May 04, 2008

(A Section from a Larger Piece)

then

Isaac watched the squad car drift by. It did not slow down in front of their place. It did not have to. It was the third one that week.

He had felt this way before. Eleven. Coming home from the pool. Cutting through the public park between the pool and the long uphill walk to his home with the neighbor boy, who was two years younger, whom Isaac spent time with because it was easy. A boy whose family moved away and whom Isaac hadn’t thought about except when he thought about this.

Off the path before the bridge that crossed the Kishwaukee River, they stopped. Glass glistened in the sunlight. They left the path, searching the high grass for bottles they didn’t have in their collection. Brands their fathers didn’t drink.

They set them up in a row along the edges of the picnic tables. They found thirteen new ones in all.

They knew what to do with the rest.

The glass chimed against the horseshoe spikes. Green and brown and blue beads of glass reflected the sun like cool drops of rain. One after another, glass ripping over the iron.

What the hell you boys doin’

They turned, bottles raised above their heads ready to be thrown into the growing piles. Neither boy spoke. The neighbor began to cry. Isaac looked at the neighbor boy, then back at the officer who took the bottles from their hands.

“Don’t tell our moms,” he said, voice steady, eyes locked on the large man before them.

They raked the glass into trashcans under the officer’s supervision. He made them rake the whole area and just a little beyond that, too.

They walked home and waited.

The call never came.


if



Isaac and Sarah slept.

Tomorrow became them.




then


“This has to end.” Isaac said to Alex, staring blankly down at the opened suitcase. He meant his own running.

Alex didn’t look up from his work. “I know,” he said matter-of-factly, licking the flap of the bag to secure it. He meant his own, too.

Alex rolled the bag closed and laid it on top of the row of bags inside the briefcase. It was the fist of the second layer.

“I know,” he said again, absently, already forgetting everything, weighing an empty bag to measure it against the weight of the universe already resting there.

He pulled out an empty bag and filled it with a large bud from the half-pound bag.

“Hold on to that,” Alex said, tossing it at Isaac. Isaac trapped it against his chest with his hand.

He clasped the baggie in his fingers and tossed it back at Alex. “Keep it.”

He knew Alex knew what he meant. He could tell by the silence that followed him out of the room.

13 comments:

Visceral said...

Children falling through the cracks of the city. Drunks for fathers and a strong love for their mothers. I could feel the anxiety of the call that never came. I am amazed at how vast your visions are.
Happy Sunday:)

camera shy said...

thanks visceral

Visceral said...

I had to read this one agian.
I had to imagine what bigger part was missing. It is hard to tell if this is the beggening or the ending, a new start or a good-bye. Maybe it is both. Just thinking aloud here on your page, sorry to take up space with my nothingness.
-Have a breezy day;)

Dolly Vu said...

how are you ralph? still in minneapolis? glad to see new work...hope you are well.

Visceral said...

Would you like me to pour you a cup also?

camera shy said...

why not

Liam Wilkinson said...

Long time no...see?...type?...

Hope you're well and happy! I've started blogging again at www.liamdw.blogspot.com

Hope you can drop in for a cup of virtual tea sometime...

Liam

camera shy said...

hey liam

yes, long time no type for sure

i too have only recently begun to blog again

still many other projects demanding my attention

but i will be around more often i think

loving soul said...

I could see the innocent guilt in those eleven year old eyes..

camera shy said...

loving soul

thanks for dropping by

and thanks for the kind words

rubenh (thesocialreformer.com) said...

good stuff

camera shy said...

ruben

thanks
and thanks for dropping by

Ruth said...

I recently came across your blog and have been reading along. I thought I would leave my first comment. I don't know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading. Nice blog. I will keep visiting this blog very often.


Ruth

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