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“Old-man” Cody, Four years my elder, And five younger than his mistress, Makes his way before me, The only, “known,” and only near. He dips, trips and spits his way Into the night and plight Of my only company, “Alone,” And I’m happy with just that, “Alone.” We met four years, 22 days And some-odd hours ago, Culminated, a Hidalgo County jail, 2,200 miles and some odd feet Away, From here that is. He was of origin, my home, The when and Where I was ten years prior – Juxtaposed, the dusty Stockton shipyard, Only minutes prior, “now.” He laughed then And laughs again At our, “backwater,” roots As he longed for the tumbleweed, But I don’t and won’t When we’d brawled after something Mumbled, and congruent, “mother,” Words tangled with knuckles in cheek, If only syllables, that spew, drip, And crawl from his mouth – Unwanted, anomalous, and As desirable as a spastic colon. Coming back to the tumbleweed, I’ll never forget how, “that,” night, Our very first encounter had ended - My face, in between his boot And that wretched brush; The scratching and the bleeding, A creation, making me The modern scarecrow of sorts; Pinned and echoing something similar to – “Uncle!” as my mouth failed to render, But my body’d spoke more than enough, And into the dark behind my eyes I’d leave. Tonight’d be different though. Sure, this, “newest,” moment ended, But an older one began again – As we came “home,” to iron bars, Blistered wrists, and guards playing “gods” With two of the town’s poorest drunks; One a writer with broken lip, The other a’bleeding, Both scarlet and pride, two ol’ boys, Conjoined in only numb, Courtesy the 5 o’clock whiskey, With a chaser, my victory, And the sweetest I’d ever had. Luckily, Cody had a warrant, A bonus prize of sorts, as I’d be rewarded, A darker cell somewhere and away for him, Leaving me fortunate and leaving slumber To take what was rightfully hers, Me. Yeah, I slept and slept with the wines of Buttress parallel justified atop lip, Despite – the desperation, my brothers in Adjacent containment, And deafening “roll-calls.” In between the snores of those That’d nowhere else to go, Myself included, I tucked in, Still smirking within this starless night, And whispered, “goodnight Cody, You took me last time, But I’d had your *** this round. Good night, Good night,” And, “goodnight,” again. He was my, "Finnegan," (bit of a Star Trek reference). Every time I bumped into this prankster (like clockwork, regardless location), we'd always drink and we'd always brawl. I hated him. I loved him. He was my friend. He was my enemy. I ought add, "sweet dreams Cody," as he slept some years ago and never woke up - he was driving. Bad call.
0
Jul 29, 2015
Jul 29, 2015 at 8:04 AM UTC
Good Night "Finnegan"
“Old-man” Cody, Four years my elder, And five younger than his mistress, Makes his way before me, The only, “known,” and only near. He dips, trips and spits his way Into the night and plight Of my only company, “Alone,” And I’m happy with just that, “Alone.” We met four years, 22 days And some-odd hours ago, Culminated, a Hidalgo County jail, 2,200 miles and some odd feet Away, From here that is. He was of origin, my home, The when and Where I was ten years prior – Juxtaposed, the dusty Stockton shipyard, Only minutes prior, “now.” He laughed then And laughs again At our, “backwater,” roots As he longed for the tumbleweed, But I don’t and won’t When we’d brawled after something Mumbled, and congruent, “mother,” Words tangled with knuckles in cheek, If only syllables, that spew, drip, And crawl from his mouth – Unwanted, anomalous, and As desirable as a spastic colon. Coming back to the tumbleweed, I’ll never forget how, “that,” night, Our very first encounter had ended - My face, in between his boot And that wretched brush; The scratching and the bleeding, A creation, making me The modern scarecrow of sorts; Pinned and echoing something similar to – “Uncle!” as my mouth failed to render, But my body’d spoke more than enough, And into the dark behind my eyes I’d leave. Tonight’d be different though. Sure, this, “newest,” moment ended, But an older one began again – As we came “home,” to iron bars, Blistered wrists, and guards playing “gods” With two of the town’s poorest drunks; One a writer with broken lip, The other a’bleeding, Both scarlet and pride, two ol’ boys, Conjoined in only numb, Courtesy the 5 o’clock whiskey, With a chaser, my victory, And the sweetest I’d ever had. Luckily, Cody had a warrant, A bonus prize of sorts, as I’d be rewarded, A darker cell somewhere and away for him, Leaving me fortunate and leaving slumber To take what was rightfully hers, Me. Yeah, I slept and slept with the wines of Buttress parallel justified atop lip, Despite – the desperation, my brothers in Adjacent containment, And deafening “roll-calls.” In between the snores of those That’d nowhere else to go, Myself included, I tucked in, Still smirking within this starless night, And whispered, “goodnight Cody, You took me last time, But I’d had your *** this round. Good night, Good night,” And, “goodnight,” again. He was my, "Finnegan," (bit of a Star Trek reference). Every time I bumped into this prankster (like clockwork, regardless location), we'd always drink and we'd always brawl. I hated him. I loved him. He was my friend. He was my enemy. I ought add, "sweet dreams Cody," as he slept some years ago and never woke up - he was driving. Bad call.
liam-c-calhoun
Written by
Jul 29, 2015
Jul 29, 2015 at 8:04 AM UTC
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