I peel back the skin, and grimace. I
used to think I was beautiful, but this molting has gone on for too
long. I fill plastic bag after plastic bag with the remnants of the
man I was. Photos carefully organized, text messages quickly erased,
and blushes awaiting command. I comb my hair back at spit at my
reflection. My heart pretends to beat, and I pretend to breathe, and
she pretends to smile, and he pretends to love me. I am caught half
way between dream and stone, clumsily clawing my way up, ever
upwards. I sit on the curb and make a show of being a man, I crouch
in the bushes and piss like a dog marking his territory.
Pictures meticulously taped to a brick
wall, so sturdy, and yet so fragile. I wasted so many weeks, so many
days dreaming of a face I'd never see. One bit of paper smells like
pleasure, and another is bland premature blackmail. I use to think
she was safety, I use to think she was pristine, pure, and full of
pleasant words meant only for me. I went to bed with flint and steel
between my legs, and no one can put out the fire. The little one,
that little girl that calls me brother, she said she wanted to meet
my porcupine and my lizard brain, and they both arose with passion
and dirty thoughts in their little minds. I slammed the door in their
faces, and tried to talk her down from the ledge, but I worry she
can't speak my language. She holds so tight to the idea that she
pretends is me, a stern, handsome knight in shinning armor. I refuse
to hurt her, even though she begs for me to push her down the stairs.
Can someone so empty as I feel really say they have friends in high
places?
I am caught between an illusion and a
nightmare. Gold fills my nose and mouth, and my knees are so weak. I
can't get up out of this chair, I can't rush to her side, but I am
cursed to hear her screams as cuts her own flesh and muscles from her
pretty little bones. I can hear the blood dripping on the floor, and
I can hear her breathe growing shallow and slow, tears fill my eyes,
I can't save her this time. I wrestle with a dragon and he spits
venom in my face, it stings but feels good. She's clouded from my
view now, wreathed in fog, but no, she is smoke now, ethereal,
elusive, ephemeral, and she's always with me, making me cough and
sputter in awe and reverence, she was so beautiful. Such lovely
curves, such lovely....teeth. I am holding fast to the idea that I
never had skin or bones or muscle or hair or eyes or anything else
that might be aroused when it touches her. It curls around my waist
and winks at me, this dragon is such a tease.
Ha. Ha. Ha. He. He. Hoo. Ha. I paint my
face, pretending I am just fine. I am getting drunk alone, pretending
I am not a drunk. I remember this one time when she danced with me;
awkwardly. Almost immobile, stiff like a corpse, but still not cold,
that would come later. I touched her shoulder, and she swore she'd
get even, so I dropped my pants and winked at her, and she stared in
horror at the dragon still curled around my waist, damn thing won't
leave me be. I take the scalpel and hammer in hand and play surgeon,
I try as I might but the dragon bores deeper into me, and he starts
to change form, and little fireworks go off behind my eyes. She meets
my gaze then, and realizes she left the stove on, and rushes off lest
she become an accidental arsonist. So I am left there with my pants
around my ankles and a dragon doing slaughter inside me. I wear the
noose she made for me around my neck with pride. Is it mauve?, I ask,
smiling. She rolls her eyes and grips my manhood between her
forefinger and thumb like a vice and spits in my eyes. I reel back,
and being to sob. She uncorks the bottle and drinks it whole and
smashes it over her children's heads, and laughs.
The little one, that little girl that
calls me brother, she rises from the grave at last and I embrace her in a
fervor of relief and desire. Her hand slips down my pants and slap
her across the mouth, immediately regretting my decision to let her
love me. She doesn't cry or run away, she kisses me then, and I taste
ash and remorse. She tries in vain to remove my shirt, only to find I
am not breathing anymore. She leaves me then, and I open one eye to
watch her go. I love her, and she knows it. But I don't want her to
get my smell on her, she's worth more than a pound of flesh, more
than the world says she's worth, worth more than I am. Carry on,
little sister, carry on and never look back.
Silhouettes and wet-dreams are all I
have to keep me company now that the little one, that little girl
that calls me brother, has left me in the dirt. Well, those two
nightmares, and my dragon. I catch a glimpse of something outrageous
out of the corner of my eye, and I run in a panicked frenzy. These
aren't the droids I am looking for, but I dig up old flavors now. Let
me get back to the point. Remember when I was your beau, and you were
my Muse, and the sun rose and set on our little empire? Such was our
golden age: tears, laughs, spilled hot chocolate, and that damn dog
sniffling and slobbering about my feet. We walked up and down the
high streets and the low creek beds, hoping no one thought we were
being too forward. Remember when my hand first touched yours? Only
took my fathers worst nightmare made real to drive your flesh into
mine. Funny things scruples, they're like a sack of rocks tied to
your eyelids, never letting you admire what you find most appealing.
But I digress.
An eye-blink and you changed your mind,
once you were content to not let me touch you, and the next,
actually, you never let me touch you or your soul. But such chaos we
wrought, pinning little idols to the walls of your brothers hovel,
never letting him forget that we remembered where he hung his coat.
Remember your fathers jokes, remember his eyes? Ah, well, I shouldn't
bring up old scars, better to let it all lie, like narcoleptic
hounds...with fleas.
They say to me, wasn't she more fun?
They say to me, wasn't she far sweeter? They say to me, didn't she
feel more natural? There's nothing natural about what she did,
nothing normal about the life she led. But I can still hear her voice
sometimes, when the wind blows in the empty streets at 3am, it makes
syllables and phonemes a lot like the noise she used to make. Hollow
and cold. Like rocks hitting tin, I still try to dance to the beat
they make.
Oh, well, here goes nothing, I ask her
to dance, and she smiles and offers her hand. Not the first time, not
my first time in this river, but I am still afraid of being carried
away in the current. She laughs when I step on her toes, she doesn't
strike me, or take me by my balls to teach me a lesson. So I try
harder to impress her with my grace. Like an elephant in a ball gown,
I am bursting at the seams, she doesn't seem to mind. There's this
myth about a sort of Bermuda's Triangle in a woman's eyes, a place
where horny men go to die. Well I say, let them rot. If they're
unable to truly accept a girl's grace and civility, they don't really
deserve it in the first place. So me and her make plans for things
others can't understand, I lose sleep in her words and in her
father's eyes. And those that are unable to appreciate beauty warn me
to be careful. Such pity fires up in me for them, maybe they've never
had a real friend. But me and her continue our quest for a world
without boundaries, scribbling maps with black crayons and speaking
languages that we make up as we go, those fools out there, they can't
stop my sunrise. And her brother graces me with his candor, and then
is gone again. And her sister settles in for the long haul, all fire
and innocence, crafting idols for me from clay and sweat and sugar
and dreams.
I figuratively use the word literally:
because I literally had a demon in me. But it was passively leached
from my veins, with no struggle or fight, and it can never come back.
I squirm on the carpet like a man with chlorine in his blood, and she
looms over me, head cocked to one side like the bitch she is, only
watching my agony, offering no comfort. My mouth runs dry and my skin
is wet with sweat, and still she just observes, imbibing my pain like
whiskey and my screams like vodka. She smiles a half smiles and poof!
She's gone for good now, I hope. But the other two, no three, no
four, no five, not six, no seven, no eight. The eight of them all are
there now, helping me up and asking if I need a glass of water.
They're sturdy, solid, little glimmers of God. I have two eyes but
only one heart. And home is the shed it inhabits.
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