Halloween

Jack in love
Halloween.
As was tradition, the boys would stalk the neighborhood, armed with cartons of eggs and cans of Barbasol. Me and my friends were foam-caked, yolk-splatted messes when we ran into Alexis and her friends coming home from school. They were dressed in their Catholic school girl uniforms, not a trace of egg or shaving cream marking their clothing. When the girls saw us and knew they were in danger of being “bombed,” as we called it, they collectively warned—You’d better not—knowing we would. Which we did.
I exclusively targeted Alexis, cracking several eggs on her head and dosing her with clouds of shaving cream. Alexis squealed and screamed the entire time, which excited me. When we were done, the girls cursed us out and yet took it in stride, understanding that we were boys, in Brooklyn, on Halloween, and they had expected no better from us.
I stared at Alexis, made-over by my renegade handiwork, and thought she looked beautiful. A beautiful mess whom I so badly wanted to kiss. We didn’t kiss, but Alexis did hit me hard on the arm and called me an asshole while smiling big. My heart rose. Maybe just maybe we had a future together.
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Death of a Super Hero

   I was six when I found out I’d never become a super-hero.
   We were in the kitchen. Me, my mother, my father.
   My father’s hand was around my mother’s throat. He had a wild, bloodshot, not-there look in his eyes, an inflamed vacancy. He reminded me of a wolf about to savage its prey.
   My mother’s eyes were big with fear. She cried out a number of times—Daniel, Daniel he’s going to kill me. Daniel, Daniel.
   My name became many things in that moment. An accusation, a weakness, an empty husk, a recrimination, a point of departure.
   She kept calling out my name. It felt like a hundred times, but in reality it was probably around six or seven. Things not only look bigger when you are small, they also sound bigger. All the shouting and screaming and accusations and vitriol that filled my house felt like acoustical storms to my small pink ears. Violence was the melody upon which all other riffs are were improvised.
   So yea, my name repeated—Daniel, Daniel, Daniel. But no one was home. Something vital in me had fled, had flown away to another part of the house. Or out the window. It wasn’t there and without it I couldn’t move.
   Frozen, I stared at my father.
   He struck me as inhuman. Like some lunatic in a horror film, like Jack Nicholson in The Shining. His meaty hand was clutched around my mother’s thin neck. I knew that he could break her neck if he wanted to, that the possibility of him breaking it existed as a very real possibility in that moment.
   What had preceded my father’s hand around my mother’s throat was her caustic verbal attack. It had to do with my father’s drinking, drugging, gambling, or all three. Soon my mother was throwing things. At first in the proximity of my father, and then directly at him.
   He deflected objects and ducked. It was warfare with a quality of slapstick.
   My mother remained the aggressor until just after she took a swipe at my father’s face and caught his cheek with her nails. My father touched his fingers to the fresh scratch-marks, as if needing to tactilely confirming what had just happened. Then he lost it, charging at my mother like a bull and backing her against the wall, where she was now pinned, hand around her throat, calling out my name. Daniel, Daniel, Daniel.
   Each time I heard it there was less of me. My name was the hated enemy that was driving me out of myself.
   Yet I had to do something to help my mother, to save her. I was her only hope. I remained paralyzed but managed to speak—Da.
   This single utterance broke his trance. He still had the wild look in his eyes and he still had his hand around my mother’s throat, but the murderous intensity had slackened. Just enough.
   He released my mother and stormed out the front door.
   Piece a shit, my mother screamed as the door slammed.
   Screams and slamming doors. This was the blunt vocabulary of the house.
   My mother slid soundlessly against the wall and crumpled to the tiles.
   She cried hot, loud tears.
   I looked at her and didn’t move.
   I felt bad for her. And hated her.
   The hatred burned deep in my chest and lungs and I wasn’t sure of its source then, but now I understand that I hated for forcing me to participate in their war, for involving me in her mess, for trying to enlist me as her savior. But mostly I hated her for showing me that I would never ever become a super-hero.
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Innocence

static-tv-playing-in-dark-with-reflection-on-ground_njgvvoaen__S0000
The party ended and I went to Gillian’s house. I was between places and Gillian was letting me stay with her temporarily, which given our history was a tribute to her character. We had been in a tumultuous three-year relationship, followed by two years of her not speaking to me after we split up. Or rather, after she kicked me out. Which, if I’m honest with myself, is what I, as a saboteur, had been angling for throughout our relationship. I needed to test the boundaries of Gillian’s limits. I pushed and pushed until I had gone too far, until we had reached that point of no return which I both craved and feared.
I went into the apartment and was greeted by Gillian’s cat, Midnight. She rubbed her head against my shin and purred, just as she had always done when I lived there. I thanked her for the warm welcome and stroked her scalp.
I went into the living room and found Gillian asleep on the couch. The T.V. was playing static. I didn’t know that could still happen in the 21st century. I turned it off.
I stood over Gillian and considered waking her up and telling her to go into the bedroom. I leaned down to nudge her but couldn’t do it. She looked like a small child. Her legs drawn in toward her waist, her face cradled between her palms. He breathing was slow and even. She was still wearing her glasses.
Her stillness got me thinking.
I thought about how everyone was a child when they were asleep, everyone was innocent. Then I thought specifically about Gillian, and the fact that she and I had been through a lot together. I felt blackly guilty for things I had said or done, ways in which I had hurt Gillian, and myself, during our relationship.
I’m sorry, I whispered to the sleeping Gillian. I had said sorry countless times to an awake Gillian. Elton John was wrong. Sorry wasn’t the hardest word. In some ways it was the easiest. And cheapest.
I reached down and carefully removed Gillian’s glasses. She stirred, but didn’t wake up.
I went to the bedroom where, for however long I slept, I could become innocent again.
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Altar

ONO_Stone-Piece_v2_photo-Pierre-Le-Hors-600x900
At the blank altar,
a woman swallowed hard truths–
no stone left unturned.
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Scroll

on the road

One man’s boyish scroll
as the road map for parched throats–
Long-running well-spring.
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Kingdom

old-typewriter
Keys to the kingdom,
one graceful peck at a time–
No wings required.
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Mask

old_venetian_mask_by_songyongbin-d3h9e5a
You cannot see tears
burned inside a hidden face–
Dying by degrees.
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Shoes

old shoes
To write solidly,
yield to an old pair of shoes–
Love holds still for love.
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Futurism 101

ny 20s
Shaping destiny’s progress
through emptiness
held together
by an epiphany of particles
architecting man’s worth
in finite measures.

 

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Beckett’s Noir

noir alley

Uprooted dark rose,
growing cold in the shadows–
Waiting for Godot?
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