1.9.24


A hoot
       read it once  came back to the first page asked Who the fucks Dick Schmitts

the name appeared at the top of a page a friend penned Labor Day 2008 Sep1


I’d been hiking up & up & ampersands were wickedly dashedslashed plus signs was beginning to tire

I was reserved, thoughtful, & not feeling social as I mounted a rise – steep – unable to see over the top until I pulled myself up onto it

It was flat, grassy, Grecian, a wide lip as if surrounding the mouth of an extinct volcano, misty, eyrie, the soil gravelly, deepbrown to black, lampblack, & warm

As I walked the gravel underfoot broke & became fine, dusty, aware. It ran up my feet & legs in an sincere embrace, & the more it gathered the heavier it became, every step a labor

It climbed, accumulated on my thighs & hips . . . & soon its weight & warmth drew me down dropped me to my belly . . . & the ground softened, occasionally belched . . . & I found that my exhaustion, lactic acid affecting my legs began evanesce under this luxurious, heavy warmth . . . & coalescing smooth-beaded gravel massaged me, kneading my muscles – million exquisite fingertips seeking, finding my hurt, unease, my exhaustion, invigorated me. I was renewed & whatever quiet angst I had carried up – the knots loosened, came undone, fell away

I forgot the trouble I harboured . . . a high tide had risen, washed away the refuse, the choking flotsam when it retreated

I laid, lounged on this queer earth, held clots to my face, relished its effervescence on my jaw & brow, the bridge of my nose, it massaged my eyelids . . . phosphenes formed beautiful angels, spun wild kaleidoscopic patterns

& I reveled

& I felt up

Standing, I walked forward, intrigued by the sound of seeping water, walked, nose high, smelling cleanclear water

I found beyond, in a rise, a bank of earth, a shivering runlet, bubbling, that formed a cutaway & was filled, edged, with small-leaf green plants & when I brushed them with the backs of my fingers, they recoiled, tendrils, like mollusc tentacles, & following the runlet it led to a hooded hollow, a shallow pool deep in its gullet, where water seeped from its concave walls, dribbled, in other places, abbreviated waterfalls . . . it smelled organic, invigorating

I got to my knees, crawled, then onto my belly to enter its maw, there anointed by fresh Elysium water. I splashed, washed off the busy mask, the coat of anxious powder & as it slowly quit it formed soft mud like yogurt, then congealed into rounded gravel

When I was clean I reversed myself, crawled out, took to my feet, & walked out of the hollow into a queer flickering hue, a fretted, latticed, see-through vapour on which, in which, a male and female newscaster, seated side-by-side appeared. They gestured me & the image, the shot, began to drift towards me at the edge of the hollow. But before they were out of scene I gestured to them, shook my head no. “No news here,” I said. Wisely they diverted the camera

I went outside the hollow, scaled it, peered over the edge . . . perched above was a pool, bluemineral water, over it a stone platform

There was news

Working my way down, right, I saw another hollow birthing. Inside it was a black man and a black boy – his son?

It occurred to me that if hollows grew, they might reverse, could diminished themselves . . . become non-existent?  & a claustrophobic sense & dread filled me  & that hollow holding the man & boy ceased, then began to shrink, the invagination they were contained in closing up

the hollow I was outside of began to shiver

I lunged, pitched myself headlong from it to theirs, plunged my arm inside, yanked the boy from the man’s arms, hurled him onto the roiling gravel, slick mud

As the lip diminished, falling with it, the hollow filling with bizzing water, obscuring the man, I plucked his wrist before he utterly disappeared, yanked, threw myself, all my weight backwards for all I was worth & dragged the man out. Emerging he clawed at the hollow & he landed, collapsed, on top of me, his eyes wrestling terror, “My boy? My boy? I die, my boy be alone.”

“Boy’s safe. We’re fortunate.”

I pushing him off me. I stood. I didnt want a fusillade of thanks or tears . . .

NEXT.
         then I was in an apartment, a house . . . & the slender green small-leaf plant that ran along the edge of the quick runlet leading into the hollow were growing in terra cotta planters, extending thin trailers and spillers

They recognised me

Monday, Labor Day, to Tuesday, 2  9. 08
1507,  Sunday,  1  9. 24

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