We sleep in the abandoned house On top of a worn, rough carpet. Small creaks are heard underneath From floorboards, that are Exposed in spots Revealing coats of wax and stain.
We wait for morning’s blur Pushing ourselves up With scuffed hands, still soft After the night’s search For baubles & bits worthy of trade From dumpsters, the urban Pandora’s Box.
You found a book, still new Though its cover is creased Said you’d become a writer Said it’s already been written ...Somewhere.
The city seems to flicker. We wait ‘til afternoon To take a shower at the center Looking for a cure to the night.
In the rec room There’s television news in the periphery Featuring the fallen... Car wrecks and shopping malls Losses of temper & savings accounts. Fashion zombies writing best sellers. Cops, cops, and more cops. Snow at five, touchdown at six. Stay tuned for murder at eleven.
The walls at the center glisten But so does everything. Oil shapes our safety From the gloves that handle our births To the glossy final finish in a box. Life unravels in microfibers. Even the old floor we sleep on Is topped with a polymer that flakes Its bits colored like peanut brittle.
An insane medium sits in a corner Next to a group of schizophrenics. She says, “Pick a fate. Any will do. But it must be done not as you, but by another you. Amass! Amass! Be a mass cookie cutter Fender bender, beach comber Record collector, gas cap aficionado, murderer. This isn’t reality TV, this is reality.”
We pick perfection as our fate One where our bare Feet glide across a tiled floor All smiles To a refrigerator filled With presents to ourselves, where The fat has gelled inside our ground beef And broccoli, still firm In its plastic bag. On shelves, there are jars of berry preserves As red as the day they were picked. There is a real bed, with a comforter We would make love.
Millionaires and sports heroes have come to the center to serve turkey to the homeless. It must be Thanksgiving. A news crew is here to tell the story About how real they are How clever they are to have picked their fate. They seem uncomfortable handling mashed potatoes. The medium smiles at us and helps herself to a huge portion Of cranberry sauce. She says, “Fate is that little dog that won’t stop barking At everything and nothing.” And she laughs, mimics a dog bark. Her lips are stained a weird kind of pink.
The cooked turkey is greasy, Oily. It’s basted in something unique. Our fingers become slick We lick them dry while heading back to The abandoned house Carrying leftovers.
You’re wearing your jeans The ones you have worn a hundred times. I know them so well I’ve memorized the weave Of their blue threads and The one button that won’t stay buttoned. It is as if you’ve written these memories down Inside of me...somewhere. We lie down on the ragged carpet Waiting for the night. I kiss your lips. They are softer than any other Lips in existence.
Wow, it’s a great telling of a day in the life of…
My reality is, if they haven’t been there, like the line in Boyz in the Hood, “…they don’t know. don’t show, or don’t care about what goes on in the hood.”
This is powerful. Their wish for a refrigerator with “presents” and a bed is heartbreaking. And the description of the jeans tells me they have spent every moment together, going through this hard life together. And they love each other and they’re trying to believe that’s enough. Well done!
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