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a person on the metro, six stops from their destination leafing through a brochure titled How To Get Rich Quick - sighing in disgust, "I was never allowed to go on the metro when I was young," boasts the woman sitting beside them, an accessory of The Scene. a prop (voice is loud and nasally, and the person - five stops - considers moving) quick smile, polite: which means, go away. or, at the very least, don't talk quite so loud okay? okay? a softcover Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary is under the seat, discarded, Sharpie skidding through it (four stops) at every jolt of the train. this is normal, all trains are jerky sometimes, and the loud woman expresses her concerns. an old man, older than both people, older than anything really - coughs. wet coughs. the person frowns, but quietly, so the woman and man won't notice. (they are well-practiced in the art of subtlety) three stops. the woman leaves but the smell lingers and the dictionary, having slid back one or two rows for effect a flock of tourists board. kids in the seats parents hanging tiredly to safety holds (be still be quiet keep your hands to yourself, mandy a little boy of six clinging to the person's jacket with sticky warm fingers) two stops, and the boy asks why they look so sad. what they're reading. they have perfected the art of silence but little boys don't understand silence. the mother hovers in the background sneaking ***** looks at the person, wax smudged smile going crooked at the edges one stop, the boy asks where they got their hair (my head; he is unimpressed) he is kicking the lonely dictionary providing it with company, or maybe unaware. they leave, and the mother hisses something at them as they pass - clutches the boy's arm. the dictionary has been stuck on the word spectral for three days, and the train hums to life.
0
Mar 10, 2015
Mar 10, 2015 at 9:28 AM UTC
still life taken from a moving train, 1997
a person on the metro, six stops from their destination leafing through a brochure titled How To Get Rich Quick - sighing in disgust, "I was never allowed to go on the metro when I was young," boasts the woman sitting beside them, an accessory of The Scene. a prop (voice is loud and nasally, and the person - five stops - considers moving) quick smile, polite: which means, go away. or, at the very least, don't talk quite so loud okay? okay? a softcover Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary is under the seat, discarded, Sharpie skidding through it (four stops) at every jolt of the train. this is normal, all trains are jerky sometimes, and the loud woman expresses her concerns. an old man, older than both people, older than anything really - coughs. wet coughs. the person frowns, but quietly, so the woman and man won't notice. (they are well-practiced in the art of subtlety) three stops. the woman leaves but the smell lingers and the dictionary, having slid back one or two rows for effect a flock of tourists board. kids in the seats parents hanging tiredly to safety holds (be still be quiet keep your hands to yourself, mandy a little boy of six clinging to the person's jacket with sticky warm fingers) two stops, and the boy asks why they look so sad. what they're reading. they have perfected the art of silence but little boys don't understand silence. the mother hovers in the background sneaking ***** looks at the person, wax smudged smile going crooked at the edges one stop, the boy asks where they got their hair (my head; he is unimpressed) he is kicking the lonely dictionary providing it with company, or maybe unaware. they leave, and the mother hisses something at them as they pass - clutches the boy's arm. the dictionary has been stuck on the word spectral for three days, and the train hums to life.
buckybarnes
Written by
American
Mar 10, 2015
Mar 10, 2015 at 9:28 AM UTC
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