Phasmotor
July 29, 2009
Driving the highway late at night, I collect souls.
Pushed between the crevice of rock and hard drop, I find Felicia: whitewashed wooden stakes bound with weather-beaten fabric flowers, a cross bearing the moment she steered astray, drunk eyes guiding bald-smooth wheels of the sienna-rusted Taurus right into the mountain wall, brains and best intentions sprayed across mother nature’s back step.
Atop the bridge ledge, Sam: a photocopied picture of cracked smile stretched across nicotine yellowed teeth, eyes dull, blurred colors ruined by rain – an ode to the last time he jumped, free fall open sprawl, toward the river rush of rocks.
Cassidy, a wilting blue teddy bear tied to the stop sign with peeling yellow twine on the highway one junction straight out of Hell’s Gate, her two year old body a rock through the windshield, papa asleep at the wheel but still alive to, each year and on the same day, strap another bear to the same sign to mark another missed birthday cake.
Rick, withered and sad – his mouth prune wrinkled, eyes crow-scratched – the catalyst of a four car pileup disguised as a picket sign shoved into soft shoulder ground, his name carefully stencilled in his wife’s perfect scrawl, reminding motorists of future tense to please drive carefully, to please keep hands on the wheel at ten and two, not up the skirt of the late-night mistress who’s name the wife never knew.
George, the overnight freight runner whose ticking-time log book kept beat to a depleting savings account when, assets seized and family starved, his addiction to the red-blue-green glow of video lottery terminals became the last push he needed to send all 18 wheels over the canyon lip, his great descent a scrambled attempt to right too many wrongs – the only show of his sad life a bent guard rail, the broken headlight glass a monotonous prism catching moonlight.
Felicia and Sam and Cassidy and Rick and George and me, we drive all night. We wave to other souls hitching the long length of the one, the five, the two, the 97, the long trip home when, tucked beneath sheets thick with sleep, my own soul sighs and says: here, for another day.
xoxo,
M.L. H’art
Ten Years Late.
July 6, 2009
Ten years ago this month, your skin in ash-blue pucker, flattened veins surface-close, I cried on the shoulder of the all-star volleyball jock who, if we were still in school, wouldn’t have held my hand and passed me a Kleenex when your mother, stone faced and sure, said you were happier now.
Lid wide open in a roomful of us just starting out, we saw the rope burn left behind when you swung from your parents’ open concept vaulted ceiling second floor railing banister.
It’s been so long since you and I drank a water bottle full of liquor we stole from the pick-locked cabinet in the camping trailer parked on the front drive, playing poker for shots, scrunching our face after each burning shit-mix swig.
It’s been so long since you called late at night, us both whispering in the dark into coil cord phones, for dating advice, telling me you were in love with my best friend, asking how to win her over even though it meant giving advice I’d wished you’d use to win me over.
It’s been so long since we camped in the woods with twelve of our friends and stayed up late under summer stars passing a bottle and a joint, talking about the way things would be when we got the fuck out of this shit-small town and really started living.
It’s been so long since you turned to me in biology class and mouthed that song, the one that went “la-de-la, this year will be better than the last…,” the corners of your lips upturned in smirk.
It’s been so long since you hurt yourself the first time; since you let the light fade to dark in your head; since you stopped calling; since you turned inward on yourself; since you got farther and farther away, the length of my arms no longer enough to connect me to you.
It’s been so long since I walked away from your shadow body, snot-wet tissues crumpled in shaking palms; since I got the fuck out of that shit-small town; since I starting making every year better than the last.
It’s been so long since I thought of you early in the morning; clouds ten years late heavy with the tears shed for a life gone too soon.
It’s been so long since I thought of you and said: it was selfish leaving us that way.
xoxo,
M.L. H’art
Eleven Syllable Escape.
July 2, 2009
Passing you by – your feet sinking deep into downtown pavement, eyes fixed to shell toed shoes counting careful steps – I barely recognize you.
Thin hair drops in limp lines from scalp to shoulder, spreading greys steal strawberry shine from lengthy locks, locks which used to compete with the sun. Your mouth is exploited by sad lines, deep imprinted tears in sallow skin dyed the color of nicotine. Matte mouse eyes skitter about tired lids, the whites yellow, the yellow fissured with splinters of bloodshot stress.
You’ve widened since I saw you last, hips a spill of squishy surplus, button and jeans fighting to stay together.
Turning, wizened fingers wrapped in paper thin skin reaching for my shoulder, your mouth a cracked red raw O, you say: hullo, girl. How’s your pretty life?
A sideswept chasse and I miss your grip, my hesitant smile a defensive apology for your attempted touch.
Again, you say: how’s your pretty life?
I scrunch my eyes, look you over, try to find the you I knew way back when you used to smile and shine, your packaging still smooth and store-front sexy, your laugh like rushing water, gurgling, bubbling.
Good, happy: I say.
Fidgeting hands smooth a hand-knit tunic over threadbare jeans as you chuckle, the sound of desperation like wheezing sand paper. Yeah, you say. Me too.
You flick a fired butt, the ember grazing paper skin – a quick ignition close to setting you aflame, your widened rack a torch.
Awkward pause, a beat too long, and I think of all the things I’d like to say:
Remember when we sat up all night and laughed until the moonlight cracked to let the dawn in?
Remember sitting on the kitchen floor in the first apartment we shared, eating spaghetti off one green cracked plate, red sauce splashing linoleum only we were in charge of cleaning?
Remember the friends, the drinks, the parties, the fun, the fun, the fun – the fun that poured so easily out of you, the unstoppable, beautiful fun?
Standing, your shoulders a horse shoe slump, I cannot find the you I knew way back when; the hardened turtle shell is hiding the you who used to be and so I don’t say the things I’d like, but instead say:
Great. Okay, then. Was nice to see you. Take care!
Faux enthusiasm, an eleven syllable escape and you’re gone from my memory again.
xoxo
M.L. H’art