|
||
|
opened the door. They entered quickly and closed the door, which
|
||
|
automatically locked behind them. The office was completely dark
|
||
|
except for a crack of hallway light under the door. Larry turned on his
|
||
|
flashlight, walked past the desk to the wall cabinet, opened it, found a
|
||
|
stack of exam papers with the flashlight and took them out. Sean sat in
|
||
|
Mac Hugh's chair, a hard oak swivel chair, nervously tapping his
|
||
|
sneakered feet, craving a cigarette, while Larry put the pile of exams on
|
||
|
the desk. He fingered through the stack, mumbling to himself. Sean
|
||
|
thought it was taking forever for Larry to locate the final, but they had
|
||
|
been in the office less than three minutes.
|
||
|
"Here it is. Nope . . . this must be it. Yup, here it is." Larry was
|
||
|
whispering to himself. Sean couldn't help but smile as he watched Larry
|
||
|
intent on his mission. He pulled a copy of the exam from the stack and
|
||
|
handed it to Sean.
|
||
|
"You want my fingerprints on it, too," Sean whispered, smiling.
|
||
|
Larry put his finger to his lips but didn't say anything. He picked up
|
||
|
the stack of exams and turned quickly to return them to the cabinet. He
|
||
|
turned too quickly and slammed his right foot in the wastepaper basket
|
||
|
next to the desk, knocking it across the office. It sounded as if a bomb
|
||
|
had exploded. Sean nearly jumped out of the chair. They both froze.
|
||
|
Larry managed to hold on to the exams. He put the flashlight out. They
|
||
|
didn't dare move a muscle. Their hearts were pounding out of their
|
||
|
chests. Their breathing was audibly shallow and rapid. Perspiration
|
||
|
rolled off their foreheads. Their hands were clammy. They heard a door
|
||
|
open from down the hall and then the sound of slow, deliberate
|
||
|
footsteps coming toward Mac Hugh's office. The footsteps paused near
|
||
|
the office door for what seemed like an eternity. Sean thought his
|
||
|
breathing was as loud as a cheering football crowd. Larry felt the skin
|
||
|
tightening around his mouth and nose. Sean screamed in panic to
|
||
|
himself. The footsteps resumed, moving away. They breathed a sigh of
|
||
|
relief and looked at each other, although it was too dark in the office for
|
||
|
them to see anything. Then they heard the footsteps again, moving
|
||
|
faster, returning from the far end of the corridor and again pausing in
|
||
|
front of the office door before walking quickly away.
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
"You stupid fucking bastards," Larry yelled at Tom. They were in
|
||
|
Sean's room. Sean sat at his desk, smoking and staring out the window.
|
||
|
"But, but, Larry, I, I told them to be sure that each one had diff,
|
||
|
diff, different answers.
|
||
|
"Every fucking one got a B, with the same, identical wrong answers.
|
||
|
How stupid can you be? You've fucked the whole thing up."
|
||
|
"It, it wasn't my fault," Tom pleaded.
|
||
|
"You went over the exam with them the night before."
|
||
|
"I, I told them to make sure . . . "
|
||
|
"That's it," Sean said, still staring out the window and puffing on his
|
||
|
cigarette. "I'm out. Two close calls is two too many."
|
||
|
"What did Mac Hugh say?" Larry asked.
|
||
|
"He, he, he said since people had obviously cheated, the exam
|
||
|
would have to be given again. He said he was going to talk to everyone
|
||
|
who got the identical result."
|
||
|
Larry received a B-plus. "Shit," he mumbled to himself.
|
||
|
"We have to get rid of the key, Larry," Sean said, turning his head
|
||
|
to look at him. "Mac Hugh will know that someone had to have broken
|
||
|
in to his office and stolen the exam."
|
||
|
"But we didn't break in," Larry said.
|
||
|
"It's only a question of semantics," Sean said. "And time. Sooner or
|
||
|
later . . . We have to get out now. Today. At least, Mac Hugh won't talk
|
||
|
to you because you got a B-plus."
|
||
|
"Sor, sor, sorry, guys," Tom stammered.
|
||
|
"You were right, Sean," Larry said. "You said they'd fuck it up."
|
||
|
"I'm not gonna say, 'I told you so,' Larry, but it's all over for me.
|
||
|
We'd have gotten caught sometime. Not you and me, but someone we
|
||
|
sold an exam to would have."
|
||
|
"Shit," Larry said again, this time much louder. "What will I do
|
||
|
now?"
|
||
|
"Start to study," Sean said. "I'll write your papers for you. You'll
|
||
|
make it."
|
||
|
"I, I, I'm really, fu, fuck, fucking sor, sorry about it," Tom said.
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
That evening Sean walked into Larry's room.
|
||
|
"What happened at class today?" Sean asked.
|
||
|
"Get this. Mac Hugh talked to everyone in the class, not just my
|
||
|
stupid fucking frat brothers with the identical scores. He told me that I
|
||
|
was the one he suspected of stealing the exam."
|
||
|
"Christ almighty."
|
||
|
"How did he figure it out, Sean? So soon?"
|
||
|
"He's a wily bastard. When he thought about it for awhile, he
|
||
|
must've figured it was all those visits you made to his office, for one
|
||
|
pretext or another. You never went to his office all year, then all of a
|
||
|
sudden you start going there four times a week. He must be guessing
|
||
|
though. I wouldn't sweat it, Larry. How could he know for sure who it
|
||
|
was? There's no evidence."
|
||
|
"Wouldn't sweat it. Shit, he scared the living shit out me," Larry
|
||
|
said. "All the time I was standing next to his desk, and he was accusing
|
||
|
me, I had my hand in my pocket fingering the goddamn key."
|
||
|
"He can't prove anything."
|
||
|
"Mac Hugh said that he was sure someone had 'surreptitiously,' as
|
||
|
he put it, gotten into his office. Someone who had to have a key since
|
||
|
there was no sign of break and enter."
|
||
|
"What did you say to that?"
|
||
|
"Nothing. What could I say?" Larry paused. "He said one of his
|
||
|
graduate students, who was working very late, heard some noise in his
|
||
|
office the week before the exam."
|
||
|
"Now we know the owner of those goddamn footsteps. But
|
||
|
remember: no one saw us. By the time we left the building it was well
|
||
|
after midnight. There wasn't a soul there."
|
||
|
Larry said with a little more confidence, "You're right, Sean, he
|
||
|
knows, but he can't prove a fucking thing."
|
||
|
"Shit, Larry, we didn't use gloves. What if they dust the place?"
|
||
|
"The first thing we've got to do is get rid of the fucking key."
|
||
|
Sean said, "Let's get a six-pack first."
|
||
|
* * *
|
||
|
Blueberry Creek criss-crossed the campus several times as it ran toward
|
||
|
the bay and out to sea. Several small bridges crossed the creek, but the
|
||
|
most famous was the Kissing Bridge.
|
||
|
After drinking three beers each, Sean and Larry walked erratically
|
||
|
toward the Kissing Bridge, where lovers gathered at sunset and after
|
||
|
dark to make out. Even on cold winter evenings like this evening there
|
||
|
were couples on the bridge. Sean had suggested this bridge as a
|
||
|
symbolic place to, "Kiss the key good-bye."
|
||
|
When they reached the bridge, a few couples, who were leaning
|
||
|
over the rail, turned and looked their way. They heard giggles. Larry
|
||
|
nudged Sean. "They must think we're queers."
|
||
|
"C'mon Larry. They might just be embarrassed. Afraid we've come
|
||
|
to look."
|
||
|
"Have you ever brought a girl here?" Larry asked.
|
||
|
"Once," Sean said. "It's like being in a meat market. Everyone
|
||
|
checking out everyone else. Weird. How could anyone feel comfortable
|
||
|
here, unless you're an exhibitionist."
|
||
|
"A what . . . ?"
|
||
|
"Showoff."
|
||
|
"Oh. I came here once with Carol. She hated it, so we left."
|
||
|
"Well, shall we get on with it."
|
||
|
They stood in the center of the bridge. Larry pulled the key out of
|
||
|
his pants pocket, kissed it, offered it to Sean for a kiss (he declined with
|
||
|
impatience), then dropped it over the railing. They listened intently.
|
||
|
CLINK! Sean turned to look at Larry. Larry turned to look at Sean.
|
||
|
Larry said, "Aw, shit."
|
||
|
"Larry," Sean whispered harshly, looking around to see if anyone
|
||
|
was looking at them (several were), "the fucking creek's frozen. Why
|
||
|
didn't you . . . ?"
|
||
|
"There's always a crack open in that ice. It's so near the bay.
|
||
|
Brackish water and all. I see it on the way to class everyday."
|
||
|
"The problem is, Larry, you don't go to class everyday."
|
||
|
"Let's go down there and make sure it goes in the water."
|
||
|
They slipped and slid down the short embankment, which educed
|
||
|
great laughter from the bridge. "Larry, how are we gonna find the
|
||
|
fucking thing."
|
||
|
"With . . . "
|
||
|
"We didn't bring a fucking flashlight with us."
|
||
|
"Right. Well, then on hands and knees, I guess."
|
||
|
They must have been a wonderful sight to those leaning and
|
||
|
laughing over the bridge, as they groped around on the not too thick ice.
|
||
|
After a few minutes of feeling the ice with their gloved hands, they
|
||
|
heard a loud crack. The ice buckled but didn't break. Suddenly a
|
||
|
flashlight shone on them, and the couples on the bridge could see the
|
||
|
pair crawling off the ice as quickly as possible, more laughter ringing
|
||
|
out.
|
||
|
"Whatcha doin' down their boys?" a voice called out from the
|
||
|
bridge.
|
||
|
"My, my friend lost his key," Sean said. "Could you come down
|
||
|
and help us find it?"
|
||
|
"Better get off the ice," the voice said before starting down the
|
||
|
slope. "It's liable to break on you. We don't want you to wash out into
|
||
|
the bay."
|
||
|
They nearly shit their pants when the bearer of the flashlight
|
||
|
climbed down the bank and stood beside them. It was none other than
|
||
|
Sergeant Bob Wilkins of the campus police. Neither Sean nor Larry
|
||
|
knew whether they were shaking just from the cold, the beer they had
|
||
|
drunk, or from the sudden appearance of the fuzz in the person of
|
||
|
Sergeant Wilkins. They imagined it was mostly the latter. Both were too
|
||
|
numb to speak. They stood on the thick frozen edge while Bob flashed
|
||
|
the light up and down the icy creek. As he did, Sean and Larry could
|
||
|
see the rivulet of water running down the middle of the creek; the slot
|
||
|
into which the key was supposed to have disappeared.
|
||
|
"There it is, boys," Bob said. "It's over there, near the opposite
|
||
|
bank."
|
||
|
Larry said to Sean, "You stay here. I'll go over and get it."
|
||
|
"Be careful," Sean answered.
|
||
|
Larry climbed the embankment, slipping a few times as he did,
|
||
|
walked unsteadily across the bridge, through the crowd of cheering
|
||
|
lovers, and back down the other side. With Bob's flashlight steady on
|
||
|
the key, Larry crawled on hands and knees out to where it lay. As he
|
||
|
crawled he reached out . . . a little further . . . just a little bit further . . .
|
||
|
two more inches . . . CRACK! SPLASH! Both Larry and the key
|
||
|
plunged into the cold water.
|
||
|
"Shit!" Larry yelled. "Help! Get me out."
|
||
|
By the time Sean reached the opposite bank, some of the guys and
|
||
|
girls who were on the bridge had pulled Larry out. At least now he
|
||
|
knew why he was shivering uncontrollably. A few coats were placed
|
||
|
around his shoulders as he stood shaking on the bank.
|
||
|
Sergeant Wilkins was on his walkie-talkie calling an ambulance.
|
||
|
"Just relax, son," he said. "Help will be here in a lickity-split. You'll get
|
||
|
all warmed up in the infirmary. They'll give you some hot soup and
|
||
|
coffee."
|
||
|
During the short ambulance ride to the university infirmary,
|
||
|
Sean said, "So, Larry, I guess you lost your room key." Larry smiled to
|
||
|
the puzzlement of the EMT. "Yah. Shit, I'll have to get a copy from
|
||
|
housekeeping when we get back to the dorm."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Smartest Thing She Ever Did
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Dan Siemens
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beef headed rubber toes nictitate slowly under screeching waterway
|
||
|
power-tool. Dog solitude and buzzsaw judgment discover humming
|
||
|
fields of chain linked electric death. Ticking twisted instants subjugate
|
||
|
undeniable thermostat, placing mutual transparent watershed opulence
|
||
|
amidst blank-faced centrifuge. Lunatic buffalo grapplers braid cortical
|
||
|
convolutions engendering unthinkable escrow annihilation. Floodgate
|
||
|
circulation spring arm contractions force hateful mutation gravy to
|
||
|
percolate with thick cheesy flatulence. Innuendo. Large gray non
|
||
|
technical ice blocks filter sense-data from the sweaty palmed denizens
|
||
|
of the churning clock tower. Reusable dermatology mugs flash grid-like
|
||
|
patterns of mental states across the superstructure of the mind. Holiday
|
||
|
masses of uniformed silkiness from Berkeley compel subcutaneous
|
||
|
predispositions to rise mystically through the crystalline geodesic.
|
||
|
Therapeutic vomit hunger scorches the unfathomable slipstream of
|
||
|
conflict stratification. When "The A-Team" started to get boring, Sally
|
||
|
turned off the television and fell asleep on the sofa. Factory mashers of
|
||
|
no certain dignity gathered sullen imponderables, scraping thick yellow
|
||
|
gelatin from the corrugated fuselage. Red strap latticework clasp
|
||
|
extremities without notice. Above the flaming balustrade seven tilted
|
||
|
nodes of punctuation hung expectantly, devouring the barbaric crooners
|
||
|
of forgotten fictions. Odoriferous crab grass pontificated geophysical
|
||
|
scarab fortunes, while highway robbery boldness festered madly in the
|
||
|
spectators. Deliberate syncopations tantalize dynamic halitosis, utilizing
|
||
|
roadside morsels in order to strike wholesale casework procedures.
|
||
|
Frame razors feature raving felonies, and gestating gimlet producers
|
||
|
beseech copious tidal mercenaries to undulate laboriously. Swordfish
|
||
|
symphonies run gutter pineapples. Pandemic ebony ledger delegates
|
||
|
legitimately confound leather guesswork manuals. Evading deliberative
|
||
|
mania scratchers, damp spider-like citadel burials gobble butane highball
|
||
|
germicides. Shellfire insecurity octaves support ostensible officer
|
||
|
reverberations, and vigilante paradigm fissures incarcerate crematory
|
||
|
equilibrium. Livestock cartographers forge fossil dedication entrails,
|
||
|
attributing blueprint irrigation falsehoods. Serpentine rotor thongs
|
||
|
ensue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Sunday Ritual
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Michael Heacock
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bang. . .bang. . .bang. . .bang. . . .
|
||
|
Six Sunday morning. I'm supposed to be asleep, but how with
|
||
|
all the racket above me. They know I'm not a heavy sleeper. They
|
||
|
raised me.
|
||
|
Bang. . .bang, int. . .bang, eee. . .bang, int. . .bang, eeesh. . . .
|
||
|
This is why all my slumber parties take place on Friday night.
|
||
|
Not that Mum and Dad disallow Saturdays. No. Sometimes they
|
||
|
question my refusal to hold such get-togethers on that other non-school
|
||
|
night. They seem to think I sleep through their Sunday ritual, that my
|
||
|
friends would too. I never explain. I don't even want to imagine the
|
||
|
giggles and talk that would erupt if my friends knew of my parent's
|
||
|
behaviour. Just laying here, pillow over my head, waiting for it to all be
|
||
|
over, is embarrassment enough. They're in their late-forties, what is up
|
||
|
with all this activity; why is everything still working?
|
||
|
Bang, eeesh. . .bang, ooth. . .bang, augck. . .bang, int. . . .
|
||
|
I never hear Dad. If it weren't for the headboard slapping up
|
||
|
against their bedroom wall, waking my slumbers, I'd never hear Mum.
|
||
|
Oh, lucky me. Dad is quiet in life and quiet in love, it seems. Mum's
|
||
|
pleasure is subdued, though forcefully, I can almost see the strain
|
||
|
swallowing those screams (my skin is crawling just thinking about my
|
||
|
parent's carnality, the images popping into my head, unwanted as they
|
||
|
are). They've always taken pains to hide the ritual from their children.
|
||
|
Yet that headboard. It mustn't be quite the noise it is up there that it is
|
||
|
down here. Acoustics.
|
||
|
Bang. . .bang, ahh. . .bang, God. . .bang, eeesh. . . .
|
||
|
At least they're not experimenting, right there above me.
|
||
|
Always missionary. The pace of their tango gives it all away. You
|
||
|
don't get those fluent rhythms unless you are doing something you are
|
||
|
well practiced at. And they are always quite chipper and agile Sundays,
|
||
|
no limping about complaining of pulled muscles, no visible bruising, no
|
||
|
Band-Aids or gauze pads.
|
||
|
Bang, int. .bangeee, bangsqueakooh bangeeesqueakbangughban
|
||
|
gsqueakoonbangughbangaaaahhhh. . . .
|
||
|
Well, I guess they go shopping today. Time for a new mattress,
|
||
|
maybe a futon, put the old mattress up against the wall. Wouldn't want
|
||
|
the kids to find out about your little Sunday ritual.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
layers
|
||
|
by
|
||
|
Virgil Hervey
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
zip, button, snap,
|
||
|
cotton, wool, nylon,
|
||
|
twigs, feathers, grass,
|
||
|
sheetrock, fiberglass, vinyl siding,
|
||
|
pane glass, smoke detectors, burglar alarms,
|
||
|
stern face, crossed legs, arms folded,
|
||
|
back arched, hair bristling, personal space,
|
||
|
lies
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Biographies
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Michael Gibbons
|
||
|
I am a San Francisco cab driver and writer of fiction. I was a
|
||
|
Peace Corps Volunteer in Sierra Leone, West Africa from 1967
|
||
|
to 1969. When I returned I taught high school before deciding to
|
||
|
pursue a career in journalism. When the money wasn't very
|
||
|
good in writing I supplemented my income by driving a cab.
|
||
|
I've never given up cab driving because the impressions I get
|
||
|
from people I meet often become the "meat" of my fiction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I have published over 100 articles in several publications
|
||
|
including Harper's magazine, Harvard magazine, the Christian
|
||
|
Science Monitor, the Boston Phoenix and the Real Paper.
|
||
|
Electronically, I've been published in Sparks, Sibboleth,
|
||
|
Intertext, and Whirlwind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Michael Heacock
|
||
|
Mike is a late-twenties university student who enjoys good
|
||
|
intelligent rock, like Nirvana. When he heard of Kurt Cobain's
|
||
|
untimely death, he fell into a deep funk, but at no time did he
|
||
|
consider following the artist's lead (Mike did drink much beer
|
||
|
though). No stories have come of this experience. . .yet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Virgil Hervey
|
||
|
Virgil Hervey is a New York City criminal lawyer who plays
|
||
|
trumpet and writes poetry and short stories. He is the publisher
|
||
|
of GOD'S BAR: un*plugged, a literary magazine for
|
||
|
disenfranchised computer bulletin board poets. His poetry and
|
||
|
prose have appeared in The Flying Dog, Sand River Journal,
|
||
|
The Olympia Review and GOD'S BAR: un*plugged. More are
|
||
|
scheduled for upcoming editions of Blank Gun Silencer and
|
||
|
Venusian Travelogue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Heather MacLeod
|
||
|
Heather is earning her B.F.A. in Creative Writing at the
|
||
|
University of Victoria. Her most recent publications have
|
||
|
appeared in Tessera, The Alchemist, Herspectives, and Grain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Michael McNeilley
|
||
|
Michael McNeilley is editor of the Olympia Review; was
|
||
|
Founding Director of the National Student News Service;
|
||
|
worked as a reporter and correspondent in Washington, DC;
|
||
|
writes on art, disability, business and political issues; and has
|
||
|
published poems and stories in New Delta Review, Red
|
||
|
Dancefloor, God's Bar, Hammers, Poet, Gypsy, Silent
|
||
|
Treatment, Poetry Motel, Lilliput Review, Slipstream,
|
||
|
Bouillabaisse, DAM, Ball, Plazm, Minotaur, The Plastic
|
||
|
Tower, SIN, xib, Abbey, Aspects, Ma!, Hyphen, Ship of Fools,
|
||
|
Exquisite Corpse and many other publications.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dan Siemens
|
||
|
I wrote this during my early college years. I think I'd call it
|
||
|
"Anti-Poetry" or something like that. Does it mean something?
|
||
|
Yes, it certainly does, but I'm not always sure what it is. I'm not
|
||
|
even completely sure what the motivation was behind this, but
|
||
|
something inspired that dense glut of colorful, yet ultimately
|
||
|
meaningless images. I guess the simplest explanation is that
|
||
|
reading it over kinda reminds me of watching television. I think
|
||
|
there's a great deal of meaning to be found in nonsense and
|
||
|
chaos. At least, that's what my mathematician friends tell
|
||
|
me. . . .
|
||
|
|
||
|
E. Russell Smith
|
||
|
When Russ isn't walking through Algonquin Park with a canoe
|
||
|
over his head or researching his next story in darkest Anatolia he
|
||
|
is a freelance writer in Ottawa, where he has never worked for
|
||
|
the government. Watch for his next book, "The Felicity Papers",
|
||
|
from General Store PH, in the fall.
|
||
|
|