Literary
Wisdom of Scars
“I’d hate to see what happened to the other guy,” the paramedic says to me. He’s on the other side of the velvet rope on the polished faux marble floor. The room is vault-cold and lit low, relaxing. It’s his way of asking. Everyone asks. Never directly, always sideways, half-joking. He shuffles forward a step. I shuffle forward a step.
Luigi
I met Luigi on my second day in Elba. I had left my shoes on the veranda the night I arrived and they had been stolen, I assumed, by one of the children who pestered me for money as I had climbed the guest house stairs the night before. I didn’t recall why I left them outside, but I supposed it had been so I wouldn’t get the room so dirty that I would feel obligated to tip the housemaid.
Wings
There was once a man on Cherry Street who grew wings.
Downtime
It was so quiet for a moment the dogs next door began to bark, furiously, as if something was the matter.
Checkers
Today, I was in a relationship. It was the happiest and saddest, the most hazy and yet abundantly clear thing that I’d ever experienced. And though I have loved and lost, I feel no regret, and have been made not a better person, but more a person, just from the experience.
Normal Sex is Boring
“Ordinary people can never fall over the walls, because they never dare climb high enough to see what is beyond the walls.” - B. Traven
When The Time Comes to Love
From time to time, I’d driven past those men walking down County 519. They’d been carrying clear plastic bags filled with things, not completely filled, maybe one-third, and not big like a garbage bag, but smaller. Always alone, they’d been heading toward town, wide cornfields on both sides of the road, farmhouses and silos along the way.
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