9:10 False Cobra

It’s always around this hour in the summer­­ (when it’s still so warm out, but there’s that flicker in the light) that I can’t help but remember moments of speaking to men, men who blinked with round colorless eyes as I told them how I simply wished for more time. They’d laughed, and I’d had to explain––

the kind of time who doesn’t show her face much, not anymore, except perhaps to the very wealthy, or the very insane, or to the slinking creatures that warm their bodies on rocks in the heat, a lucky few fearful of nothing but the looming evening. Perhaps I could set up a metal folding chair in the endless lessness of some defunct industrial parking lot, on the hottest afternoon of the year, and sit there, not even particularly comfortable, but alone and uninterrupted with time, who had almost become a stranger. She would be thrilled I’d known the best place for us to catch up, where she would not feel like a currency, and I would gently dust her off, listen to her stories of all the characters she’d met, how their silly instances of mortal wanting had made her belly-laugh until she’d wept. I would have time to myself, for only-she-knows how long, burning and sweating and screaming our smiles at the asphalt oven of permanence beneath us, until the first stars should have begun to appear, but they would not come.

­­––one of those round-eyed men had nodded a bit more, his eyes now milk-white as they rolled back in his head. He was Bela Lugosi’s great-grandson, and held up his hands to prove it, the family resemblance visible in the ten long, draping fingers of horror that he thrust in my face, missing only a sweet, papery neck for them to grasp. Dracula’s bloodline reduced to this party trick. I must have said something funny, since he clapped those huge pale spiders together like it was the first time like he had ever felt that swelling of air inside, his own body betraying him with a howl of a laugh. I wondered if he had ever tasted blood beyond his own bitten lip, if he could even smell blood in the water despite those shark’s eyes. I never saw him again. It seems to me that when you can’t find time, not much is funny anymore, not really. Not when laughter is so tense and so hideous, all those chokes and gasps, little bits of spittle, bared teeth. Regardless, I’d like to try out a joke before the sun goes down, but when I open my mouth, my tongue flicks in and out, wet and forked. Named for what I’m not, I don’t even have a punch line to forget.

11:22 Children

I think it's normal to miss
my best friend
from middle school

things were far more

simple
with her
and even when they weren't

her freckles were

a constancy
I welcomed most of the time.

I don't know who is genuine now

people are awful when they're older
even though they were cruelest
when they were children.

most days I write like a child

I like to think in simple terms
and I remember Dr. Keikus
whose name I still don't know how to spell.

He was the first to try

and help me
simplify.

First with board games,

whose colored spaces
seemed to fade even more
over the course of 45 minutes.

Then with

the Grieving Process.


"Are you worried you'll go to

H-E-Double Hockey Sticks
because you're mad at God?"

I don't remember nodding

but life progressed
as though I did.

A success story

for Dr. Kekuus.

He was a little bit fat,

like me.
I think I liked that.

How do child psychologists know

if their patient who sits
on the floor across from them
picking at a scab
with sticky fingers
and wandering eyes
isn't just agreeing
so that they can fit one more
round
of Guess Who
into their session
because not everyone has that game
at home.


If I saw Dr. Keycus today

I'd probably like to tell him
that dead skin is the number one attractor
of cockroaches
and that I think of that every time I clip back
my hangnails.

If I miss just one

don't notice it fall to the floor
leave the room

I imagine Gregor Samsa himself

will be there when I return
cowering in the corner,
drooling over it
in shame,
because truthfully
he wants to be there
even less
than I want him to.

1:18 I'm Feeling Lucky

Google search:  how to swear in French
                          does pee really turn red in pools
                          why didn’t I trust the kids with mechanical pencils
                         

If I wear a hat that says I’m angry, does that mean I am? You’ve had complicated questions long before there were instant, uncomplicated answers.


I saw my mother alone in the window. I don’t want to say anything else about it, except that I wish we had finally put the curtains up, so that I didn’t have to see my mother alone in the window.


Google search:  why are parrots so smart
                           how to tie a bandana in your hair
                           how to tie a bandana in your hair so it stays
     how to stop feeling so alone


My mother’s puppets. They lived just a wall away, slept just a wall away. Lived in their old yellow and red boxes so soft from time, the aged cellophane a blanket over their everywhere-jointed little bodies, lifeless, still and connected by strings. There were over 30 of them and she ordered more each day. Each afternoon I’d come home to an eBay window on the monitor, an active auction counting down for a clown or an old man or a ballerina or devil. I’d see that she was always the highest bidder. I’d see that she wanted all of them, wanted to add each and every one to her little family. The strange, boxed family of a pseudo-collector. They lay in their boxes like tiny bodies in coffins. She opened them all once when they arrived, showed me once, made them dance for me just once, but only for a little while. She spoke of the giant puppet theater she would build one day for my children, and then that was it. Back in its box it went, straight into the closet, next to all the others, on top of all the others. At night I imagined each new puppet in its box, its eyes moving round in the darkness, buried alive, its painted smile still frozen in cracking permanence. I swore I could hear them breathing in their paper coffins.


Google search: my mom is lying to her therapist
                         why do they make us read crime and punishment in high school
    will i ever be loved


When he runs into you again someday, you will have just bought a very soft and warm robe from a department store. It will be in a large plastic shopping bag, but the top will be open just enough so he can see the light blue (or pink) plush. He will think that you must be getting on well, to be buying such a lovely thing for yourself. You are the sole beneficiary of a soft robe from a nice department store. He’ll think about that for a second or maybe two as you both walk back to your respective cars, your robe in its plastic bag hitting your right knee – then the back of your left – as you fumble for your keys. He won’t know that you could have cried because the woman who helped you pick out the robe had been so nice that you’d had to pretend to drop something, had to bend down to keep water from falling out of your eyes when she’d asked what had brought you to the very nice department store on that day. Her question had been innocent but the hardest ones always are. You’ll wear the robe for the rest of the afternoon, the night. Fall asleep in it.



I’ve always found Raskolnikov to be a strong, solid name.



4:46 Cold cuts

(4 AM doesn't take kindly to strangers, it doesn't care either way if you skin your knee or if you make it home at all.)

The woman who walked by me in the packaged meats aisle at Target smelled of something rotten.

I didn't know what to make of it. She didn't bump into me, but still I said "sorry I'm so sorry" and she turned her awful misshapen back around and looked at me like I'd come at her with a cleaver.

I'll never get over my first love, or the first time someone scolded me for doing something truly wrong
 (I was in preschool, with a tendency to argue)

And I'll have a hard time forgetting the first time I tried to wish away my face when the wind was far too cold, because of course it's easier to have not than to have,

I'll imagine the flashes of certain photographs taken
and smells of meals I might eat were I able to
stomach the sheer density 
of meat that day

(sorry I'm so so sorry)

Looked at me 
looked at me like I was rotten.

5:52 June Bug


He liked to watch the geese. He often made bets with himself about whether the geese would move should someone walk a bit too closely to them. He always won these bets, knowing the geese were accustomed to humans, so they would rarely move. Except when the young neighbor boy with Downs came to the lake and rushed at them. The boy’s babysitter laughed just as hard, every time, but the child sometimes ran so close to the slimy edge of the lake that the man worried he might fall, and that certainly wouldn’t have been funny.
The man claimed the same unremarkable bench for his spectator’s seat above the lake each day. He liked it because it sat atop a hill high above everyone else who came for an afternoon at the park, so he could watch them without being watched back. The wood sagged in a few places, rotting from years of morning dew, but for the most part it was just worn enough to be soft and smooth, offering no risk of splinters. When the man was new to the practices of both watching and sitting, he would sometimes bring a blanket or a cushion for added comfort, but that quickly took on the tone of an amateur, so he stopped doing that.
The man was forty-four, of average height, and had a bloated belly riddled with small silvery stretch marks left over from a violent adolescence of growth spurts and insatiable hunger. The scars reminded him of the swimming bacteria he would view on slides under microscopes as a young boy in his father’s medical office. Lying in his twin bed some nights, he’d imagined them wriggling off his skin; itchy and unable to sleep, he would then turn on a light and inspect himself in front of a full length mirror, staring at his teenaged belly that had already started to round, just to make sure the scars weren’t moving.
Sometimes he saw the same people at the park, other times he didn’t. On St. Patrick’s Day, he didn’t recognize anyone. His wife had given him an old Tupperware container with some kind of green cake in it; he hadn’t opened it. She had meant for him to bring it to the lunchroom at work, to share whatever buttery recipe she had adorned with food coloring and sprinkles. She had meant for him to enjoy it, to come home and thank her with a light kiss on her forehead, after which she would cook him a perfectly adequate dinner with a chopped and steamed vegetable he wouldn’t like the smell of. She had meant for him to make love to her after they ate, when his gut would be most swollen and uncomfortable, because she was thirty-seven and didn’t have much time left.
 He would not be bringing it. He would not be going to work today. And he hadn’t even called in to say so, but he wasn’t terribly worried about that. Nuclear plants employ many hundreds of people; he was certain on an atomic level that he would not be missed, at least not for a day. Someone else could push the buttons, write the reports. And it would be easy to say his medical appointment was on account of the radiation levels he’d noted the other day on his personal dosimeter clipped to his shirt pocket. His exposure readings had been high, much higher than normal. No one would dare question a medical appointment with levels like that. But they would perhaps raise seemingly good-natured questions should they learn that the appointment was, in fact, with a urologist (but he did not, of course, plan on telling anyone this).
The man went to his bench. His khaki pants felt too tight as he sat down. He wondered if anyone would notice were he to unbutton them, just for a little bit. The waistband dug into the uneven ridges of his gut. The first time his wife had seen him without a shirt, she had said his stretch marks reminded her of aerial views of canyons and valleys, like flying over the Grand Canyon, even. He had never really seen anything like that, but he knew it was a kind thing to say.
He decided to keep his pants buttoned. The dull pinching around his middle was maybe more tolerable than he’d thought. He checked his watch, his wrist bulging slightly around the strap. The appointment was in an hour. He thought of how the woman he’d spoken to on the phone had said their office offered same day consultations and procedures. His wife’s holiday cake sat next to him on the bench like another person. He wondered why they had been using the same Tupperware for thirteen years, the once-clear plastic sides now mottled and cloudy no matter how long he scrubbed them in the sink. When his wife had bought the 36-piece set of the plastic containers (because she’d felt sorry for the weary door-to-door salesman, she’d said), the lids had started out the chemical-scented bright pastels of new kitchenware––pink, yellow, blue. They now made the man think of rotten Easter eggs.
A fat woman lounging on a grassy knoll below sat up to stretch her segmented arms. Lower and to his left the man saw a young couple with their bodies folded together like a pair of hands. The girl had red hair and long legs. The boy whispered something to her and the red-haired girl laughed, tossing her head back and then leaning closer into him. The boy curled his full lips into a smile and began to run his fingers through the girl’s hair.
The fat woman turned around and her eyes were red, and they looked at the man. He wondered if she saw his scars from where she sat. A silly thought, considering they were hidden beneath two shirts and a jacket. A few minutes passed. An older woman by the lake began to feed the geese bits of moldy white bread. The fat woman was still staring at him. He needed to look somewhere else. He looked at his hands. They were dead birds in his lap. He needed them to do something.
            The man felt his skin. He rolled up his sleeves, touched his forearms, tugged at the hair. Pulled one out and looked at the follicle that had come with it. He glanced at the fat woman with the red eyes to see if she was still looking at him, but she had turned back around and was facing the lake again. He grabbed his stomach. His wife would probably be at the elementary school by now, taking temperatures and calling mothers and sending the fakers back to class. She was good at her job. Fitting the part, she was a natural with small children. When they’d first married, all those years ago, he’d promised her four of their own. Instead, they shared five miscarriages and 36-pieces of moldy Tupperware. Now he found the prospect of having children with her unlikely or impossible. He had been preparing to say as much to her. In fact, he’d waited over a decade for those perfect, honeyed words to come to him; he’d sat quietly, monk-like at the kitchen table, and awaited some kind of sweet, illuminating language to strike his tongue with grace and clarity. But the words never came, and he drank his coffee with extra cream and said nothing.
            The woman at the medical office had said that modern men get vasectomies all the time now. That he could expect to feel some pain in his nether regions for a few days, naturally, some possible blood in the urine, but that it is an overall easy procedure. He would be allowed to return to work in just a few days, as if nothing had ever happened. His wife would not know.
            A shiny green June bug landed on the lump of his belly he was still holding. He let it stay there, examined the tips of its insubstantial legs that resembled the split end of a hair, how they seemed to grasp the fibers of his shirt without having fingers. It appeared to move in slow motion. The emerald metals of its wings caught the sunlight every few seconds as it crawled across his lower abdomen, crossed the valleys of his scars underneath his cotton shirt. It stopped for a moment when it reached the beginning of his khakis, his groin, then turned around and moved back up along his belly once more. The man was still hunched over, clutching himself and staring at the beetle, when he realized the fat woman with the red eyes was now standing next to his bench. Startled, he sat up straight. She told him he was lucky the bug had landed on him or else she would have had to pinch him. The June bug detached its thin legs from his shirt fibers and flew off in a slow whirr. He was silent as he watched it disappear.
            The fat woman’s eyes were even redder up close. The sun-spotted skin around them was puffy, blotchy. She asked if he knew that you have to pinch people on St. Patrick’s Day if they aren’t wearing green. He swallowed, and said he knew that. There was a long pause, during which the fat woman took her thin, dishwater-colored hair out of its limp ponytail, letting out a heavy sigh. The man looked away, at the geese. They waited for the other to say something. She asked who the cake was for. The man didn’t know how to answer that, so he didn’t.
            The young couple on the hill below stood up, the boy stretching as the girl began to fold up their blanket. The fat woman breathed deeply again, and told the man that she would have to pinch him now that the bug was gone, unless his underwear was green. He looked at her then, at her red eyes. She asked him if he would like to come with her somewhere. He remembered his appointment, his vasectomy, he was to have in less than an hour. He said yes.

***

Hotel walls are thin, and sometimes call attention to the solitude of the listener. The man could hear the muffled conversation of a busy family in one room to his left, an arguing couple behind the walls to his right. He waited on the edge of the bed as the fat woman ran the sink in the bathroom. He counted to ten. His wife would be getting home soon and wonder where he was. He’d missed his appointment by a few hours. His wife’s cake sat on a chair in a dark corner beside the heavy floral curtain, like another person. He ran his hands along his stomach, feeling the ridges. The fat woman would not see them as aerial canyon views.
            The man thought of the beetle that didn’t care about his stretch marks, and he got up to leave. He thought of the boy with Downs, running about the side of the lake. He left the cake on its chair, the woman in the bathroom. The scars on the edge of the bed. 

10:39 I Ordered Pasta Bolognese

You didn’t really want to eat there anyway, no, there were dead animals on the walls and their eyes were glassy. You didn’t want to sit in that booth, either, because it was hot and you wore shorts and you knew your legs would stick to the worn pleather. She made you sit in the middle. The table was too high. It made you feel like a child. You saw the booster seats in all their hollow plastic grandeur in the corner. You forced a tiny dry-lipped smile at what would happen if your 22 year-old-self asked for one. It is, after all, always nice to have something to scratch your fingernail against underneath the table. She told the waitress you all had to hurry. Hurry to the airport. They both knew what they wanted to eat and no one seemed to realize you hadn’t even opened the menu yet. All of a sudden it was your turn and your eyes skimmed the Sandwiches and Seafood sections. Settled on the Pastas. You ordered pasta Bolognese. She ordered a Cobb salad but she made sure to say how much she loves pasta Bolognese. You knew she’d be eating off your plate. He ordered a meatball sandwich. You wondered if you would ever be in the position to watch him eat a meatball sandwich again. Signs pointed to no, not likely.

The day before you’d looked at the world horizontally. Face parallel to the earth instead of perpendicular. The wind blew sand in your face but you didn’t mind. Hardly any of your body remained on the towel. You didn’t mind that either, though you knew you looked odd. It was warm. Three young Hispanic men stood at the shore, holding their t-shirts at their sides as the tide began to tease their feet. One of them rushed at the water and yelled an obscenity, it was cold. The other two didn’t join them but laughed. Their toes were wary. They knew better. A seagull shit in your bag, which had only been a little bit open. Green fishy bird shit on your wallet and notebook and sunglasses case. You washed everything off in the water but there was still the smell.

The food came. You ate it. When you were full she started picking at the little bit that was left of your pasta Bolognese. A few minutes after she had finished he said “oh no” and you looked up and saw she had her face in her hands and in the small crack between her sun-spotted wrists you saw her chin crumple. She pulled one hand away to grab a napkin and you saw that her face was red and squished and that she had begun to weep. It sounded like she might have said “sorry.” She excused herself to the ladies’ room. He looked at you with concern and some frustration perhaps. You raised your eyebrows at him and then you looked at his hands. They were too big.

And  then you felt like being horizontal, right there on the table. Just your head. If you could just make your head horizontal, just for a little bit. You would press the right side of your face to the glass tabletop, choosing the left side of the restaurant’s insides to look at. The left side of the booth. The white stuffing squeezing out of a wound in its shiny red fabric. His meatball sandwich. Him. 

9:33 That Place


Carry it with you, cradle it like a quietness you can see all curled up resting and breathing in the palm of your hand. The neighbor's phone rings (you don't like that you can hear it), and your dog is too old, now, she doesn't meet at least 4 of the 7 criteria to keep a dog alive, now, so anything you might have held silently beneath one particular Mexican lime tree with gray thorns has up and flown away.




We write poems about our headaches.


(Words borne of a headache.)