Press "Enter" to skip to content

Month: July 2023

Simple Town

put aside in fast forward, the
best part of the day happens
when i'm not there, head down
the long march from alarm
clock to time clock to alarm
clock to time clock, darkness
to darkness, work farm work-
ing work fam in endless motion
of trivialities for a sequence
of numbers ejected behind
unhappy bars, left untended
i stand in a puddle and cry,
so i queue up a life on rails
at the sink, to tend, to clean,
to cook, in ten minutes i
forget ten hours, trading
one pair of shoes for an-
other pair of shoes, head
down the long march from
alarm clock to time clock to
alarm clock to time clock,
bearing so often the
artificial  burden of
artificial light, i miss
the warmth of
blessed day,
the sun-
shine
in
my
eyes.

July 31, 2023

The Cat at the Gate

There was a cat at the gate. He was no ordinary cat. He was a mackerel tabby with a blaze of white across his nose and two horns of stiffened hairs spiraling up from the top of his head. When the wind blew from the south his words reached human ears.

“I’m making up for time not yet lost,” he said.

And I understood.

We walked together into the garden. The trees lifted their limbs in a wave of emerald and turquoise, and the grass sighed beneath our feet, and the puzzled shadows of dawn made faces as they retreated. The distant cry of a hunting horn rose on the air and I lifted my nose, but smelt only the perfume of lilacs and oranges. We were alone.

My companion matched my long-legged pace, his striped tail held high, until we reached the glimmering depths of a pool. He curled his tail around his toes and looked down at his reflection, an imperfect image of shimmering white that spread like spilled milk. “This is where she’ll walk,” he said. “On a summer day. In the rain, with lilies between her fingers.”

I took a breath, filling my mouth with air that tasted of sprung sap and overturned earth. I nodded.

We walked on, over the rounded backs of pebbles and the brittle remains of last year’s leaves, under the bridge made by twin trees felled by their own embrace, and up a steep bank littered with the empty shells of mollusks. I pulled myself up by way of a gnarled root. The cat leapt the distance in one smooth arc, his horns thrust forward like the rack of a stag.

He paused to drag his tongue over his back, a flash of pink in the murky gloom of the wood. I waited. We had left the garden and I no longer knew the way.

I followed the cat as he slunk between ferny plumes crisscrossed by the glistening trails of slugs. His shoulder blades lifted and fell beneath his fur. His ears swiveled behind his horns. When he halted, I halted too.

I heard nothing beyond the distant whisper of falling water. The trees had grown thicker, each one slouching amid a carpet of its own progeny, each one marred by boles and broken limbs and weeping sores infested with beetle larvae. Sawdust lodged like blown snow inside their craggy hides. Below lay piles of larvae plucked from the wood by birds who couldn’t resist their fattened bodies but couldn’t abide their bitter taste.

A second trumpet blew from the hunting horn, closer this time. My heart constricted. “They’ll find us,” I said, though I hadn’t meant to speak aloud. “We have so little time.”

The wind was from the east, and so my companion made no reply. He walked on, his back low, his padded feet silent on the mossy undergrowth. I lost sight of him as he crept through the tangled remains of a holly bush, its branches still showing white wounds, the earth torn in short furrows of three.

I climbed over and found him on the other side, his gaze fixed with a cat’s indifference on the empty hollow left behind by the shrub’s uprooting. “This is where she’ll be brought to bay,” he said. “On a winter’s night, with the moon as her witness.”

“Ah,” I said, an exhalation of grief sharpened by revelation. I hadn’t known and wouldn’t now forget. “She will die here.”

“No.”

I looked down at the cat, but he had resumed his grooming, his head bent to his splayed toes, his eyes half-lidded. “Then where?” I said. I couldn’t keep the weight of my heart from my words, so I didn’t try. “You must take me there.”

“It’s not a place for those such as you.”

“It’s not for her either,” I said. I held my breath, listening for the horn. But I heard only the gurgle of water I couldn’t see. “She was once mortal.” And could be again, I didn’t add.

He met my gaze as if he’d heard. His alien eyes held neither pity nor compassion. He stretched his pliant limbs and trotted into the underbrush. His pace was quicker this time, his back low, his ears flattened behind his horns. I kept up only at the cost of snapping twigs and whispering leaves, but he didn’t slow, and above the ruckus of my own passage the horn blasted its strident call a third time, so close it crept like an unwanted caress against my skin.

Down once more, into a gully. I slid and stumbled where the cat ran and leapt. I fell once, twice, my knees bruised by unyielding rock, my hands scratched by the sharp edges of torn grass. Shapes had been pressed into the sandy mud, the shallow impress of a human hand — larger than my own — the deeper gouge of a hoof. Crushed leaves still wept, strung with crystal droplets. A tuft of coarse hair, layered from white to gray to black, had caught on a splintered branch, only to float away a moment later, lifted into the air by a sudden gust of wind.

“Hurry.” The cat’s voice rang out like a bell. He looked back at me, his eyes wide. He turned away, his hindquarters bunched, and he sprang up into the arching branches of a willow.

I hesitated. She couldn’t have–

“Hurry!”

I grabbed a branch and pulled myself up into its shelter. I couldn’t see beyond the drooping curtain of leaves and only followed the cat as he climbed higher and higher, his claws leaving marks in the trunk, my soft hands and feet searching ineffectually for handholds and footholds. “Wait,” I said. “Please, wait.”

His shape hovered above me, a black shadow, his horns growing and retreating as he lifted and lowered his head. “We’re almost there.”

I caught up with him at the crown, a lofty break in the foliage. I sighed as the sky opened above me in pearlescent hues, laced with clouds, gilded by the watery light of two suns. It was a sky I didn’t know, but remembered. “This is where she was born,” I said. I swallowed. I wouldn’t weep.

“Look.” The cat’s voice drifted, drawn into a deep whisper by the errant wind. “There.”

I followed his gaze. Down, down below us, in a spiraling haze of smoke, an orange flame licked white branches, and once more the peal of the hunting horn rang out, a triumphant note, satisfied, merciless. My throat opened in a wild cry. “I can’t reach her.” I clutched at my eyes. “I can’t help her.”

“That was never in your power.” The cat had stretched himself along a heavy branch, anchored by his claws. “You would only have been destroyed.”

I lunged at him, but he sprang away. I slipped, landed hard on my shins, and caught myself before I could fall. “I hate you.” I wanted to let go. I could let go. “You’re unkind. You’re cruel.”

The cat blinked, slowly. Unmoved. He canted his head to one side in an unfeline gesture. “I don’t hate you,” he said, as if he’d mistaken my meaning. “It was an act of love.”

“What do you know of love.” I leaned back against the bulwark of the tree. I wrapped my arms around my ankles, no longer caring if I fell. “Everything she ever was, everything she could ever be, ends here.”

“She made her choice.” His lifted his eyes to the sky. The blaze on his nose picked up a brilliant highlight in the dual glow of the suns. “You still need to make yours.”

“What choice?” He hadn’t lied to me. They cannot lie.

“Let her go.”

“No.” I breathed around the knot in my chest. “I can’t.”

“You can.”

I closed my eyes. “I could just let go,” I said. “I’d fall for a long time before the end came.”

“You could.”

“Why shouldn’t I?”

“That’s up to you.”

Tears burned from beneath my lids. “She was never mine,” I said. “So I cannot hold her.”

A sigh shivered up from the leaves below, a susurration like a watery breath. When the wind shifted from east to south, the sigh was echoed in the voice of the cat. “She was much loved,” he said. “So I shall go in your stead.”

I squinted against the dazzle of the suns. My companion sat with his head bowed, his horns lowered, his figure indistinct, suffused with a clouded brilliance. I lifted a hand, though I couldn’t reach him. “Who are you?”

He laughed, a tinkling as of tiny bells, like falling water. The wind shifted, taking his words, and he leapt in one smooth motion, to land on his feet at the end of the branch. “Will you find me?”

“I will.” I didn’t know where, but I knew I would, in time.

“Then I will be content.” He tilted his head once more, in that uncatlike gesture — and leapt. Down. Down. His voice came on the wind. “Find me.”

And I did.

July 20, 2016

I choose

I chose mother
you chose wife;
pattern overlap
re-cognition for life.

To serve, to comfort,
to clothe and feed;
I'll meet you where you are
and follow where you lead.

July 25, 2023

run away

we are the new
subversive
medium
on
the runaway bus.

the driver doesn't know
that the driver has
ascended.

the wheel spins. we jump
in our seats. a generation
flashes behind glass.
framed in steel.

we believe in the road. but
the driver has ascended.

we clutch at the periphery.
the engine screams.
there are no brakes.

we jump to the
beckoning of
the driver.
but
the driver has ascended.

July 18, 2023

eye

i bathe
in that moist
envelope, that blur
about that most poisonous
star, that progenitor, that
devilish singer of flesh,
that roaster of green
underlings in red
and black on a
cosmic timer
-ding!-
and the
unfolding folds
back again beneath
a clotted layer of
eyeless love
piercing
a hole
through
the gray
sky.

July 8, 2023

hole

and
the communists,
the Marxists,
the Maoists,
the Democrats,
the progressives,
the liberals,
the activists,
the SJWs,
said
sterilize
the children

and the mothers,
the teachers,
the librarians,
the school boards,
the nurses,
the doctors,
the politicians,
the journalists,
the bankers,
the billionaires,
said
sterilize
the children

and the pediatricians,
the surgeons,
the insurance companies,
the advocacy groups,
the social media super stars,
the mockingbird media,
said
sterilize
the children

and the children's hospitals became
abattoirs

and the great chimneys belched out the
choking black dust of human
medical waste,
a smog,
a blight
of loss and grief

futurity,
family,
health,
wealth,
happiness,
bonds of love
and renewal

excised like
tumors from the
bodies of girls and boys
prostrate beneath
needles and scalpels
and chemicals

human wreckage

carved open,
spilt,
split
by
greedy
opportunists
ideologues
psychopaths,

all cheered on
by
WOMEN

captured by
their own toxic empathy,
feminine hyper emotive savagery
that bypasses the circuitry of logic,
perspective, suspicion,
and

the communists said

talk to the children
about sex,

introduce them,
make them comfortable,
groom them,
and

the teachers taught the seven-year-olds
about having sex in the 'booty hole,'
and

Planned Parenthood brought cartoon
flashcards with an ABC's of filth and
kink,
and

school libraries, led by
the Marxist head of the ALA,
proudly showcased books
that openly supported
pedophilia,

"Don't judge," said one teacher to her class.
"Don't judge someone just because they want to have sex with a five year old."

and
every drawing of a little girl
is marred by radical mastectomy scars,

and
every glossary is filled with the language of
obscure sexual deviancy, sexual acts
their parents have probably never
heard of, much less performed,

those parents,
those primal figures,
those males and females,
those work-a-day normies
parasitized by infertile dead-end
unproductive duplicate couplings,

the homosexuals,
the gays,
the lesbians,
the LGBTQ+pedo,

the social super PAC that
stole the show, that wanted
equal rights, then special rights,
that captured the empathetic heart-
strings of America's overeducated youth,
that drag queened the Overton window
wide open, that repackaged sexual acts
into an identity of persecution, then
character, then family, an emblem
of catastrophic unfairness that
only a sociopath could look
down upon with
disapproval

bigot!

that
populated
an army with the
daughters and sons of
mothers and fathers to
storm the ramparts of a
Christian nation for a picket
fenced illusion of normality
shrouded in vitro while
the outrage machine
rumbled on, the
billion dollar
bureaucratic
cog wheels
of

Human Rights Campaign
PFLAG
Stonewall

and
all the
other self-serving
bottom-feeder fat-cats
who couldn't step away from
the trough, who'd had a taste of
human flesh, who couldn't give up
their sow's ear purses, who'd quietly
added to their menu the children of a
country they hated, a country they'd
undermined at the very roots,
who'd turned the values of

family,
prosperity,
liberty,

into hate speech,
until the schools,
the governments,
the corporations,
the churches,
the banks,
split open
like
bloated cadavers
to spew a million serpents
to darken the green land with
the pastel flag of a vengeful
Pied Piper leading children
to the slaughterhouse
to be flayed alive,

girls
emptied
of uterus and breasts,
motherhood and future,

boys
castrated
into effeminate
eunuchs to serve
in the army of

death
disfigurement
discontinuity

ATROCITIES

who stands at the brink of
catastrophic loss and says NO

who steps between the butchers
and the babes and says NO

who kneels in sacrifice, for moral duty,
in clarity of obligation, for the
generations that follow,
and says NO

who says
not in my name,
not in my time,
not here
not now.

I say NO.

Do you?

July 8, 2023

Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, the content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.