Archive for July, 2012

07/18/2012

Absence

by Pierce Nahigyan

On the first day, the turtle crawled under a hollow log. On the second, he buried himself in the wet mud; he felt the balmy heat in the air, and knew tomorrow would be hotter, and dry. He buried himself in the mud to wait it out, for he knew the fourth day would be cool and wet.

The third day it was hot, and he slept. The fourth day it rained, and he emerged from the wallow, mud dripping from his cracked leather skin, sluicing off his beak and down his long, green neck. He had never felt the rain on his back before, and as he crawled through the jungle he shivered in wonder, and arousal, and sorrow.

On the fifth day, he feasted on a nest of baby dragonflies. In the late afternoon he dared to climb to the top of a weathered rock he had often passed in his distant youth, when he was no bigger than a bowl of acorns. It had never been a rock he would climb, not in youth, not in health, not in time. And, he would admit, no matter the shame and loneliness in it, he was triumphant basking atop it on the fifth day, the fading sun roasting his back to a fine, gleaming sheen, like pebbles of charcoal on the spine of a dragon.

On the sixth day the beasts found him. The wolves broke him, the foxes dragged his pieces away, the birds and the cranes came to snap up the tough sinews that lay inside his toes.

Six days. It had been six days since he learned how to strip off his shell and go wandering in the wild. Six days he lived knowing his life was marked, against the natural order of the world and all within it. He crawled in freedom and in fear, weighed down by its absence, buoyed by its relief, lonely for it. But the old turtle had always been alone. He had never learned to run.

07/11/2012

Abscond

by Pierce Nahigyan

Maurice was a snail. It was no kind of life for a gentleman.

Properly, Maurice was both a gentleman and a lady, an attribute of most land-based gastropods, thus doubly irritating. It offended both his manhood and his feminine sensibilities. From his early years he felt that this was so, that there was a great cock up somewhere in the divestiture of his body. The how or why of it escaped him, but he felt quite sure that some nefarious being had absconded with his true anatomy – prior to his ability to form an opinion on the matter. It was an intuition, lacking sense or proof; a demanding complaint that was simply there, in him, couched inside his rubbery breast.

When it came time to mate, Maurice repaired to the garden wall as a conscientious objector. It was while lounging on the moist bricks after the morning’s rain that he was snatched by a crow and dashed to pieces. His slimy entrails were devoured, parasites and all, and then the crow, matter-of-factly, took to the humid skies. Truly Maurice was too good for this savage Earth, and just right for breakfast.

07/09/2012

Abscission

by Pierce Nahigyan

Cold and alone, in triumphant prose, these words were writ in an alcove: “My dear, I fear, unfortunate here, I’ve come to the end of my rope. Where once we were sane, we are now twain, your loveliness scraped hence like soap. The bubbles of us, memories and such, are floating away day by day. And here, lo, dear, I fear next what’s near: the frigid, the frozen next slope. Here up in this cave, I’ve tried to be brave, hammering my last request just to cope – you took the tent, the kevlar rope and bent my carabiners all out of wack; you took the rations, the flashlights, compass and map, thermal underwear, goggles and canes; you left me a chisel and a hammer and whistle. That was cruel, somewhat elegant, Cathy.

“But if you reach the peak within the next week, remember me, darling, I pray. I may, we can say, have never loved ‘fore today, the wind howling, my beard iced, eyelids frozen. For before today I fought futile fears: my wife, my life or my mountain. Thank you for stranding me thus. My heart breaks in my mountain, my life ends as a wanton, my mountain returns me to dust. Cracked and insensate, I’ll a fine statue make, preserved as a wretch and a guide: This way the infidel, this way to the top, this way to the no place to hide. Come hither, mountaineer, though the ice is but sheer, and lay your hand on the band ’bout my finger. My love like a dove has trekked up above, leaving me all my earthly delights. And that angel in white sends me death tonight. In Hell I wish icicles up her rear.”

The epitaph went on with a litany of wrong, punishments imaginary and base. It cut off just as the name of that poor mountain man was half spelled in the granite and snow. That abscisscion is intentional, I believe, as warning to the rest of us Johns. In sickness and health, poverty or wealth, some marriages end, some live on. And some weird folks do like to torture, it’s true, and some folks ride out the storm. But for better or worse, a hearse is a hearse, and evidently Cathy was no woman to scorn.

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