Thursday, December 31, 2020

for sale: closet full of unmatched shoes, mostly right--25 cents

sticky liquid sound
of my old brindle hound
slopping on her mound
disembodied in the darkness
repurposes as the soundtrack
for a tight shot: 
spot lit
center stage,
alone
on a simple fluted column,
one
brand new
black
leather
high top
left, 
with an urgent red swoosh on either side.
 
linger.
 
fade to black.
a moonless night
beyond house lights and power lines
my eyes so wide and hallucinogenically clear
my foot,
sucked shoe-less by the muck
numb
up to my elbows
in dark winter stew,
rooting for the right mate.

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Whaddaya have to do to get a fucking ice cream in this God forsaken town?

they were broke again,
42 hours in
to payday.
upshot is
5% mail in rebate
on his 88”
flat screen surprise.
a Christmas present for ‘us’


it’s after noon and the place is still dark?

tension imprisoned
their small apartment
intersecting flash points,
problem areas,
pinball bumpers
It was smart to stand still,
or sit and pretend concern

don't disrespect the moment
by checking your phone
It was safer this way,
to navigate
after he was sorry


jesus christ. I guess I just sit here and wait?

the attempt to console him,
peeling back
complicated layers of recrimination
was like trying to work
a hug around the problem itself,
splayed open for autopsy 
on a stainless steel table.


still no answer. can you believe this shit?

she would blame traffic,
because being with him
was like raising someone else’s child
and the only consolation
these days
was punching the ground beef
like his brains,
when she made him meatloaf

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Mom & Pop Shops

Insult the hunter’s meat.

we couldn’t, wouldn’t watch them die,
fuck it--
we are way too busy.
--doesn’t make the meat less satisfying
and then we can’t just rearrange our entire lives
--the cook less apt
they‘ll have so much in common with the others
--the shit that hits the ground less fertile

( if you were worried about true love)
the hunter will sense desire
through strained visits, knee to knee
tone of voice towards employees
and the crosswords you leave behind

Moo Shu Pork, a Diversion, and a Glazed Donut--To Go



Christmas evening
waiting for take out in the parking lot of a restaurant
called Chinese Restaurant.
next to a place called 30 Dollar Massage.
Shipley Donuts sign winks,
beckons from across the street.
My daughter lit up
back when she was face to face
with the display case,
palms to glass like she’s in solitary
surveying the yard.
Snag a two-top by the window and
witness my baby girl before the advent of shame and anxiety
divide her attention
between a coconut cream and the Sunday morning sidewalk.
Now she can look the cashier in the eye,
black coffee
one glazed, to go.

80 dollars worth of Chinese take out is enough to choke a pony.
(see, there you go again, your
degenerate
obsession with
tainting cute words with violence. ) But,
since we’re here:
The Choking Pony: a bar
Choking pony: a euphemism
Choking Ponies: a play about the night Tracy Letts and Sam Shepard got drunk and screwed
The Choking Ponies: a three piece bar band from Ann Arbor that opened for The Old 97’s when they came through back in ‘94.

Anyway, I drive thru Shipley’s and order a dozen mixed

she is still 16 when I get home
accurately translates my accommodating attitude as fear
a whinging need to be liked
my inability to say no, and the troubling relativity of my values
wreak collateral damage on her delicate personal life.
an eruption no donut’s gonna fix

Sunday, December 20, 2020

THE WANING DAYS OF VERONICA’S FIANCE


Veronica’s fiance was no Richard. He would be the first to tell you that he daydreamed of comfortable chairs and Food Network personalities as he planned their fancy frozen dinners for the week. Still, Veronica was becoming increasingly distant as the anniversary of Richard’s death approached, so Veronica's fiance shadow boxed plus high-speed running in place on his walk home from work to bolster his attitude. Breathing heavily before his front door he declared himself a winner.  He would make a really good father.

 

Veronica was on the couch dragging the bottom of a Doritos bag. She peeked inside to double check before looking up at him. He sank in beside her, close enough to smell her, and tried to catch on to what she was watching without having to ask too many questions. She hated when he asked too many questions. Especially about Richard and when she thought she might be ready to let him go.

 

She was critical of his walking, of his slacks and tie and the brown leather laptop bag he slung over his shoulder every morning. His hunching and his mumbling. The stains on the carpet did actually become more pronounced after you vacuumed. That was a fact that made things even more complicated between them.

 

Once they tossed the facade of the extra pluck and tweeze, he hated to admit it, he would never admit it to her, but she didn’t have good taste in TV. That his programs ran on  more sophisticated and specialized cable networks he took as a sign of his superior evolution. He was true crime, earnest narration,  re-enacted scenes,  gruesome with the soft patina of daytime soaps. She enjoyed prime-time comedies and was as loyal to her major network as her dear, poor Richard had been to his Dallas Cowboys.

 

She removed his hand from her thigh, leaving tender nacho-cheese flavored prints. It’s too hot, she said without taking her eyes off the TV.  It would take him days of personal affirmations to attempt it again.  As if summoning a Lowe's commercial from earlier

where people dressed nice and did things, she remembered what she wanted to tell him:  “I hate our yard.”

 

She believed in the inertia, that somewhere existed the equation solving for what a pain in the ass leaving would be relative to the slim reward leaving would provide. She cultivated inaction as a solvent for the vague dissatisfaction she felt for nearly everything.

I guess--

but it's so hot--

And it's windy--

She believed fun should be expensive for someone. But even when she shopped her lips turned forever to the earth in disappointment.

It’s just since Richard’s been gone…

 

He agreed they were probably too young for kids anyway, and didn’t he notice how her nephews and nieces avoided her? She did not like children. And in fact, due to a careless diagnosis she was made infertile by an unnecessary regimen of antibiotics, information she withheld from him and everyone else except the closest of her Facebook friends.

 

His knees cracked when he stood up.  A fart, which she clocked with a flinch, took up residence in the room.  He cut the TV and left them in staggering silence.

 

“Baby, What the fuck. I was watching that.” Her bottom lip extended in mounting dread for what this behavior augured.  Last time he turned off the TV he announced that they should cut down on their drinking.

 

“Veronica. I know you say you’re not ready. I mean, I try to  understand what you had with Richard, but we’re here now”

 

Richard won her with vague but, in her mind, practical promises of love and fiscal security that even he began to believe up until immediately after he climaxed inside of her. It was only a week that he needed to ignore her calls. Only a week listening from his bedroom while his mom nurtured her optimism. “Um. Well. OK. Could you give him this card that I made?”

 

Oh Richard, she would say, after he deployed, laughing at a scene left on the cutting room floor.

 

Richard got away. And Richard suffered for a few excruciating minutes after an IED detonated near the ditch he was shitting in.

 

This man standing had to block her view for this? To ask, “Vero? Do you love me?”