South Side of Blue Mike used to live in a midget room with a five foot high ceiling and twelve square feet, including the space heater. He spent sever short years there and ten long summers hiding and hidden behind the cornfield. He’d listen to the oil wells pump. He’d make the garden hose coil. He watched tufts of weed grow as he drank dollar bottles of wine. He shared his ice cubes and jars with anyone who could find him. He kept his empties on the windowsill. He would croon long lugubrious vowels at slivers of broken moon and wait for his emptiness to fill. There were always seven adult cats and a dog called That Blue Dog. The cats were color coded for easy counting. He counted them as he ate beans from a can. Mike grew his own smoke. He baked his own sand. He spread his ideas as if they were jam. He walked everywhere when he went. He went as often as he could stand to take a few steps. He crossed the North Canadian going and coming. He felt, like the rest of us, the dangers of being young. Additionally he knew the illegality of his mouth, his subversive thoughts. He carried conspiracy in his pockets like lint. He was nervous and fragile as the times. None of the forms he had to fill out had a box appropriate to the conditions of his birth or of his race. He used to tap dance in the dirt, in his boots in the powder red earth. He could kick up little tornadoes at his toes and stomp‘em flat under his heels. He knew how Virginia reels. He considered one word at a time. He had the time to. He could deal with it. A simple sentence could he him typing until the ribbon grew so vague and thin it almost whined. He’d type the letter ‘O’ and there’d be a hole. His fingers wept sweat as he worked over and old Smith-Corona manual portable. It was elite and he felt elegant. He had the urge to be urgent. It kept him up for the sunrise. He had the need to be understood. He burned votive and rubbed unguents. Necessity was another inconvenience. He used paper left over from the war. Everything he had was surplus, so he always felt as if he had more than enough. While many of his best friends went on to Ph.D. degrees and divorces, he learned to sleep standing up just like the horses. He always favored small house especially in wide open places. But where he is now, God only knows. It’s not on the map and there aren’t any roads. © 07/09/97 |