the heat crept up
with the rain and
when the storms
left us
it left us
with broken trees
mostly cracked down
the middle
or the sides
shaved away by
lightning
showing the splintered
insides of the sweetgums
and the silver maples
a dogwood tree
in full bloom
stared silently at its
pale children
that lay just above
its roots like
stray feathers from
a cast out angel
after the fall
it was a little
over a hundred degrees
and when I walked
up the ramp into the house
I untied the long strings
from behind my
railroad boots and peeled
the socks out from
my heels and then my
from pruned toes
I should have knocked
my jeans clear of its
hanger-ons but
I always forgot
and they fell off
in my wake
I grabbed two short glasses
from the red cabinets
one square edged
one round
and I sat them
where I leaned
in front of the empty
sink
I poured Greenhook
in mine warm as it was
and filled the other
with water from the faucet
which I poured into
the drouthy dirt of a
potted plant
that was the first in
a row of five
then I watered myself
I didn’t know a
damn thing about
plants and it was
obvious I didn’t know
how to take care of
them or
anything else
but she loved plants
from the moment
I met her ten years ago
and she loved plants
to this day
and she could grow
them as if they had
been her own hair
or nails
she used to point out
flowers in ditches
and name them
and she would see plants
on my land I never noticed
and she would name them
she is as far gone
as she is
regardless of these plants
that sit in my kitchen
that I went out and bought
and felt ridiculous trying
to choose which ones
I make no falsities there
but drinking them
one by one
reminds me of her
and it doesn’t make sense
but nothing ever has
and sometimes all you got
is the things you do
and sometimes
all you got is the things
that you don’t
and what I got is these
plants
and what he’s got is you
that’s that, in green.
Arlo
Some scholars and hard men alike just might say there ain’t nothing quite as joyous as a Saturday afternoon with your curious and wild eyed and loving offspring. And never so much joyous a moment as if it be in the autumnal susurrus of fall. Be that as it may, men like me have never known it, will never know it. Haunt us it does some, comfort us maybe, but crossing the thoughts always, he said.
The father nodded to the man who sat with one leg in boot and the other, nub in peg. The train came and the father was ready for it. He nodded again to the man before squatting, gathering and lifting his young daughter to sit in the crook of his arm. He boarded the train and the man watched the headlamp of it until there was only darkness once more. He farted and jostled his balls and smoked his piped tobacco that had been cheap and drew harshly.
He knocked the ash from the chamber and replaced it in the inside breast pocket of his weathered woolen coat and stood with much of the weight of his large and over-ripened body going through his left hand into his walking cane. He stepped from the platform and walked through the muck and the mire of the rain softened middle of town and into the saloon, which was little more than a casino and opium den the new owner had started calling The First Chance. Out front, the Women's Temperance Movement held their signs and chittered and bitched at those entering and leaving and the man farted on them as he passed.
Inside the young whores smiled at each other and nearly every man. The old whores smiled at nothing. He tried speaking to one of them with a scar around the jowl that she had tried to cover up with cosmetics and then at another who had no scars but was fit more for washing clothes at the Chinese laundry than honest whoring, but they knew in their hard earned instinct that he had no money nor did he have hygienic decency and they hung around the edge of the bar and waited for the men who left the poker tables with a jig in their step or for the men paying for their drinks with dollars.
The man knew he would not find charity here or unattended beer and he walked out the way he came, this time the lady teetotalers recoiled away from him like rain that swam around knotted wood and ran down the straight grain. He growled and lunged at one who screamed like he had clamped onto her with his brown fangs. He laughed and it sounded like it hurt and it did.
A big one of them stepped between the woman in hysterics and the man. She stood a head above him and she had eaten better meals and his smile faded. Didn’t mean no offense, he said. He backed away leaving two of the same side foot prints and a straight line that harrowed a trench in front. The big one stepped back into the women who were victory clucking and serving him right.
He stood like a buzzard on the open floor of a house that was being constructed in the daytime but sat in the night like the rib cage of a dead coach-sized buffalo. The music and the arguing and the fucking was but a faint noise on the other end of the town. Usually he would be with the legless Confederates and the undesired, passing cheap drink and sharing a fire but there were none left in this town. They had been taken by disease, vice, or violence, so he stood alone.
He did not sleep in the dead buffalo at the risk of being kicked to death in the morning and wandered back to the platform. He stopped a few hundred yards short and rested on a cut tree that did not get the opportunity to see many things in its short life.
He smoked and when he was done smoking used the stem of the pipe to itch his amputation between the stump and apparatus and the catgut chords. He remembered for some reason his granny breaking the necks of chickens. Taking life as if it was nothing more than snapping fallen branches into kindling and it was the last thing he remembered as he labored to lay in front of the last train into town. He guessed it was like this.
As soon as I get to the urinal
the same door I walked through
opens and shuts orangely.
They walk down the urinal row
and stand directly behind me.
Fingers touch my shoulders.
I turn and grab the collar
of their shirt
my right hand in a fist.
It’s a squat woman
not irregular looking,
but ugly with the sad
longing eyes of a woman
who had been fat all her life
no matter what supplements
she had taken or diets she had
followed for eight day
stretches.
The sadness in her
was the same
sadness and self loathing
I’ve seen in many people
where they were just
a slave to the food.
We all are slaves
to something
but their master was
particularly cruel.
Can I help you?
I need somebody.
What?
I need you. I need you.
I need somebody. Need.
What’s wrong, ma’am?
She pushed me backwards
into the stall and began
rubbing herself on me.
I push her away but she
comes back murmuring
and needing.
I try to be gentle, in pushing her
but she won’t stop.
She lifts up her skirt
and shows it to me.
Two more women walk in.
Get the fuck away from me!
I watched you come in here,
she said.
Get off!
I shoved her hard against
the wall.
The other two women
look at her with disgust
and tell her to cover herself up.
She backs out of the bathroom
sadder than she was when
she came in.
Sadder now, I imagine
than she’s ever been.
I feel a strange guilt.
Each of the other women
take the stalls to my
left and right.
I began to urinate and ruminate
and I’m thankful they came in
when they did.
Now I know how you guys feel,
I say.
Oh, honey. No you don’t.
one of them says.
I squeeze the last few pumps
of urine out.
Shake it.
Zip up.
Dribble down my leg
and take a step away
from the urinals.
For the first time
I realize they are pissing too
That they are even in here.
Legs hiked up,
skirts over asses.
I leave the bathroom
and get in the short line
behind a Jew
and a Polock.
When they are done
and out into their worlds
never to be seen
by me again in this lifetime
I order a salmon bagel.
Hold the capers.
Hold the labia.
territorial pissings.
There is a sin
coming up second
to rape
and sitting right above
murder
and it’s the cardinal sin
of being boring.
There is no shortage
of boring damned people,
an extreme surplus of them.
They have been ruining
the world
and collapsing civilizations
since their have been civilizations
worth collapsing.
Interesting men
have always gone to war
to run their bayonets through
other interesting men
because of the needs of
boring men to feel
adequate
to grab at other
sources of power due to
their lack of being something on
their own.
Boring men
destroy interesting women
so a man with more
doesn’t steal them away
and leave him with
his dick in his his hand
and boring women
erode interesting men
from the inside
because when they
fell
In love with him for his
ways
They didn’t expect it
to be so hard to
outshine him
so they decide he
is an oppressor
and start to sharpen the
guillotine slat.
Boring people wage
terrorism
on the others of us
every day with their woes
and their boring cancerous
conversation and it chews
at the rest of our contentment
with living.
We see their rules
and their governments
and their sycophantic societies
and we decide we’d rather
be somewhere else
because if they are right
it’s too much to bear
being wrong.
So we grab
interesting tools
built by interesting
gunsmiths
and we cross the
crevasse
of fear and unknowing
and make an interesting scene
for someone else
to find
and wonder:
’How could someone do
something like that?
What a coward.
Was he sick?
Look at these scribblings
on every surface
and all those books!
He must have been sick!
Yes. He surely was.
My goodness.
Goodness me.
Anyway,
I have to get this over with.
The game is on at 7.
We (they) are playing the
(Whatever’s).’
cardinal sin numero dos.