sociopaths
animals with expression living room on a normal day classically trained classically trained 2 act normal act normal 2 maybe sprout wings
photo by eliza lunny
animals with expression
Cigarettes can levitate you and the bare weight you have very bored in your head, and you have not even known you were unhappy, until it all leaves you like imagined geese from hills eager for migration. Birds are so fun to imagine. This all comes from years of wanting to know how to fly and standing out on balconies pretending sex is the same as flight, and surely geese can feel glowing underneath their wings like I do when her eyes go crossed. When rooms feel thermals. And language works like animal speech. Only by repeating each other’s names. I do believe all birds are named Chirp.
In the moment without thinking I whisper my thoughts of making her feel like how geese might feel, small in her ear like putting a marble there. Shadows circle the walls near the bed at the center like hammerheads choosing not to feed because there is no hunger available. Something is very full in the way we lay. A few minutes ago out in the hallway there is a telephone ringing she tells me we should ignore.
She stares from below and ponders me like a good aroma and she smells something brilliant to say. Wincing her eyes to light clarity and when she focuses.
She says you should not be smoking. Love is not like cancer.
And I say geese.
So many days on a balcony, we can feel at the glands in our throats and witness cool air burning against neon. Lights turn on slowly and there is too much metal in smells these days, I notice as we dress and get along. Peeking through the open window we like to narrate, soothsay and pretend the hand of the omnipotent. Poet be like clouds and not what hovers, not economy. My days these days move like stomachs without food or sugar, but the people are not getting softer or more cohesive. Better yet, they are making plans to swim in pretty trunks, the very root of my madness to be. Later there will be violence for love.
Outside traffic sounds hollow and far away and everything looks like digestion. Cars glimmer down black highways to see more cars, all seemingly empty.
The population is so in love with the speed of light.
But I am only as fast as her face. Moving into expression.
She stares at the warp of the metal inside the bus and says what a shitty day. The machine exhales natural gas and Belle has to be at work for her housekeeping job in about twenty minutes and she’s worried. Relationships have pipes and I can feel her pressure seated right here next to me quite heavy. Sunlight can make her feel unattractive when she is thinking about time, so I have my hand at her thigh where I create new language through small squeezes and tightening.
Behind her ear, I am communicating. To the lobes. Employee of the month.
And she calls me a strange bird.
And I say geese. Have a good day at work.
living room
On the balcony there is a good twenty minutes she feels like she wasn’t thinking about anything at all but how fast the cars are moving and what to eat for dinner later. The sky appears to be thinking about clouds but does not quite produce them and there is some gray that gathers she ignores. Richard watches blue smoke rise from his cigarettes in the ashtray and leaves and says, I have to go to the bathroom real quick. She says okay and watches a man on the street stumble home while crossing a red light. A yellow car nearly hits him and goes honking off in the distance.
An ambulance is screaming red and blue sirens en route and Belle follows staring and takes a moment to feel corrupt inside does not take a breath and can you imagine, its almost like her eyes are changing color. Barely noticing that she is biting her lip. She imagines a white man pumping his palms into someone’s unconscious chest and shaking his head, because too much time has already passed for the man laying down there. No longer a man, but pen and paperwork to take place much later. A hairy wrist is rising and the paramedic will look to his watch and ignore the reflection of the face and say John Doe, ten seventeen pm western time and then Belle turns around to the kitchen and wonders if the chicken has finished simmering. Crisp smoke already hovers a deep aroma. Makes home in the nose.
She wonders if she should tell Richard about this but decides not to. Something is burning.
Her buttocks march back and forth underneath cotton like a gentle unbreakable code, back to the kitchen where the air conditioning is humming slow octaves and cools the skin like a song made of hair. She judges that the meat is still good to eat. After a few pokes from the fork and she turns around this many times to find either salt or saffron, her favorite two spices to pinch between thumbs. Richard brings her pepper and thinks, I am definitely an ass man. He says there is a kiss on your neck from the future and I am here to deliver, honey babe.
She says wow and wonders what she means. Does she mean to be either cruel or delightful? Or does language fail again like it does when she has nothing clever to say and something moving too as well like Richard, wrapped up all nice and pretty and delivered quid pro quo, I like you too. A hand to be shown to be impressive deserving applause. Richard does not care and watches her smile while he continues to travel through time on the back of her neck despite her hesitating and believes I like you more than behavior. Faint orange light swings around the surfaces of wooden cabinets like wind chimes in air and Richard decides to leave his hands right where they are. Between the bars on the small of her back and he smells chicken.
Chicken and rice and green beans.
Red wine and burning candle wax on top white lace linen where dinner is waiting.
He says I thought we were vegetarian.
I don’t know she says. I’m feeling weird.
She does seems quite transported. Her voice holds like weak tea and there is no stimulus or a way to go talking but down to business. There is something obviously wrong that is not so obvious and the investigator inside him, inside Richard. Now has his hat on.
What happened?
I’m not sure she says. But I was angry.
Why angry?
Do you remember the man I told you about one time? When I was young?
Wait Richard says. The man that touched you?
Yeah she says without levity.
I think I saw him today at work.
on a normal day
No one talks in the family and it’s absolute madness hounding all the time, her mother says. Much too quiet for a kid growing up, especially for a girl like her always upside down somewhere, on a couch or hanging from a tree. Seven people in the house all the time and no one had a damn thing to say to anyone else, unless it was to get out of the way, or to borrow some money or to scream recklessly because it was too hot outside.
Maybe she is trying to break some long-going, bad tradition, by moving away so far from her mother. Generations of sad people brooding sadder people, never talking about anything substantial or finding out why.
Maybe that’s why my baby doesn’t pick up that pen anymore.
Baby does not write her mother, and I remember that my girl never wanted to be princess. Dresses were the devil and shoes constrained her until she reddened to tears. A face so pink, you could have sworn I had a knife on me or something, so I let her run off and away almost nakedly. She preferred birds, climbing trees, and eating strange fruit. Falling from various points of the tall oak tree in the backyard and marking them down in her spiral green notebook. She surveyed and survived every fall and came home to tell me about it. Belle said she could survive anything. She told me everyday.
Late autumn one year, I remember being a cruel mother.
I remember telling her, green eyes are a recessive gene, Belle darling. You are going to have to stare at people twice as hard and twice the time, for them to really see you. I think I stopped being her mother there. And Baby Girl was always such the listener.
Her eyes developed this seductive color when she looks anyone in the eye. And any man or any boy, it doesn’t matter, she could make him feel a greater part of this society, like he has a fine suit on, immaculately blinked from nowhere, like he’s superman. She is dangerous I am telling you. Her eyes carry an affinity that is very heartbreakingly easy to feign and she does not know what she is doing.
She won’t be able to love you back, Richard. Because no one really sees her. Not my angel, her mother says.
And Richard breathes into the phone, staring at Belle while he does. Already early in the morning around six o‘clock, Belle is getting dressed for work and she is a hurrying balancing act of coffee, keys, and many small bags. Her mother calls everyday, every morning, like a rooster crowing the day wide open.
But I am superman he whispers into the phone.
Belle kisses Richard on the cheek and rushes out the door to catch a bus and through the window, he fingers an opening in the blinds and watcher her jaunt away.
You never protected her, Richard says to Belle’s mother. Please don’t call back.
So do you think you can? Do you think that’s what she wants? Richard?
classically trained
A man dies today Thom says and he looks off vacantly at the sky like he does not possess eyes but holes in his head, and he does not care what to see out there. Witnessing alive things like birds making V’s and the sun setting beyond the cafe. By the way he is speaking, Thom seems to be suffering from an old memory he usually keeps secret and underneath his sociability, but he pretends everything is fine. A breeze does not move them. The sky is courting the earth with darkening blue and clouds and Richard plays the table with his fingers like a piano and forgets the name for cilantro and picks up the cilantro a little bewildered and feels strangely blank. Stares at Thom exhaling white smoke rings a perfect circle in the air and Richard stares back questioning what he has in his hands. A pale green thing. What is this called, he is thinking, what the hell?
A man dies today Thom says and he speaks dramatically but calm. There are a group of officers around this John’s body and his eyes are open because he dies very comfortably resting at home. His feet are up against his red expensive ottoman. Television’s off and there’s an open book at the coffee table. He doesn’t finish his last story but he watches the shadows on the wall and how the ceiling never moves. Wind becomes useless. Everything is seemingly okay and the carpet is spotless and the kitchen beyond where he lays, is how he would like it to be dirty. Because a few scattered beer bottles here and there are not likely going to kill anyone, right? Dead solders the man calls them and he drinks many bottles until they’re empty and he leaves them wet on the counter, without thinking about cleanliness or tomorrow. Officers write things down in their notepads and clipboards and the man just lays there, dead and buzzing and grinning his last beaming expression. Looking down, the only female officer there present at the scene, thinks he looks happy. There is a hole three inches deep in his head and the wound resembles apple pie.
There is permission to give an autopsy and information is later unveiled that the man had died of three natural causes says a doctor. Three particular objects are lodged inside the hole at the center of his head like candles on a cake and there are no exit wounds. Like the John wanted to keep them for some personal reason. His hair is rinsed and he is slightly shaven with a buzz cut. Appears as if he is joining the marines and the doctors did that. Detectives involve and undergoing the investigation worry about paperwork and complications about the case and barely realizes the brevity of what happened to the John. A moment of true art. The first object found is a small pocket knife.
This knife is thrown from an incredible distance maybe twenty or thirty feet away, by a young boy who has never seen a naked woman before. Four days later he is courageous enough to ask out his first love without being afraid.
The second object is a slow bullet from a Colt .45 like an old gun. Shot by a woman who cannot speak English only Portuguees but she wants to learn. There are men on her floor she finds attractive and she is curious for them to make sense. Her first words in English are honey and babe.
The third object is unidentifiable.
Looking down again at the John after the autopsy, the female officer changes her mind and holds her chin in front of her other colleagues. The room has a nice stillness hovering around them and the doctors are puzzled reading X ray scans. She decides and says out loud maybe he’s in love. He has that look. That’s it.
Richard is looking at Thom like he is burning one hundred dollar bills. He says fuck you. That was a gorgeous story.
Thom says that’s how I view people. Sometimes I don’t know what to say.
classically trained 2
There is an eight-beat silence between them where no wind comes, Thom can hear with his musical ears classically trained. He decides today that he is alive and Richard takes a slow drag from a new cigarette and exhales. Feels a deep reservoir of peace in what the people do here everyday in the restaurant, the same thing they seem to always do in routine, like wait tables clean floors and talk about bad parking. A young woman stands slanted waiting to pick up an order and her eyes follow drowsily at the people passing outside, all walking the same direction like a slow monotonous parade; something no one claims to admit that they are walking sometimes, to get from point a to b and then another. He imagines undressing Belle when he gets home from collar to navel and he ponders the people again inside the restaurant. Wonders how he can make them all stop what they are doing without a gun, and just go ahead and do something else. Anything else really he thinks, just not what y’all doing now, and he smells his black coffee from the ceramic cup and looks across the way. Steam masks his face as a moment of warm pause and he begins to miss Belle much too much. A group of pigeons take flight across the street and reassembles on the ledge the building opposite at the exact same height and they do this a few times. Thom says the sky looks like patches of turtle shells.
Richard wants to say but thinks we talk about the sky too much. But well, its always there, he thinks quietly in his inner monologue and he takes comfort in that.
Inside the cafe there is a beautiful couple dressed in black and silver like a real lucrative looking couple, and they are having small salmon with the head still attached. The man seems to be like a doctor, by the way he carves the knife so meticulously, and his lady caller must be one of the gorgeous people that follow doctors, like sunshine to water, never-endingly. Judging how closely she leans in, he must know what a real human heart looks like and gets paid for the view.
If she was an actress, she would steal scenes Thom says. I would fuck her for free. And Thom exhales another smooth white smoke ring. So why are we here? Why the meeting? What’s up?
Just then the women inside makes a face, which Thom feels is more like a grimace, rooting from a nasty seed of thought and she even points to the two companions, sitting just outside on the patio. Staring at the smoke from the cigarettes like a swarm of locusts she can hardly deal with and cannot further more, go unnoticed. Again with the finger she points and more so, the terrible grimace, which her husband boyfriend or whatever he is, complements well with snide eyes.
As if a thin layer of restaurant glass can stop the honesty of these two friends. Thom thinks about a scene as if it were to happen, him smashing his head into the window glass fucking thing and showing the man and the woman a thing or two about people smoking and having a good time. There would be a small film of blood running from his head which he would use as prop somehow and Thom would of course then, sing a song. I don’t know he thinks. Maybe something American that everyone knows. Yankee Doodle stuck a feather in his cap. And called it macaroni.
I don’t know what to do with people like this Thom says.
Just stare at them like you know who they are Richard answers. With compassion real calmly.
With slow eyes Thom smiles at the loving couple and pretends he is a clown that never changes his face. This frightens the couple dressed in black and silver and not once does the glass fog up or become hard to see through, which Richard finds hilarious. They are suddenly very intent about finishing and chewing their salmon and drinking their wine and every now and then, when they look back, of course Thom is still staring, earning his performance as the under appreciated clown.
So what does Belle do? Thom asks.
She’s an inventor.
Oh yeah? What did she invent?
Everything Richard says. But no one gives her credit.
Another silences passes through them and Richard finishes by saying, but she’s a housekeeper for now. Working for some hotel downtown. The couple inside has asked a hostess to come over and scope out the situation and Thom is there smiling. The hostess, another young gorgeous women, seems to be touched by what Thom is doing, or tired from what her hard day has dished out to her, and replies back to the couple with short and apologetic moves from her shoulders, as if saying, there is nothing we can do sir.
Actually that why we are here Richard says. There’s a man Belle remembers from her past that she’s seen at the hotel. And I think this is the same guy that molested her when she was young. Richard sighs with banality but brushes it off.
So we’re showing him a good time? Thom asks.
The best of times Richard says. A night to remember.
Before departing and leaving a generous tip, Thom shapes his fingers like a pistol and shoots a breath of fresh air at the couple inside, like one quick twitch of the wrists and he tells them you’re dead. You’re dead. Richard looks around the ceilings and the walls of the restaurant looking for a no smoking sign but finds none. He gets distracted with flying sparrows along the black sheet of sky and the freezing cold in the city, a cold of which he feels belongs to him and him only, more so than any other man that might be walking and thinking his same dark thoughts.
This is for me Richard says. Something selfish.
act natural
A cloud moves and she can see her face brighten in the reflection of the glass, filling a sweet little agony in her eyeballs and she begins to admire the feeling. Her eyes, crows feet and she yawns like no one is watching her and she feels better with her lips almost wet and her eyelids too. Belle sighs and says revolution jokingly, walking through the Luxury Suite on the balls of her heels, completely unaware what day of the week it is. Belle feels it is maybe Tuesday today. Towels are in her arms and wrapped around her waist, and her hair is up, very well and tightly, and it does not move when she passes, whistling and killing time, meandering the steel alloy life of a house keeper. If Belle listens very closely and she often does, there is music playing above her from hidden speakers. Violin strings accompany her pacing back and forth and up and down the hallways and the long green carpet, raining down from the intercom system, overhead radio, and everywhere there is people, there is elevator music. Elevator music, fuck my life she thinks.
The classical strings move her body strings and make Belle feel like a voodoo doll, at the mercy of every song or mighty symphony that scores all around her. Every breath she inhales feels ridiculously romantic, moving in slowness like she is being filmed delicately. She is far too emotional walking over to the next room to go clean again, as if feeling serendipity everywhere or within every simple basic human task. She is susceptible to this music, doing chores. Doing laundry feels like a true love lost at sea forever, and she fucking hates violins, she can not even describe it. But Richard is good in her head.
Sometimes she stares at the clock and wonders what Richard is doing. Waiting for the heavy clothes to dry. Waiting for the dumbwaiter. The air conditioning cools her skin and she slows down herself. Allows a difference in how she breathes and even how she squints her eyes at people passing by, giving her tips and pocket change. She folds her towels with intrigue feeling high and happy.
Inside her arms, methamphetamines waiver a sense of slow popping relief, a feeling as if nothing can really touch her or do harm to her, unless she gives them privilege to disrupt her good days. Slow possession is what it is, she thinks, like she is flying or being elevated from the floor in a dream vessel and she does not feel like she is using again. It becomes merely survival sadly, to stay awake until the next day and she remembers telling Richard in bed, what the drugs mean. The high she gets and these calming feelings of flight account for the only times in her life when she truly feels like a Princess.
Not even her mother knows that.
She has about forty five minutes left until her shift is over.
She enjoys catching view of any clocks, any watch face surfaces, like a secret hobby to do at work, to pass the time and the soul. She’s counting down the minutes before she sees him again. She says Richard is so fun to miss and more people pass her in the lobby, maybe a few dozen, and no one bothers to listen. She receives a five dollar bill when she cleans up a man’s dinner, and the steamed vegetables go untouched on his plate.
Something like Mozart plays again.
People pass like parades.
Belle has bags of dirty clothes to lug over to the great hamper bin at the end of the hall and her arms hurt.
But commotion is now stirring throughout the hotel, and the guests are suddenly leaving their rooms, suggesting an eerie spectacle happening outside, because everyone is remaining quiet but worried, all heading one direction toward the exits. There are a lot of hands over mouths and warm whispers, steady shuffling of feet and torsos. She brushes by a pretty coworker of hers on her way outside. The girl says I have to close the registers tonight. I wonder what’s happening outside, the girl is asking inquisitively, and Belle says I’m not sure, hold on. Belle interprets panic on everyone’s faces and this causes sobriety in her.
She has two hands and ten fingers. She is awake. Follows the crowd to another crowd, outside the lobby of the grand hotel and there are two police cars, an ambulance, and a red fire truck. Only one siren light remains turned on and rotating blue and white lights, as if the mystery is already solved before she gets there and she wonders what is going on. The crowd is too large for good news.
Someone jumped from the rooftop, some older man, Belle learns. They think it might be suicide and it’s really tragic really. She meets a family on the outskirts of the large crowd, all of whom seem very excited more so than afraid, and they tell Belle everything they‘ve heard, very engagingly. The father holds his daughter in his arms, raising her on his shoulders so she can maybe catch a better glimpse of things and Belle feels demented watching.
Not really knowing why, Belle asks someone else in the crowd for a cigarette and a light. While she smokes her first stick in years, she asks a woman for the time, who has a pretty watch on. There are too many high shoulders for her to see anything but it’s not like she wants to see. She feels almost excited to be killing some minutes while still working on the clock but excited is not the right word, and she’s too tired to care how else to say it. There is sadness though.
The pavement looks wet but isn’t really. She likes this color black and it tickles her skin somehow, the way nostalgia would and she realizes how many trees are surrounding the hotel, and there has to be hundreds.
I have twenty two minutes left until I go home she says. That’s like one Simpsons episode.
act natural 2
The door takes a while to open and when she manages to get through, she finds Richard reading calmly on the couch, and there is a bottle of wine opened and a ruined package of cigarettes almost empty, next to him. There are only a few smokes left in the pack, and the television is turned off, and the room is clean and spic and span. He must have cleaned she thinks and she tries very hard to be quiet, breathing even slowly, trying to surprise him maybe. The evening feels cool and happy to be home again, and the moon blows a sparing wind, giving fuzz to the carpet. Shine to the wood floor boards picture perfect.
Richard wearily smiles and looks goofy towards her. Belle moves her body and hovers over him, says hello, and kisses him on the cheek where it tickles him the most and she loves doing that. His face often turns very singular and noble with his eyes closed when she kisses him right there, like he is getting knighted or something.
The blood in his head almost centers itself at one decided, loved location, underneath her lips, on his cheek. She thinks all boys must dream of such grandeur of kingdom and great modern damsels, where the kiss is the only reward. When they do, they can sink so deeply into this keen, behavioral chivalry and they don‘t even tell their lovers, because she assumes it’s more fun that way, like a secret they all share with very close male friends. A covenant even, replacing God with the happiness and the praise of women and affection. Brothers being ridiculous and fun, honorable. Godless.
No one but me knows how soft his cheeks are she thinks.
Richard rises and says, I’ve made dinner. Its in the kitchen.
Belle says oh yeah? She turns around and unravels an image of a whole suckling pig already roasted on the counter, resting on a metal tray and aluminum foil, and lie the smells of salt and oils. There is an apple in his mouth and his eyes as baked as bread, looking very easily to crumble and delicious too. There seems to be no side dishes to go with the meat and she asks, you made a whole pig?
I know right? I guess I got tired of vegetables too he says.
He seems to be already chewing something and looking very exhausted and worn out, placing his book down on the cushions. Richard takes a long drag from a thin joint. And light bulb goes his eyes, he gets up almost habitually towards the food and Belle watches him hurry off. He swings his hips into the kitchen to fetch a couple of clean plates and utensils, and Belle stares at his departing shoulder blades, shimmy shimmy shaking, steadily in rhythm like from the old days of jazz and spontaneous foxtrot. There is almost a spotlight beaming on him when he changes his mood like this and gets into new character. The light carries dust.
He is performing for her. He is trying to make her laugh. Those eyes he has, maneuver intentions to woo her out of her shell and make her float there in the living room via laughing. Richard pumps his fists in the air and mimes doing pull ups like a new way to dance, and his head pops up and down, eyes like Chaplin.
Because it all means he is paying attention to her and he sways like one giant muscle, smiling.
Women too are dazzled by bodies. Belle chews her lower lip like the skin of an apple she is saving for later or hoping to have. Shadows repeat in the living room because of the headlights, of the traffic flow. Belle wonders how the light gets all the way up here, near the seventh story so high up and she sneaks the joint she sees from the dining room table and the smell almost speaks to her out loud like: Long day?
She takes a hit. The weed pulls her mind to the back of her head and she feels slowness. The windows are cool and perfectly see through. Belle exhales like how people should be exhaling, watching her own breath travel to the ceiling and feeling so good to be stationary. Her eyes feel at home. She theorizes the size of the room and how lovely it feels to be walking around barefoot, closer to him. The kitchen dims in gloss and she doesn’t know what she is really thinking or if it makes sense but whatever, life is seamless. Belle leans her chin on Richard’s neck and says, I think that’s why your pupils get so big when you‘re high. Because you’re trying to see everything.
What? Richard asks, grinning and admiring her. Man you’re really stoned he says.
Shut up, Belle says and she kisses him. Tries to communicate solely with her lips and she tip toes. The massage from her tongue makes Richard feel like an anchor, slowly reeling towards a low depth, and she guides him towards the closest piece of furniture he can sit in, which happens to be the leather love seat in the center of the living room. Refusing to let go of the kiss or opening their eyes, they move like people blindfolded willingly. Richard bumps his knee against the coffee table and the sound of his pain like a sudden balloon popping, causes a smile on Belle’s face and she sucks his lower lip rather in a little harder. As if to say, it’s totally worth it, do not worry about your knee.
She straddles over his waist and moves like she has many brains, accounting for every ounce of her one hundred and fifteen pounds, collectively getting very warm and swarming him. Her lower thighs remember his shape and hold him there and push him like a domino, and Belle amazes herself when she rolls down the slope of being very horny. She continues to follow through. Moving somehow irreversibly, she turns a sexual being and keeps falling.
She enjoys these transformations and thinks birds do the same thing when flying.
But he says wait. Hold on.
Richard gently sways Belle from their union and become two people again. His hands pushes her shoulders away until he can see her face again, out from the blur and into warm blood focus. The way he is being delicate makes her feel apprehensive and eerie. Strangely rejected and misunderstood and there is a look in his eye that slows her down a bit, because he seems prepared to say something heavy. A solid brown color in his eyes like he has been rehearsing and pacing back and forth at home forever before she came back. She knows he never says, I have something to tell you. Richard always skips that part.
I did something honest today, he says. Thom and I did.
She moves her hair back and her body winds down the hot knot it previously gathers, and she shakes her head grudgingly. She looks around again at the clean house and imagines his anxiousness, trying to calm itself through chores and cooking. Out of her head, Belle bursts into the present, feeling weary but sober again, and she washes her face with her hands. The vagueness in his voice scares the idea of loss in her.
What are you talking about? She asks.
The man that touched you.
I pushed him off a building, and Richard shrugs his shoulders and stares at her.
I don’t know how to say that beautifully, he says.
maybe sprout wings
Before leaving he takes another slow drag from the joint and begins walking downstairs outside like he has new feet. The smell of wet leaves rolls down the hill in the morning and he knows that it’s coming, or that it will come, and it’s only a matter of patience and he has to go out walking to find it. He leaves his wallet, his watch, and his pen at home, and he throws his cell phone over his shoulder and refuses to look back. The sound of the thing crashing into broken plastic sends relief spinally to his heavy head, and he feels perfectly alone with the birds. The population is Richard and his streets and the ocean he will see soon enough. Breathing feels good and he looks forward to the cool waft of some new hours. Some time in his hands and his pockets. He watches the clouds make silver with the moon.
He begins to urinate in the rose garden outside his apartment, which makes him feel hairy at the neck.
On the street, a young hip couple crosses the street drunkenly, to the sounds of the pied piper, mechanical bird chirping. The girl leans her head in at the boy’s shoulder and they stumble like the ground is crooked or being aggressive. The boy leans too and bites down on the girl’s ear and Richard can hear them laughing and getting louder with glee and horseplay.
Most days Richard wishes for a camera for a shot like this, to capture it beautifully and take it home. Tonight he wants rocks and a good arm. He thinks survival takes a long time and starts to laugh for no reason. He stares at a real sparrow sleeping in the tree and says chirp.
Upstairs Belle finishes the bottle of wine he’s left behind and her anger and disappointment vibrates where her ears make bone, and she doesn’t know what to do now. Maybe sprout wings. Their last conversation replays in her head and knocks on her solitude like cruel strangers at the door. When she yells at Richard, it is the first time she raises her voice in front of him, and it’s like she wants to kill him. Or blow his house down.
She says I don’t need protection and that was incredibly selfish of you and you shouldn’t have done that. I can protect myself. I can survive anything, Richard! When she yells at him, she unhinges. Feels like she is talking to her mother on the day she leaves home and never bothers to be contact again. Everything in the body rises and even her teeth cramps. She sighs terribly and asks herself, who needs a drink?
On the street, another young couple crosses the street and Richard wants a dry scotch or perhaps cheap beer. He wonders if Thom can accommodate and imagines his very deep liquor cabinet and decides for a detour. An ambulances passes by like a banshee and Richard pretends he is making the siren sounds with his heavy staring. Eyes like sharp diamonds.
The sirens sound and his chest hurts underneath gradually. He dips in hands in his pockets and stares at the air and says it’s cold outside but I don’t need a jacket. He walks and hopes for sun rise. Belle dances in his head and he even sees her in the ocean, a few moments later, knowing it’s not really her. It’s a different girl out there swimming.
In the morning many hours later, Belle makes coffee but makes too much of it. She realizes Richard has not come home quite yet and his phone is off. Why is his phone off? She moves her body outside the balcony and hugs her knees, takes her coffee black and even drinks his normal share of two cups. The caffeine makes a grand assembly in her blood steam and every cell feels much larger, and she can hardly sit still. There is a nice cool fog and the smell of wet leaves coming from uphill and she breathes the freezing cold in, and her lung caresses back, trying to be calm. She watches a walking stick bug rise from the pile of sticks and stones beyond her feet in the balcony and wonders how long it has been there, and what makes it finally come out of hiding? Inside her, there are wet organs irrigating what she thinks her soul is, and she gives up the dream of wanting to be dry, of wanting to be so self-sufficient. She wants to go see the ocean too.
About this entry
You’re currently reading “sociopaths,” an entry on richardchiem
- Published:
- September 25, 2009 / 8:51 pm
- Category:
- short fiction
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