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February 26, 2010
The room was yellow, never a good sign. English ivy climbed the window sills. Plush cornflower blue armchairs sat one in a corner. A simple mahogany table supported a silver lamp and an oversized plastic clock that was transparent and revealed the works. Simple table. She was a secretary, she was a single mother, and this was nothing she remembered, not even when her boss bent her over the desk, not later when the child came. Synaptic cauterization is very effective, the nurse said. I've had it myself. The nurse leaned in close, squeezed her hand. You'll see, she said. It feels kind of like Christmas. Very effective. Like Christmas. Posture, posture, preen and peck. Freud got kicked off the Ark, as it were, too amped up, as he was, for a cruise. They left him turning quick circles on the dock, trying for gyroscope, coming up up up, listing giddy instead. We talked once. He never met my eyes, never met, while his own eyes threw sparks fantastic and spectres fantastic and theories inedible and somewhere on that voyage he lost me. His sneezes stank of cinnamon, his face dusty with chalk. Three years ago he tried to grab my hand unanchored because I really really had to go. Razored digits raked my wrist and cut my skin like paper. Cinnamon sneezes. As a child it was slammed down slicked with fixative and interviewed through high-powered lenses. Familiar not alien, the lenses, them, and that was what burned. At night the machine was left running unattended. Downstairs cupboards were interrogated and picked clean. In no time at all they sat hunched over eggs and bacon and loaves birthed by fishes. It was all most delicious rattle rattle tap tap great slurpings and grunts. Coffee percolated and sent them shivering down hallways sniffing out domestic asymmetries and straightening chairs. Great gumdrops of raspberry jam mottled the floor under the kitchen table. Upstairs vigilance ensued. Fishes delicious. Like tissue paper, the kind no one could write on unless writ small, like tissue paper, the kind that offered itself up to wrap lightly, to rustle insubstantial barrier. Freud would not give up, first on the ship, later on the woman. Or maybe concurrently, who could tell? First he sent up signals from one of those cigars of his that smelled like asphalt and fennel like leather and whiskey like no shame smells. When that failed the ever industrious fellow strode to a nearby shop wherein he purchased a set of red semaphores are they ever any color? it doesn't matter. Stirred to mouthings of abandonment stirred to open endlessly that ugly raw orifice his office appeared to suffer only slight diminishment. Passersby recognized him. This was, as the ladies gossiped, where he was to be found every Sunday, after all, here stranded, unshaven, something of a dead-mouse smell about him, foaming from the mouth, weedy graying hair salt-sticky, licking his fingers, testing the wind and taking dictation from the burning sensation in his nasal cavity. Sometimes it made him spit. But today he was in top form, signalling the ship till it sailed out of view, stopping only occasionally to say hello to a taffy-stickied child, to a dog with one eye, to attractive young women who laughed, kicked up their heels, tried to steady their hands. Back again, then, to frantic flagging. What a work ethic that man had! At sun's downing, a small voice was heard to say: But sir, the ship is gone. What ship? Freud asked. Stirred and foaming. Wow. She closed the bright purple journal, turned it over. The back of the book was a riot of stickers. Sailor Moon characters, manic octopi, sharp-edged black flowers traced in silver, iridescent rainbows, bedazzled ponies and moons done up in glittering pink, green, yellow and orange rhinestones. Everything was hatted, including the pony, including the moon. Obscenely cute round-headed girls in bright dresses were arranged as though in hushed coversation. Without those carefully drawn hats hovering over heads the tableau might have been charming. But the hats. The hats! Huge toppers, stovepipes pressed gloomily, emphatically onto the page in black Sharpie. On the front of the journal were two white computer keys secured with clear packing tape, one labeled "Delete/Break," the other "Home." Rising behind the Home key was a yellow smiley face. A lock of curly hair gently punctuated its forehead. She sipped lychee bubble tea that tasted like cold sweet alone with tapioca alone pearls she chewed and chewed. Across from her a tall alone German tourist sat alone with his hand alone draped lazily, calculatedly, nonchantly, with his arm, with his hand falling into the water of the new koi pond surrounded in white tiles. He was in a mall, traveling alone with a couple of alone friends and their daughter alone. His wife hade just left and he didn't care about anything, certainly not a few fish. Swish-swish, he waved with grace gracefully he waved under the water, swish-swish. As his hand moved he stared pointedly at nothing, swish-swish. The fish will get sick, she thought, trying not to care, as he didn't care. Impossible. Distraction then, deep breaths, refocusing. Paging through the paper she smiled at Japanese noise-band names. The little girl, blonde, dressed all in pink, ran around the pond bearing a strawberry ice cream cone like a torch. The man looked on, swish-swish. Those fish, she thought, will get sick. On another day she might have asked the man to please stop but she was tired of talking. Instead she slurped up the remainder of the purple liquid, stared at the globules resting in the bottom of the cup. If she had a band she would call it the Angry Koi. It would usher in a new genre, of course. Sea Punk maybe. The thought made her laugh, which gave the German man a start which caused his head to swivel in her direction and stare, hard. She grinned back. Nothing so terrifying as a happy person sitting alone. Spinning the journal in slow circles she became increasingly aware of her negligence, how easily time escaped her. She stuck a leg out from under the table. Her dark green linen skirt extended to just below the knee. Inspection revealed everal small bruises lining the shin, just there, there, and there, she pressed each deliberately, hard, there was no pain. Often she wound up with mysterious bruises. Maybe too much purple food intake. Maybe a symptom of some terrible disease. Or maybe nothing at all. She lifted her gaze. The German man was now sitting on the edge of the koi pond, flicking water with thumb and and second finger. Posted by Melissa Price at 08:38 PMFebruary 22, 2010 Today I was happy. *** I have no gold jewelry to sell for cash. What I have is made of shells, silver, ribbon, bronze wire, beads, stones. Gold I appreciate in the spiritual sense. But lookswise it's always struck me as gaudy. *** People have given me jewelry (family mostly, some exes, one current, some friends). I've made jewelry from polished stones and metal charms I found in the secret back room of the Hobby Store on Geary (shhh). Other people have been kind enough to make jewelry for me too. Thank you. Mostly, though, what sit tenant in the apartment are books, musics, lamps, pillows, cups, vases, pens. There is a curiousity cabinet too, filled with a mixture of gifts and purchases. Dancing lederhosen, a monkey with cymbals, a love-o-meter that looks like something from a chemistry set, with a bulbous base, a spiral, a point on the top, there's red liquid that flows from bottom to bubbly top when you place it on your palm and warm it up. There are dice, finger puppets, stamps from Siberia, a Javanese doll, South Park figures, a book called Racy Madams of Colorado, Tudor Rose cards, Shakespeare cards, other cards, tiny painted bobbleheaded turtles, the usual things. All of these riches are Ron's too. We share. *** The window in the bedroom is open. I can hear traffic on Fulton Street near the park. The air is soft, nothing expected of it. *** But today I was happy because I went to the YMCA, and did jumping-around-and-stretching-type-things I hadn't done since I was a kid. And then I sat in front of a neighborhood cafe and watched dogs, for free. No one asked me for the time -- there's no need, we all have cell phones -- but I knew it anyway. Posted by Melissa Price at 09:56 PMI don't know what everyone's talking about, but they talk about it all the time. Posted by Melissa Price at 09:47 PM
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