Upon the Cliff’s Edge

Why the cliff’s edge? Because the contemplation of death from an armchair is a cheat. I stand physically alone upon this literal precipice.  The expanse of water to the horizon inspires my soul just as the 18th-century poets, whose enlightenment looked upon impossible physicality as the block that whetted the edge of their ability; I too aspire to to their aspirations.

The sound of such a mighty force of water and gravity upon the shoreline relaxes the tension across my shoulders inexplicably, but the jagged rocks below, visible because of the height and abruptness of the drop, causes my heart to pound.  My blood surges to my fingertips and I totter upon the edge, not wanting the pain, not wanting the end of my known existence and yet upon the edge, regardless.

No, I have no unfaithful lover nor am I being forced into distasteful existence; I am contemplating my death.  Suicide?  No.  Even as I weave upon this edge, I cannot force my foot forward to test my ideas of continuance.

The whine of my little dog, well back from the edge, brings me out of my own thoughts.  I step back, catch my heel upon a thick piece of turf and stumble.  I cry out and my inner organs sink into watery fear.  The only earth to catch my forward fall is the jagged and rocky strip of land that meets the sea far below.

Such a comfortable existence the lady had are the murmurs of neighbors, who scurry about with their daily and mundane tasks.  Her beauty they will say was unique and even a reality to the contemplative man. Why go to that damned cliff’s edge, why take the chance that so many warned her against?

Instinctively?  Yes, with a will to live I twist and grasp at the long shaggy turf while my feet entangled, kick against the air as if that element may solidify in pity toward my plight.  As I dig my fingers into the grass and hear the growl and whine of my little rat terrier, I laugh even as my hip and waist slide over the edge.  The warm, light, wool walking skirt wraps around my calves and the pointed tips of my walking boots slam painfully into the crumbling cliff face.  Still laughing, I dig my fingers into the turf which loosens from the ground. Scrambling for a small foothold, but hampered by my clothes, the weight of my body works against the desire of my mind.

I stop the struggle and look into the wide, fearful eyes of my little white dog.  There is a moment when I know both of us think the same thing… what will he do without me?

Ridiculous, isn’t it?  Did Adam and Eve despair about the garden when the angel with the flaming sword stood before the entrance of their once quiet domain?   What a damnable question to ask when what they wanted was their own empire.

“I’m so sorry,” I gasp at the canine face which only knows loyalty and yaps and whines knowing its world has now changed.

Bukowski In Church

He drank the song he sang, then sang the drink away.
He was beautiful in the evening and wilted in the morning,
not remembering why he was still standing, still awake.
Life is like that some say–not he–he preferred to drink and sing and not philosophize his life away.
He kept a book of Bukowski by his bed and he thought of giving his copy to her whenever she walked by him
each morning
down town.
She couldn’t stand him and was fascinated so pretended he wasn’t real
and pondered at the draw of the bar stool and why he insisted on tipping his hat to her.
Upon the church pew she would pray in a wandering, bewildered sort of way.
How do you pray for someone who does not want the full light of day?
Seems happiest with loud music and singing at the top of his voice.
She loved the quiet of her house,
the work of hands upon her quilt–loud anything was alien and obtuse.
How would the choir seem with him shouting out the sacred hymns of the Almighty?
— no she wasn’t being sarcastic
she pondered his supposed presence within the sanctuary,
praying with true honesty he wasn’t real,
then repented in that steepled, holy place.
So then she prayed he’d find his salvation in the rock band churches down the street.
Each morning she would walk down the avenue to volunteer at the kitchen for men such as he.
He was sincere, though she did not believe him,
“Good morning dear lady, at last we meet.”

Performed for the Factory Theatre

Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Love’s Trouble for Me

I worried after I fell in love that I would lose my edge. Edge is everything in my business. Love blunts every edge; I don’t care who you are. It’s cruel if I don’t stay sharp, razor sharp. Taking a swipe at someone while something blunts my edge? Well let’s face it they suffer. If I’m not hampered by the preoccupations of love, that swipe is painless, goes without a hitch, you’re dead before their mind can reach pain.

Yes, I’m a professional. It take care of the business in a quick and professional.

I was in love once before, years ago when I was young. I mean, you know love. I can’t help what I am, I can’t. She didn’t understand, and she moved to Milwaukee. It devastated me. I think disappointment gave me my edge. I wanted to hate her, I really did but I couldn’t. Years later I had a job in that area and I looked her up. She was still fine, and she seemed happy. I said hello, and she seemed edgy, a little scared but okay. Next thing I know she’s in Green Bay, then she’s in St Paul and divorced. I called her a year later; you know just to check on her, make sure she was okay. She was in Seattle. I point blank asked her if she wanted me to look up her ex-husband and she said no. She was emphatic about it, so I didn’t and I won’t. She’s in Tokyo now, seems to be doing all right.

I met my new lease on life during an emergency room visit in Chicago. One of those big hospitals. I had run into a little problem in New Albany, thought I was okay but I started running a fever while vacationing in Chicago. I love that city; Chicago. Anyway, I met Alice there.

Alice is tough as nails and hates her name so I call her Honey and Babe and things like that. She’s an emergency room nurse and man, some of the stories she tells makes my skin crawl. I mean she’s seen shotgun wounds, and people beaten to a pulp. Then there are the car accidents and the scum of the earth who hurt their kids. I was in tears one night; I don’t know how she stays sane.

She’s beautiful too. Clean. Her hair is always glossy and she doesn’t fan out on the makeup; a little liner, when I’m in town and she puts on a little mascara, a little lip gloss. I can still see a few freckles across her nose. So sweet, so dedicated.

I, of course, tell her I have no family. I’m not an idiot, I keep her well protected. I am human; some may doubt that but I am human. She loves to read old novels and I’m understanding why. I like The Portrait of Dorian Gray and The Invisible Man–man can you imagine how I can relate?

Read It Twice

He awoke one morning with the idea that premarital sex was wrong.  What would his life been like if getting a woman into his bed included signing an oath committing himself to just one woman and doing so in front of clergy and family?

The idea was outrageous; commitment, solemn oaths were societal dictates that had no room in this post religious age.  Nobody in their right mind did that thing anymore.  But guilt pervaded his conscious one particular morning when realizing that premarital sex was the only type of sex he had ever had.  So, the startling question awoke within him; if premarital sex had not been so easy, if condemns and birth control had not been so readily available what would committed sex have been like?

He wasn’t a moralist, but if a sane man couldn’t think of another reality, what was the world coming to?

So, stretching deep and feeling his muscles tense and then release, he thought of the different lovers he had known with the idea he would bring each to mind without overt emotion.  He wasn’t a cruel man by nature, but he was intelligent and feelings were detrimental to reason, in his opinion.

There was one woman who wanted to curl up next to him and talk until they both fell asleep.  At first the idea was comforting, like being read a bed-time story, but after about a year he realized he was dreading sex because of the conversation afterwards.  Words like future and phrases like ‘my mother,’ and ‘your dad,’ slipped so easily between her lips.  He imagined that his apartment was full of grungy kid’s toys and the looming responsibility of college tuition was bearing down upon him.  No, he had had enough, and they had drifted apart.  There was the other who insisted on watching him fall asleep and yet another who wanted to eat in bed and watch television – that happened once.

Yes, there was another and despite his idea of remaining devoid of emotion, his heart tugged at him and he squirmed around in his big, cool, comfortable bed uncomfortably.  She (what was her name, damn) curled up by herself and didn’t want anything to do with the afterglow.  The whole object of the deed was the touch, so he was a little miffed at her attitude at first.  There were those who were loud and those who even cried and one or two who had the sexiest moan he had ever heard. Each had their own quality, even the one who wanted to eat in bed, but only one acted wounded. 

The idea of sleeping with a virgin made his head spin, but the sheets didn’t reveal anything of that nature and he remembered falling asleep relived if not a little miffed at being frightened.  She got up the next morning unbeknownst to him and slipped out of his apartment.  He looked about, wondering if she stole anything.  She had not.  He felt odd, puzzled for an entire day, and then thought little about it.  He never saw her again.

Sitting up in bed after contemplating his various lovers he sighed and mentally conceded that each had their good qualities but each had their own diabolical fault.   A clinging lover was too much.  By the nature of the act, you had to put some distance between yourself and your lover for at least a few minutes.  Wanting to fall asleep in a quasi-pool of love wasn’t something he looked forward to night after night.  Besides, it was exhausting.  A man had to sleep.

Outside of the girl who would not allow him to touch her afterward, he never had a one-night stand; all the rest hung around for a month or two.  There was one who lasted a year.  They had met at a New Year’s Eve party and parted at the very next New Year’s Eve party – it got noisy, but the whole block was noisy on New Year’s Eve.

He had an idea.  Committed sex may be like reading the same excellent book over and over.  He had read a few novels but had never read one over.    He imagined his adolescent years reading the great novels of Sir Walter Scott.   What would those novels reveal to him now?  Reading again a novel that spoke to him twenty-five years ago would speak to him differently in the here and now; it’s reasonable to think so. The discoveries, the lines and the language that a 13-year-old boy read through quickly to obtain the ending may be enjoyable now. Yes, enjoyable and perhaps even comforting due to the familiarity.

Yes, he would reread a novel, one he loved from boyhood, that was a start to contemplating committed sex. But he would tell no one, especially a woman, because any woman would be smug about his idea and wonder what took him so long to come to it.  He would try it first and make sure that familiarity was an enjoyable experience.

“What are you thinking about?”  She walked in with nothing but his shirt on and a copy of East of Eden in her hand.  He realized that his idea had come from his latest partner.  She was a student of literature, a few years younger than him, and had the strongest thighs he could remember on a woman.

“Is that novel any good, would you read it twice?” he asked eagerly.

“I do nothing twice.”  Her smile seemed a little canine.

Sleepy

The thought came to me when I saw my neighbor walking his dog. Every day he walked his dog at the same time. The dog was big and black with a square head and a sleek body.  It’s a personal prerogative I know but I prefer if a dog has the audacity to be big-bear like big; teddy bear big.  A dog with a sleek muscular body conveys hunter and me, prey. 

So it came to me to get a Chihuahua.  One of those annoying little beasts that bark constantly.  I thought I’d test the waters first, so I went to an adopt-a-dog kennel and I met a perfect little firecracker named… Sleepy.  I was not deterred by the name because he had tiny feet and pranced about as if plugged into a high voltage outlet. 

I came home with a soft bed, food and a promise to try each other out for three days.  It was hell.  The first thing he did was pee.  No kidding, I set Sleepy down and his little legs quaked, and he dripped pee right where he stood. Divided equally between pity and annoyance, I cleaned the tiny mess up.  The dog, looked up at me with a look of abject sorrow. 

“We’ll try again, big fella.”  I said.  I gave old Sleepy a scratch behind his ears and tried to convey to him he was, in fact, a dog.  Despite his diminutive size, he should act like… well, a dog. 

We moved back into the compact living room of my house and I felt the little guy shake.  It was at this point, I thought maybe this is a terrible idea. I set Sleepy down on the floor.  He kept himself together enough not to pee and started sniffing the air.  Moving to my chair and picking up my notebook, I tried to write a few pages of rhyme that would pay my bills and keep Sleepy in the posh.  

I’m a poet and according to some critics and my publisher I’m not a bad one.  I spent most of my life traveling with my ne’er-do-well-father.  I was in several schools, missed weeks at a time and never fit in.  The one thing my Dad kept me in was notebooks.  At 13 I filled them.  At 15, I had several.  When Dad and I parted ways, I was 18 and enrolled in a community college.  An alcoholic and despondent English composition professor took an interest in me. 

The money wasn’t good, but I was used to fast food wages so when poetry paid out, I thought my life was pretty well perfect. 

Until I bought the small house on this quiet shaded street where my neighbor and his dog walked by like clockwork. The realtor priced the house to sell. I bought it. 

I looked up from my notebook as I heard Sleepy issue out with a deep-throated growl.  The dog was peering down the hallway, his little hind legs shaking like well-played fiddle strings.   “Easy, boy.”  Not knowing what else to say.  Sleepy turned about quickly as if he were chasing his stubby tail and barked, backed up, growled, and then fell over, feet up.

I was mortified.  Had I killed the dog?  I threw down my notebook and crouched down next to the poor mutt.  I rubbed his tummy and felt his heart thumping.  His eyes were shut tight, but then he looked up at me.  His eyes were compassionate but sad.  I picked the dog up and carried him outside to the porch. 

Again my neighbor was walking his dog, the big black sleek dog that put everyone at a distance.  The little Chihuahua shot out of my arms and straight for the big black dog.  My neighbor’s dog stood his ground.  Sleepy barked and growled and snapped, dodging about like a boxer. 

I picked up Sleepy and apologized. 

“No worries,” said my bohemian looking neighbor, “you need a killer like that living in that house.”

“Oh?”

“Nobody has lasted as long as you have.”

“I will admit that it’s a bit spooky.”  As we talked Sleepy kept up a low growl.

“Neighborhood kids used to dare each other to stand on the porch for a solid minute.  Would swear some lady would look out through the curtains at them.”

“Wow, kids don’t change much.”  I felt a little weak-kneed as the reality of my situation seemed to be proved.  “Did something happen in there?”

“Yeah, I murdered my wife in there and her dog.  The dog gave a good fight,” here my neighbor looked at the big black dog in front of him, “but I prevailed. But now he walks me all over the damn place.” My neighbor walked down the deep-shadowed sidewalk and faded from sight.