|
| |
View From A Flying Jimmy
Listen: hounds loose their run trill reveille behind the lines of white pine and cedar and elm that guard my seclusion.
I pretend I'm dreaming-then I am-waltzing with Jane barefoot and ballgowned through a wood: music howls somewhere beyond the grey, somewhere in the black. So I oversleep and wonder when I wake why my feet are ice.
I fly to work down backroads that turn suddenly into streets miles from my driveway graveled and tucked between menacing rows of black-hulled pecans: they bear on the third year and I keep their fallen ancestors packed naked in blue tupperware tubs stacked in my freezer.
The cockpit of my jimmy is strewn with dead coffee cups. Jack-in-the-boxes lay discarded and dying on the floorboards -similar slaughters of necessity-ketchup clotted to their sides. Last month's cable bill flaps under the visor like a battleflag.
Tobacco whips by on the left and on the right so fast each leaf on every stalk stands out in surreal base-relief. I taste the sharp and bitter tang of suckering plants: it reminds me of my father's pall malls and politics and the smell of money seeded from blood.
Barn swallows rise-in lazy tourbillions-from the fields their beaks and bellies full of yellow and green hornworms.
I wing past Buck's BBQ Pit (You Can't Beat Our Meat)-past Lucy's Do-Lounge where the girls serve more than shots -past Big Jim's Quick Mart: the stoner kid who pumps gas raises a hand in reflex. I don't wave back in sympathetic apathy.
Most mornings I stop to kill coffee cups but today I'm late.
Tenant houses rush by on either side, their concrete blocks painted with Kudzu and mildew: I think of abattoirs and oubliettes and other inevitable exits. Children and dogs and cheap molded toys from the plastic plant over in Elroy dot the tiny dirt yards-little boys and little girls stand in stagnant ditches chunking rocks at death while their mamas are inside fucking the mailman or watching General Hospital on TV.
I see slideshow flashes of their faces and I hope I don't have to come back out this way: scrape them up, heads cracked open, futures frying on asphalt like so many eggs.
I pass the city limit sign-some of the holes are mine-ringed in rust and canted to one side. Courthouse looms right, county buildings lurch left and blocks ahead day meets night where tracks split the city: segregation in iron ties old as time.
I pull into my lot-number six, section twelve-filled with cars and trucks and bikes but I am the only flying jimmy. Everything ticks: engine, watch, pulse-alpha papa charlie- the people that mill outside my windshield tick with tension.
I want to turn the key, turn around, turn into my driveway where squirrels sit stuffing my sweet meats in their jaws: instead I clinch mine-name rank serial number-open the door and step out.
Listen: animals sprung their cages snarl in angry unavoce behind walls of brick and steel and glass that guard nothing.
�2005 by Tammy Turner
|
|