Tuesday, 27 May 2014

They Call It a Ghost

They call it a ghost
at dusk, when gnats mate in Autumn
kaleidoscopecolliding female male
female male

There is nothing but frenzy
A cyclone out of textures (except
cyclone implies a shape towards an
idea the ghost won't answer)

There is swirling instead of stillness where
stillness is expected
yet these ghosts should be expected
by now.

A ghost.
Each of them endlessly
laboriously
promulgating
taxonomies of
subcategory
until the rain scatters in ways that
we all have names for; smaller than
your hands.

Connecting if they can
the swarm
in time, they have to
their lives so brief
each allotted
so few
moments to make
certain.

To make sure that they will leave
a ghost when they are gone.

I don't quite remember
not quite
exactly how long they live for
these ghosts that we see
(spectrality)
fucking the sun to sleep as
we stare into motion and envy.

I don't know quite how long, he said.
No matter
no matter
neither do they.

--------------------


Wednesday, 14 May 2014

Devil's Punchbowl

She called it the Devil’s Punchbowl – well, they did, the whole town did, she just knew it, grew up with it. A basin of trees and rocks, a gigantic precipice of cliff-face, falling directly into a quarry. The trees surrounded the edges, sometimes growing outward diagonally, reaching out like fingers grasping the dark. When I was a kid, my brother and I would always imagine stuff like this while we were playing on rainy days.
            “Can’t step on the floor,” he’d instruct, authoritative. “You gotta jump from cushion to cushion. The floor is a bottomless pit.” So then I’d laugh and smile and jump, purposefully land just on the edge, lean a little over the side for dramatic effect. Sometimes I’d pretend not to make it so he could grab my hand, play hero. I’d grab his wrist and he’d quote lines he’d heard from movies, stuff that would legitimately make your eyes well up, if it weren’t all so absurd. Then he’d pull me up, out of the carpet abyss, out of the Devil’s Punchbowl.
            Walking from the dirt parking lot, eyeing the ground for any sort of safe pathway, a stretch without gnarled roots to trip on, I tried to keep up with Nicole. She strode ahead confidently, feet coming down like keystrokes, picking the right spot and weight with which to step. She was wearing her tank-top and jeans; she’d left her jacket in the car, even though I was shivering through my own. I stuffed my hands in my pockets, thought about the possibility of tripping on a protruding root, not being able to get my hands up to brace my fall, then tugged them back out of the pockets, into the breeze. I followed her to a giant, black, metal railing. The ledge of the cliff was a good ten feet past, reflecting electric light off the rock until the empty expanse. I couldn’t see over the edge from here. I was relieved.
            There was a gigantic fluorescent light-up crucifix erected on the highest peak of the right side of the semi-circled cliff. Right at the apex, someone decided a monstrous cross, bathing everything in neon golden light, would be an appropriate fixture. They probably put it up in effort to quell the intentions of anyone who showed up with suicidal thoughts -- or libidinous thoughts, for that matter. The artificial gold covered the railing, the gravel, the cigarette butts and bottles strewn beneath. I stretched out my hands and leaned on the black guardrail, next to Nicole. She was staring straight outwards and I could see the reflection of the cross in her green eyes.
            “Isn’t it so awesome?” she asked without looking at me. “We used to come down here all the time in first year, me and the girls from my floor. We’d drink, smoke up, shout things to try to get an echo.” She had a mischievous glint in her eye and smirk that made me think she didn’t always come down here with just the girls. Eventually she turned that smile towards me and grabbed my jacket sleeve. “C’mere.
            She threw one leg over the railing and started to pivot on her ass – this big thick black wall was put in place in case any drunk shmuck’s car started to careen off the highway, the cars that I could still hear speeding by behind us.
            “Oh no – no, no, no, no…” I started, trying to laugh off her request, trying to keep it cool. “I can see just fine, we’re just fine right here.
            “Jesus, Eric, come on, I do this all the time! You’ve got to live a little -- we’re going to get you out of this rut somehow.” She smiled and stepped to the other side of the railing, a million miles away. “Come on, lets see if we can see the bottom – it’s so much better in the natural moonlight, down low.
            I sighed and looked at her expecting face, almost giddy at the prospect that she was forcing me out of my comfort zone. I started to lift one foot over the railing, just looking straight down, focusing on my hands and their simple work. My heart was thudding in my ears and I was petrified, but also embarrassed because this does this all the time, and she’s in control, and why am I so worried? 
           It became like when you’re in the passenger seat next to a terrible driver who’s speeding and you just sing along to the radio a little louder, grip the handle of the door a little tighter and try not to pump your foot onto the  imaginary brake on the passenger side.
            “We’ve gotta get out of this place if it's the last thing we ever do” I start singing under my breath, focusing on the melody, smiling tightly to let her know I’m alright, as I reach out for her hand. I shuffle along slowly, other hand low at my side, as though some gust of wind or otherwise might suddenly come up behind me and knock me through the air, toss us both off the safety of the cushions to the carpet below.
            She stepped directly to the edge; I dragged my sneakers over pebbles, ending up a good four feet behind her. There was a growing pit in my stomach and I stared at the ground, trying not to envision Nicole disappearing over the side. My head was trying to panic and I was trying to restrain the beast; my mind wanted to assess the situation and compile a list of contingencies, how to respond if she fell, what to do first, what could be done? I just kept humming and stood straight, a railway spike hammered firmly into the rock beneath me. She glanced over the edge, leaning a tad too far, then back around to me.
            “You have to see it. C’mon, I’ll hold you.”
            “I’m twice your size!” I wanted it to come across as playful, but my true emotions were showing through.
            “Here. Sit down.” Nicole approached and but her hands on my shoulders, squatting with me until we were flat on the cold, hard rock. Never releasing me, she shimmied to about one foot from the edge. She finally let go of my tense bicep and crossed her legs. She was so close to me I could feel her heat, but we weren’t touching. “I think if I came here wanting to kill myself, that would just make it worse” she said, gesturing at the cross. “A buncha kids from my year came down here last summer and managed to knock out most of the lights. Paper said it was some devil-worshipping cult – they were engineering students, so I guess they weren’t that far off.” She smiled that perfect smile at me and the blend of fluorescent and moon light ran diagonally down her face, showing me one eye, a few freckles. She looked happy, but her next question was a surprise. “Do you ever think of killing yourself, Eric?”
            I was somewhat taken aback, but I did my best to act appalled. “Of course not! I mean, what would give you that impression? I’m not that pathetic, am I?” I was lying. She could tell.
            “Oh gee, I don’t know, Eric: mountains of prescription pills, a job you hate, long pregnant pauses in your conversation, mulling around town in your black jacket like a goddamned haunting – whatever would have given me that impression?” She reached out and playfully mussed my hairdo. She’s eight years younger than me, yet I kept feeling like her nerdy kid brother.
            “The job isn’t really as bad as I make it sound,” I began the defense. “I mean, I’m building up a pretty fulfilling relationship with the photocopy machine. We get entire shifts alone together… I’ve taken to reading Kierkegaard to her on slower days as she hums in appreciation." 
            “Wow, a relationship between you and an inanimate object that can’t talk back? No wonder you’re happy.”
            “Did you really bring me down here just to bust my balls? I thought this was supposed to be a tranquil experience.” It was my turn to flash a smile. I told myself I shouldn’t pursue this one, she’s too young, she has too much going for her… but all I wanted to do was get her in my arms.
            She turned back to the bottomless pit. “I don’t blame anyone who kills themselves. It isn’t their fault, all the time. Usually we just don’t know if it’s going to get better, we just don’t have enough.” I was going to respond, but she looked deep in it, and I kept my mouth shut. “In the third grade we had a student teacher come in and give us a little colour exercise with coffee filters. We each got a filter and an eye-dropper, and the teacher came around to each desk with different solutions of water and food colouring. 
            “So we would suck up some colour, whichever we wanted, and drip them onto the centre of the filter, watch the water claw its way towards the edge. Then we’d do another colour, and in the end we got this little, damp, round rainbow.” She was fidgeting and picking at the sole of her running shoe. I realized I had never seen her hesitant before. “So anyhow, the teacher was trying to illustrate something about the differences in colour, how some could fight closer to the edge than others, blah blah blah… but all I remembered was being fascinated, watching each colour ebb outwards, wondering when it would run out of steam. I do it all the time, now; at restaurants I always dip my straw-wrapper into condensation… with my coffee I stick the corner of the sugar cube in and watch it absorb all the black. It’s become this stupid little habit of mine, like how some people peel the labels of their beer bottles.” She knew that the story was sort of pointless and I could tell that she was dancing around what she really wanted to say. “So anyways,” she continued, “I guess that’s just how I see life, sometimes. Sometimes we just don’t have enough to get all the way to the edge. We give up and conk out somewhere along the way. And it isn’t necessarily our fault.” I tried to smile meekly and I grabbed her hand. I didn’t know why such a mundane memory suddenly had her choked up; the moonlight was glinting off of her watering eyes to the point that they appeared silver, shimmering.
            “My older brother killed himself,” she finally let out. I squeezed her hand, tighter. “Everyone thinks it was an accident, that he was just driving drunk, but I knew he was going to do it, I saw it coming. I was little and I was scared and I didn’t know what to say, I didn’t want to tell anyone and make him hate me.” She was vulnerable for all of a moment, before wiping at her eyes and clearing her throat. Clearly embarrassed about letting herself cry, she turned to me know, angry.

            “So I know when people are thinking about it, when they want to do it." Her eyes held mine steadfast longer than any had in ages. "So don’t fucking bullshit me.”
-------------

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Have to Keep Trying

When he awoke and sauntered from the bedroom he could already hear running water. The slap-slap of his feet on the freezing hardwood was drowned when he entered the kitchen to find her washing the dishes from the night before.

He shivered and pulled on the sleeves of his loose overshirt, balling them up in his fists, as he gazed on her bare back. She arched forward to hand-scrub a lipstick smear from a wine glass (one of a seemingly endless pile) -- his eyes pinballed down the freckles on her back (as they always did). He approached slowly and wrapped his hands around her naked waist, kissing the back of her neck until goose bumps formed. She tensed, didn't speak.

Exhaling and stepping beside her he leaned against the yellowed counter, washing a hand over his face, through his matted hair, anything to avoid eye-contact. She stared and kept scrubbing. He was relieved at how calm she sounded when she finally spoke.

"You're going to have to keep trying, here." She reached to turn off the water for emphasis. "I'm not ready for this to be who you really are."

He furrowed his brow a bit and glanced up at her ponytail, pulled haphazardly, ringlets and waves tickling the what she called her “dinosaur bump” at the top of her spine. She was a statue, wine glass stem consumed by a nervous fist.

Drip, drip, drip.

"I know."
He heard himself say it and all anger washed from his body, down through his cold, numb feet. He found the one crack in the glossy counter top and scraped his fingernail through it, back and forth, digging at the slick blackness that lay beneath. "Okay. It's okay."

He kept on scraping until the tap rushed back on in a hiss, fresh steam reaching upward to her freckled face. Watching the cloud swim over her features for a few seconds he turned and left the room. He walked towards his shoes, towards a front door, towards his cellphone... before tucking his chin and heading to the shower, instead.