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White whiskers rooted above the trumpet player's lips; his body moves like a sci-fi parasite, as he spits out songs at the big bellied, Skecher-chic, boardwalk children. The kids give a moment's interest before passing by like armored flies, if armor were cheap cotton shirts and helicopter parents. Sooner or later, the sunset meets the brim of his hat. It's a mystery as to the speed of the trumpet dropping from his lips to its case, but you'd have to find someone who cares about those types of things. His brown, leather, Payless feet jut outward; away from one another and towards American stores reflecting themselves: Italian restaurant, Thai restaurant, Car Insurance, Dollar Store. Quicker than you'd think, his denim hips are clamped by the wooden arms of a misplaced deck chair, relocated to a dining table as small and low-income as the man who saw the dreamlike orange and purple sky drift away behind the cemetery gray blanket of smoke, rising from a fractured ground littered in mud-bathed, leaking bodies. When the night has only begun to settle in, the man's thick hands carefully adjust her picture, for he fears the paleness of his fingers will leave more of a residue than he is accustomed to. Kept within the copper and green borders, she has only begun life; twenty-three and never having to apologize, there is still so much left to the imagination; her olive grey cheeks are sided to his eyes, ready to be jammed with baby, mommy, and daddy fragments of windshield; waiting for the last embrace of a sturdy steering wheel; her hair still dry and not dampened by insides coming out or the flying weaker-than-you-think half-gallon of whole milk that covered -- or washed, depending on your attitude -- the back of her fifty-three year old head; the eggs fortunately missing twelve times, hitting what was left of the windshield, leaving an image comparable to the wall of a bar that not only has a dartboard but also a man with terrible aim or who had as much alcohol as the man who slipped his car into Margaret and Joseph's life. Joseph looks away from her picture, as his glass eyes begin to shatter. Running fat palms and bulbous fingers through the white, over grown lawn on his scarred scalp, he says her name three times before retiring to the mattress Margaret picked out.
0
May 8, 2017
May 8, 2017 at 6:24 PM UTC
21. Virginia; Degenerates
White whiskers rooted above the trumpet player's lips; his body moves like a sci-fi parasite, as he spits out songs at the big bellied, Skecher-chic, boardwalk children. The kids give a moment's interest before passing by like armored flies, if armor were cheap cotton shirts and helicopter parents. Sooner or later, the sunset meets the brim of his hat. It's a mystery as to the speed of the trumpet dropping from his lips to its case, but you'd have to find someone who cares about those types of things. His brown, leather, Payless feet jut outward; away from one another and towards American stores reflecting themselves: Italian restaurant, Thai restaurant, Car Insurance, Dollar Store. Quicker than you'd think, his denim hips are clamped by the wooden arms of a misplaced deck chair, relocated to a dining table as small and low-income as the man who saw the dreamlike orange and purple sky drift away behind the cemetery gray blanket of smoke, rising from a fractured ground littered in mud-bathed, leaking bodies. When the night has only begun to settle in, the man's thick hands carefully adjust her picture, for he fears the paleness of his fingers will leave more of a residue than he is accustomed to. Kept within the copper and green borders, she has only begun life; twenty-three and never having to apologize, there is still so much left to the imagination; her olive grey cheeks are sided to his eyes, ready to be jammed with baby, mommy, and daddy fragments of windshield; waiting for the last embrace of a sturdy steering wheel; her hair still dry and not dampened by insides coming out or the flying weaker-than-you-think half-gallon of whole milk that covered -- or washed, depending on your attitude -- the back of her fifty-three year old head; the eggs fortunately missing twelve times, hitting what was left of the windshield, leaving an image comparable to the wall of a bar that not only has a dartboard but also a man with terrible aim or who had as much alcohol as the man who slipped his car into Margaret and Joseph's life. Joseph looks away from her picture, as his glass eyes begin to shatter. Running fat palms and bulbous fingers through the white, over grown lawn on his scarred scalp, he says her name three times before retiring to the mattress Margaret picked out.
joshua-haines
Written by
26/M/American
May 8, 2017
May 8, 2017 at 6:24 PM UTC
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