16 February 2014

Superman

-->
There’s a little girl with a superman cape that needs me
Her chocolate eyes melt into tears of disappointment
As I turn my back and open the door.

Her cries echo in my footsteps
In the creases of snow
and I hear her in the jingle of car keys
the creak of the door
and the hum of the engine

I see her eyes in the headlights
as I wind through banks mislaid automobiles and crippled intersections
I feel her lips tremble as my hands shiver off the cold
And I kiss her goodnight from miles away
With a dragon’s breath
Warming the world with my life
Pushing the winter back
Before sucking it in again.

14 February 2014

"The Colossus' Glass" Diner Scene: Part Three



Angus and Benjamin enjoyed a moment of silent inner relief, Benjamin letting out an audible sigh, while Crispin lit his pipe.

“I daresay you’ve found him! Though depending on who you expect ‘him’ to be, it may or may not be me at all. Time will tell, I suppose.” His eyes glimmered at Benjamin as he paused to take his first billowing puff of the bittersweet-smelling tobacco. “So, traveled a good distance, you say? Whereabouts are you gentlemen from?”

“Jenningston,” Angus replied.

“Well, what’s left of it.” Benjamin added flatly under his breath.

“Jenningston! Hmm, I haven’t been through Jenningston in… now let me see here… “ He took another long drag on his pipe as he counted in his head. “…Well, a very, very long time.” He chuckled to himself. “From what I’ve heard it has become quite the booming little metropolis in the recent past. Well, that is, until--“ He paused mid-sentence, looking across the table.

As he spoke again, his voice lowered, and his next words struck Angus as deeply sincere, almost fatherly. “Well, there is nothing quite so disheartening as the loss of one’s home, is there? I am sorry.”

At this, Crispin set his pipe alongside his plate. “But do you know what I’ve always found to be an island of anchored hope in the midst of calamitous grief?” He picked up his fork. “Breakfast!” Just as another of the peppers on his plate burst into a tiny flame, he scooped it up and, blowing out the flame, took a large bite, eyes closed in blissful enjoyment.

The boys picked up their forks and continued to eat, not sure where the conversation would go from here. Once you’ve found your medicine man, what were you supposed to do with him? Were you to ask for healing? Or wait for him to offer? Would he perform some miraculous healing right there in the middle of the diner? Would he invite them into his… healing chambers?

Angus grew nervous again. “So those peppers you mentioned,” he said, “why won’t other places serve them? Are they too hot or something?”

Just then, Jenny returned to the table. Benjamin’s ears went pink under his shaggy dark brown hair. He didn’t look up.

“Oh, Jenny,” Crispin said, “Our young friend here would like to know if these peppers are hot.”

“Reapers?” Jenny laughed. “Well, let me put it this way. There are only two people I know who can even stand to touch the things. Crispin here, he gets them every day, and Oliver.” She gestured toward the kitchen. “He’s our dishwasher. He brings them in from his garden at home. They’re not even on our menu. Our cook has to wear a mask and rubber gloves just to cook them. We wouldn’t do it for anyone else,” she smiled. “Just Crispin.”

“And I am so thankful you do.” Crispin beamed back with a smile.

Angus felt Benjamin shift in the booth and clear his throat. “They couldn’t be that bad, though, could they?” Benjamin said, in a voice that Angus thought sounded unnaturally lower than his usual tone. “Could I try one, sir?”

“Ben, no.“ Angus saw what was coming. He knew his brother all too well. Rash, impulsive, though well meaning and deeply caring, Benjamin wasn’t one to think things through. He had once thought he heard a man hurling insults at their sister from inside the next door neighbor’s house. Before anyone could stop him, he had ripped off the screen and pried the locked window open with his bare hands. As it turned out, it was an old woman’s radio dramas playing at high volume.

Hoping to thwart what he knew would come next, Angus interjected. “He was just kidding, sir.”

“Oh, come on! Just a bite. I can take it. I mean, I love hot stuff.”

“Ahh, Benjamin, is it?” Jenny cut in. “They’re really strong, I’m not sure you’d--.”

But Benjamin was reaching his fork across the table. Angus felt him move and reached over to try to stop him. It was too late.

06 February 2014

i beam

last night at
1 thirty
a m

i ran
i jumped
i grabbed
i beam

i flipped

and it was

awesome

05 February 2014

A Toast Over War

With torch lit, you call out to the dark
Crying the proposition I am wrong
Strike true, wielding a troubling remark
Still can we not dance and sing along
Found in harmony harnessed we march
Hand in hand as stride finds stride
Conflict blossoms grace in the arch
Unity blooms in the death of pride
Forgotten qualms in barren tombs
Pressing on with the company of wisdom
Rest with peace nestled in the womb
Cry clearly, cry victory, cry freedom

04 February 2014

Plagiarizing Sleep

There is a part of me that wants to splash
Someone else's thoughts
Across
         The
               Page.
My will is lacking the iron to
Carve quality from chunks of
Mediocrity.

Mostly it's just rust and metal slivers.

Perhaps I sleep so poorly
Because my dream self remembers
Sleeping as a newborn
Eyes
       Shut
               Asleep

And sleeping well now would be plagiarism.

03 February 2014

four for Saturn's hours

i would rather golf
than paint for you
a clue
like a Haitian street
artist in sole-less
shoes.

i would rather shop
than fight for it
hard
like GSP with a sharp
ax kick to the solar
plexus.

i would rather shift
into the grey twilight
unaware
like a free spirited
nymph in a over dramatic
playonwords.

i would rather hate
a poem of mine
own
as Eeyore on
holiday in
Muscatine.

yet
(here i am and
not inspired.)