Archive for June, 2012

06/25/2012

Abrogate

by Pierce Nahigyan

Dear New York,

It has been many years since I have written you, and many more since I have visited. I have been around.

I bopped about Boston, and Atlanta, loved in Long Beach looting kisses, camped nimbly in North Carolina (Raleigh, really), chuckled in Chicago, the Second City. These days I live in Los Angeles.

We have never been close friends, so it is refreshing to write to you. There has never been any bad blood between us, nor lust, nor loose wonderings of what might have been. Growing up together, I think we both accepted our parallax in the life of the world, lazily joining forces when the occasion demanded, and enjoying our time together while it lasted. But when I sleep over I always take the floor, and we have breakfast, and I leave.

I have been around, my friend, in this big wide berth in the Earth that is America; I have come home to it from other countries, and dreamed about it, and driven across it and flown over it and sailed through it. But I don’t love you, and I’m not sure if I ever will. You know what I mean. It is too big and too wide to love somewhere, something, I have never been intimate with. If I thought we could make it, maybe I would have tried harder, back then.

I have been around, my friend, and around I see hundreds, thousands of cities where people live and make their home. I have been around, and Minneapolis, Austin, Hope, Skagway, Fort Worth, and all of them, each of them, is the story’s home for untold families, whose lives are better than pages, whose streets are invested with time and toil. And in yours you have such, too, more than most. But I, my friend, am not one of them.

I am glad to write to you, because I know you will understand, because that has been your job for longer than I can remember: to understand. I could almost love you for that. But my love is flawed like me, and needs yearning to temper it, and I have no yearning for you.

This is strange to my other friends, the ones who can move around. I have met many men and women who love you who have never met you, who have never seen you or smelled you, who have not slept on your floor or eaten your breakfast or come across the sea or over land. I know they watch you on TV, and listen to your songs, and they paint your name in big bold letters on their t-shirts. If anybody ever loved me like that, it wouldn’t hurt me; me, I’d be flattered, to tell the truth. But I don’t think anybody’s ever loved me who didn’t know me. You can bet I’d be wary if they did.

I know you can’t help it. I know there are at least a dozen places you’d like to go if you could move around yourself. But I need your help, and thankfully that entails you staying in the same place.

I will abrogate my right to sleep on your floor and eat your breakfast, I will render up my friendship if need be, if you will see a friend of mine to safety. She can move around, and she loves you, and she is coming to you now. I need you to take care of her tonight. Tomorrow, and in the weeks to come, no matter if it is a year or the rest of her life, if you keep her in a loft or upstate, ferry her to Staten Island, wherever she comes to rest, watch out for her. Watch her children grow. Tend them as you tend your trees. Keep her in your heart.

I offer up our friendship, tame as it was. Maybe you can turn its lead into gold with the magic in her smile. Do that for me and I will do for you what I can, though I call you no friend of mine, bear you no love myself. I was made for hotter places, and changing lanes; and lost causes. You understand.

I ask you for this thing, though you have no obligation to grant it, save the friendship we bear each other. Take this wish for me, grant it, and you may relegate me to a mere asterisk in your correspondence. This entails no further Christmas cards nor memory around New Years, Thanksgiving or indeed any bank holiday. I will disappear, and when we meet we shall meet as strangers who owe nothing to one another but civility.

Sleep beside her. For her great love for you burns, and will warm you of a night. Reach back to her when she reaches in her dreams, for all that you are, have yet to be, all that you were for the multitude hoping to cross your shore safely, and live. Be for her the great dream. Be for me a better friend than I could be. Not a fair thing, to ask, I know, but you have never been fair, my friend.

I understand that.

With highest regard,
*

06/08/2012

Abroad

by Pierce Nahigyan

Looking desperately for love I wandered into Milan again, after swearing to myself some years ago that I would never return. I had no business there, you see, but I was desperate for love and wanted to be desperately in love, and I have an indecent habit of orbiting geographic places that brim with nostalgia. In this case, Mathilde and I, journeying there, years and years ago, me sullen and casting what I believed were surreptitious glances at all the rough Italian women and she unaccountably happy, sappily squirreling away our time on endless photographic opportunities, doodling in her diary while we rode the train. It was intolerable, her good humor.

Do not think me heartless, no, think of me as young and cloying and unsatisfied. By way of my father I am supernaturally suspicious, no less so while abroad and Mathilde simply gushed enthusiasm for our love and for the hot Milan summer that roiled daybreak to dusk, letting up only briefly in the queer gray floored and burnished skies, that bronze horizon on concrete and steel twilight that came on quicker than anything else that came in that old, but bustling, but barren, city.

So I came again to Milan, nowhere near as cynical as I was almost a decade ago, hoping to grasp that last gasping sliver of the special, last person who desperately loved me the way the young can. I didn’t feel young. In fact I felt miserably old. Even worse, ungratefully old; nothing soothing, nothing doing for me what it should. I missed trains and cabs; the weather could not wait the last few meters it took me to step inside the cafe before unleashing its unseasonal torrents; strangers flipped up their noses at my squalid Italian.

And instead of reliving those hushed twilights where her love cleft to me in her desperation I remembered only the years afterward, when the telephone never rang, never a word returned to my scores of letters, I drowned in the gurgling morass of my own desperation, and her silence – crueler than any indictment of my past callousness – repudiated my fumbling commitment, transforming it into outright villainy, and I lay exiled atop my woe like a fat dragon paralyzed by his ill-deserved riches.

There was little hope for me in Milan. I could not shamble out of that city fast enough. Embarrassed, I clutched at the window as the train left the station, watching the thin trees at the outskirts of the city pass. Ah, in that rushing moment only did I feel that deep ember stir. I was escaping again, glad to be rid of it, outward bound, parting. The dimming sun threw up a hand of light, sending forth a herald of dizziness to usher me beyond, both hero and fraud en route to glory, bound to the next whistle stop on the way the rails led.

06/02/2012

Abroach

by Pierce Nahigyan

The keg was lifted high in the air. Barry’s thick arms thrust the silver above him and it, thick as it was, juddered like no more than a can of ephemeral pop, almost flying free of his gnarled hands. He clutched the wrought handles and swung the keg back to earth. It crashed onto the bar, split, its precious content spilling and flying, spewing, exploding, shimmering. The abroached keg ejaculated across the bar stools, the patrons aghast, Barry roaring over the endless foam.

A police officer took him down with a flying tackle. The rest of us tried to ooze through the hatches built for just that purpose, years ago, when we were much less bold, ready to flee at any moment. After so long in Barry’s speakeasy we had gotten careless. And Barry had gotten fat. Still crazy, but fat.

I could tack some pat moral at the end here about our excesses catching up with us, the waste of Prohibition, our time. In retrospect it was just the end of a great bar.

Art by Ken

The works and artistic visions of Ken Knieling.

Dan the Man's Movie Reviews

All my aimless thoughts, ideas, and ramblings, all packed into one site!

Author Kristen Hope Mazzola

Everyone has a story; this is mine

Bucket List Publications

Indulge- Travel, Adventure, & New Experiences

Virus Comix News

Subnormality and some other stuff too.

Primitive Screwheads

Not the Smartest Tool in the Shed

Luminous Blue

a mother's and daughter's journey with transformation, cancer, death and LOVE

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 211 other followers

%d bloggers like this: