A Very Special Kind of Drunk
I, as a single-malt scotch drunk, am unlike all other drunks: the tequila drunk, the gin drunk, the beer drunk.
I am, indeed, quite special:
Rooms don’t spin wildly out of control.
Speech doesn’t fuzzy-slur.
Imagined voices don’t visit me in the night, tap me on the shoulder.
I never stumble about like a stick-figure robot with insufficient RAM.
The gills don’t go green and moldy.
Mine is a decidedly different space-time under the influence of special malt:
I get hyper-focused . . .
Ears clutch the distinctive high-C tink of a wine glass three doors down and discern the edges surrounding a breath . . .
Eyes sense a warm body in inky darkness and diagnose the foul chemistry of the psychopath upon first blush . . .
I taste the wispy molecules of someone’s exhalation from a hundred meters away and the subtle differences between a drop of Auchentoshan Three Wood and Glenfarclas at 40 . . .
Fingers go a-tingle from the distant touch of a stranger from yesterday or from the future . . .
I perceive the shimmering electric field of a beautiful creature in slow delicious motion.
You might say I am cursed with a feverish awareness of . . . everything.
I read all cycles, especially those in the parafrequencies where the undead communicate with the living world.
Calling it a curse is too kind.