Never Write While Hungry You’ll roll from aisle to aisle aimless and slow eyeballing the shiniest packages first overhead and at foot at your groin and at your twitching nose.
You’ll make better bad choices (still bad choices) fill your cart with loud brightly powdered crunchies that exercise your jaw but stain your hands without so much as a goodnight kiss or any nutritional value at all.
The Mt. Vernon bridge will be destroyed next year and all the hookers will have to strut the Santa Fe diesel yard instead.
Some of them will fall on the tracks, get run over by trains that don’t run anymore, and their sisters will have to tell their pimps the unbelievable tale.
The pimps will beat the girls over the ghost trains until they get superstitious about it, inquire of the urine-soaked mystic who works the empty storefront of what used to be a boutique for children’s baptism dresses,
For five dollars she’ll confirm a curse and justify them— tell them to go on beating the girls but that they must kiss their rosaries with each crack of the belt, each break of a glistening rib,
they must force the girls to read a prayer off the back of a dollar store bleeding Jesus candle when otherwise they would have held each other naked and cried for a mortal mama who would not come.
They should go on beating the girls. The mystic shrugs and rolls an addict wrapped in a government blanket out of her shady spot
They should go on beating the girls because what can you do in a town that wants to survive so badly despite all the young mothers and trains and pimps and saints telling it to lie down and die to hush now and sleep to rock-a-bye baby to shut the fuck up, stop crying, and close its eyes.
Underage prostitutes walk past the costume shop in hundred degree heat One happily remembers to the other how she went as Cinderella in third grade
how the lace collar itched
how her hoop skirt got tangled as she crawled through her church’s lame haunted house
how a friendly churchman, the one who baptized her who was on excellent terms with her mother, lifted her out of the cardboard box Tunnel of Doom, took a long time to untangle her skirt, then commented how the itchy lace collar was pretty—
In one such re-birthed home off Elliston, a neo-beatnik coffee-beer-food joint spills red neon light into the street where dusky jazz from the “Backdeck” skitters with dead leaves down the cracked one-way blacktop— falls and rises with the daredevil sparrows that dive-bomb the al fresco eaters’ feet looking for renegade Tater Tots.
On a cloud of sweet clove cigarette smoke the hustle of something like multigenerational intellectualism floats over the noise while the silver-haired owner buses the tables himself, magnanimously, wearing jean shorts, white socks, and Jesus sandals, worn-through.
Unincorporated island— city corpus surrounds this dusty stump where no appendage grew, no sidewalks either. All negative space—all septic. Streetlights are rare.
Casual murders In the night, in its little triangular park occur by desert exposure, by gangs statistically impressive.
Twitching bodies in the weedy sand. Rigor mortis limbs, one tangled in a swing—seat and chain— one stretched for shelter of the sun-disfigured slides.
-M. Ashley
I have officially posted every day in April for NaPoWriMo! I’ve never completed it before. Thank you all for reading along. Onward and forward!
Your School of Music staff picture made you out to be so much uglier than you actually are so I couldn’t show my friends, so we couldn’t fan ourselves with our fangirl palms and drool together over you.
I couldn’t make them understand the dark-haired, fair-faced impetus for trotting a mile to class in the actual spiked Mary Janes that made de Sade himself blanch—
what pale, long-fingered hand moving half notes from here to there delectability made me choose the long sensuous skirt with the long sensuous slit, (oh mid 90’s rage!)
what high-toned atonal muscle, what used-to-be-high-school-outcast humor made me squeeze my thighs together surreptitiously between this-will-be-on-the-quiz cues.
Dr. Link—may I call you Stan— of course I may, I was also madly in love with every single silver button on your early spring black jacket.
One of the work-study cafeteria workers took to drawing pictures with a dry erase pen on the sneeze guards over the entrees.
There was a speckled pink pig for pork chops that had a conversation bubble squeal (exclamation point) above his terrified head.
There was a smiling, four-legged octopus, (making him a quadrapus?) above a tray of congealing seafood pasta dyed, inexplicably, emerald green.
Mr. Peanut dapper-danced above the orange peanut butter chicken and a culturally insensitive meatball thumbs-upped the scarlet Italian delight.
The artist slept in mornings though leaving the breakfast sneeze guards bare and me left to figure for myself which mystery muffin was which.
I’d choose one at random and quickly to appease the snarling line behind me stacking into a long, contemptuous curve, eyes on my body, eyes on my choices…
And inevitably I’d end up with the loathsome banana nut which I would eat alone, hands shaking huddled in a bathroom stall.
It’s going to be over a hundred here this weekend so roaches have started coming up from under the slab. Great big ones of the outdoor variety looking for water and morsels of dog food.
It gives me nightmares of Oklahoma, of poverty, of you leaving empty syruped peach cans on the floor, open cereal boxes on the counter, making coffee anyway in a machine the water container of which was infested with molting nymphs.
You called them albino roaches, Fucker, and laughed and said I was your freakshow baby.
The base note has something to do with sunscreen—a fair haired girl’s most important piece of camping gear next to bug spray which is the sharp second layer of the scent. The whiff of stiff, chlorinated towels, unwashed and hot from the top of the waist-high chain link fence they were draped over to dry completes the first perfumer’s chord.
For nuance, a drop of happy sweat from happy children come to wash their hands and faces with pink powdered soap from lime green metal dispensers hung over shabby sinks on which daddy long legs perch each rolling their eight dull eyes at the rush and frivolity of the new generation.
It’s like we live a great distance apart and come to visit sometimes, but usually when the other is away. We walk around, touch the dust kindly, see we’ve both been busy breaking and stacking colored glass in the windowsills— methodical about hue and striation. This one is like a bear and this one a bird. This one is like a wave and this one a glacier. This one is sunlight. This one is also sunlight.
How are you? I’m embarrassed it’s been so long. I know there has been so much and I care very much. I hope you know.