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20 Cigarettes

I walked to buy some Marlboro Reds

the kind I always used to smoke when I lived at home

with my parents

"Cowboy Killers"

"Coffin Nails"

My mom would relentlessly criticize my choices.

I tried to drown myself most nights,

but my parents broke the lock on my bathroom door

and stopped me, taking to a country hospital in-patient

facility.

I felt alone, and my shoes were stripped of laces.

But I drew a picture in an art therapy session

of my car driving over a bridge

like the one I'm crossing now,

that spans a creek I don't notice for the first time.

It was a clear day, in my picture, but I had been stripped

of my car keys, as well.

 

It is a clear day today, too, but it is still Nebraska

and the wind is blowing

and I still want to swerve into traffic, on foot.

 

My family liked my picture, and made allusions

to helping me cross this metaphorical bridge.

No one asked me about the way I imagined the bridge ending,

how I would fall over the edge and die.

But I successfully crossed the overpass, alone,

my shoes permanently tied.

 

When I got to the counter, the cashier made me aware

that the prices had gone up since 2006.

I had expected this, but they were already expensive

before

for my body, for my lungs.

I was thirty

pounds overweight back then

and ate mostly fast food, and cheese tortillas,

but the body I carry now seems heavier.

 

I wear earplugs to combat

the unrelenting flow of traffic

and people going to their houses, families.

I try to fabricate a reason to tell my parents

I won't be there

for Thanksgiving.

But I can't,

I just won't go.

 

I walk harder now.

The trouble I had breathing

as a fat schmuck

remains

as a skinny schmuck

and I go back inside

to ask for matches at the counter.

 

I just want to smell the sulfur strike

it reminds me of the chemicals my father used at work

and it is extinguished by the Fall wind, like I knew it would.

But still, I stood behind the gray gas station

the red trim.

I find this oddly exhilarating

this moment,

this fading scent,

from failed matches,

reminds me of when I got a friend to buy me cigarettes

in middle school

and I hid them in my room, until my parents went away.

 

I took them and the matches, to my parents' porch

and smoked one, imagining my neighbors saw me

imagining they cared.

The crinkle of the foil, the match strike--

these were the experiences I wanted.

And the nicotine.

But I did not want the coffin nails

for the dead cowboys.

 

I had a lighter with me, though.

I knew I'd have to light one.

I pull it from my pocket and inhale.

 

I had removed my ear plugs to ask for the matches

and all I hear is wind and vehicles.

I start to walk across the bridge a second time

I spit on the dying grass

that hangs in the dry chill

between the cracking sidewalk

in front of a gas station employee

getting off

her shift.

Her shadow races mine, and I am going to win.

 

I don't feel the nicotine yet, but I expect it to

kick in

as I listen

for a sign of life, not drowned out by thoughtless travel

for a moment,

I hear some young birds, sqwuaking under the overpass

spanning a creek

no one takes time to look

but I do.

All that collects there is trash.

There was a torn, Tar Heels hat on a rock, in the water, once.

 

I start to think again. It's working.

I'm open

Enlivened by the sound of hatchlings,

 

I hear young birds!

But I can not see

an anachronistic Spring

in my step, I am sure

for the first time in weeks.

I imagine having hope

and stride, watching my shadow crash

against the concrete ditch, relentlessly.

 

Suddenly, I realize,

what I thought were baby chicks

bound to freeze

were clanging coins

in my pocket which

I couldn't distinguish

until I'd passed into a parking lot, away from cars.

 

My momentum faltered.

The strap on my knee-support lost its velcro hold

and before I knew it

I was under the leaf-less trees

where red berries dangled

and no squirrel felt brave enough to ****** them.

I thought of reaching up and grabbing one,

but I knew no one else would think this seemed brave.

 

I smoked the cigarette until it burnt my finger,

then put the **** in the receptacle beneath my stairs

and went inside.

Enabled by the substance, inside my body just ten minutes,

to write again

19 times.

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Written by
sansara-justinovich
American
Published
Nov 16, 2012
Lines·Words
126·796
Notes

MMXII

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