satisfied
pencil shavings pushed
by youthful breath
huffing and puffing
with the effort
of creation.
"new year's,"
he mumbles,
lips only half aware
of the words
"is the worst."
all the pressure
of reinventing yourself
to be something better
and then being forced
to put those abstracts
into words
by a sixth grade
english teacher
who grades
on political correctness
rather than
grammatical effectiveness.
she watches him
with bloodshot eyes,
kept up by her husband
long into the night
as he tried in vain
to prompt desire
from her hips.
her new year's resolution
was escape
but no one else
could know that.
except, maybe, for the
man down the road
who she'd been
seeing in the dark
for a month.
he would never tire
of watching the stars
but she longed
for him in the sunlight.
the tip of the pencil
has been
ground down into
nothing
left only with
dull wood
and graphite dust
smudged on
desperate fingers.
shadows grow darker
in the schoolyard,
the english teacher knows
that her secret means more
when she's behind her desk
than it does
when she's in her bed
(or someone else's).
the boy knows
that pressures grow larger
throbbing in the background
until his fingers shake
just trying to form
the letter "o"
in
opinion.
for his new year's resolution
is to speak,
maybe for the first time
in his life
about what he thinks,
and not
what someone else things.
and his pressure
threatens to overtake him
while the teacher's secret
threatens her just the same
and when she leans over
his desk
their darkness
collides.
"carter, you know better,"
she says,
the words only half
belonging to her
prompted on
by a misplaced sense of duty
and a splash
of fate.
"opinion
isn't spelled
with an a."
it's not
an a,
he wants to scream.
my pencil broke,
and this is what
was left behind
in its wake,
a memorial
to my rage.
but instead he looks up
eyes vacant
and says
"i bet even your
husband
can't satisfy you."
and she is
blown away
crumbled into dust
by a middle school brat
left speechless
by the force
of her own
realization.
she would never
be satisfied.
and the universe watched
its orchestrated chaos
with eyes
turned upward with glee
and moved on
to its next
disaster.