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as he sat soft beside me. “Sure,” I said, with ill feeling. My instinct was not to cross my friend, I had too few left. I nodded to the Ape behind the bar and he obliged with one lemon & ginger and one green tea. He knows his regulars well and we know we’d need to wait til later for anything stronger. “Look,” he said, and I turned to see a gap and I counted the two teeth that were missing - no, not missing - he opened his hand and there they were, both accounted for, safe and secure in his grey leathery palm. “Look,” he repeated, (a little slurred this time) and turned his fist so I could see the missing skin and the bruises that gave testimony to his amateur status.   His ****** grin and wet laughter shook the silverback back into action and we got a plate of malted milks. Like I say, he knows his regulars well and he’d listened when I told him where he could get a regular supply, direct from Staffordshire, in the UK. “Lo-ok,” he said (more hesitant this time) and lifted his shirt a little to reveal the knife wound, replete with knife, buried to the hilt. “Loo-,“ he started to say, as he slid off the bar stool taking his tea with him, the porcelain shattering on the stone floor. I winced – the cups had been a gift to the Ape from my mother. ‘Why should the chimps get all the best crockery?’ she’d explained. “I’ll pay for the breakage,” I said and the Ape nodded his furrowed brow as he swung round to grab the dustpan and mop. I drank my tea, counting off the friends that remained.
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Mar 2, 2024
Mar 2, 2024 at 1:25 PM UTC
“Buy me a drink,” Gus said
as he sat soft beside me. “Sure,” I said, with ill feeling. My instinct was not to cross my friend, I had too few left. I nodded to the Ape behind the bar and he obliged with one lemon & ginger and one green tea. He knows his regulars well and we know we’d need to wait til later for anything stronger. “Look,” he said, and I turned to see a gap and I counted the two teeth that were missing - no, not missing - he opened his hand and there they were, both accounted for, safe and secure in his grey leathery palm. “Look,” he repeated, (a little slurred this time) and turned his fist so I could see the missing skin and the bruises that gave testimony to his amateur status.   His ****** grin and wet laughter shook the silverback back into action and we got a plate of malted milks. Like I say, he knows his regulars well and he’d listened when I told him where he could get a regular supply, direct from Staffordshire, in the UK. “Lo-ok,” he said (more hesitant this time) and lifted his shirt a little to reveal the knife wound, replete with knife, buried to the hilt. “Loo-,“ he started to say, as he slid off the bar stool taking his tea with him, the porcelain shattering on the stone floor. I winced – the cups had been a gift to the Ape from my mother. ‘Why should the chimps get all the best crockery?’ she’d explained. “I’ll pay for the breakage,” I said and the Ape nodded his furrowed brow as he swung round to grab the dustpan and mop. I drank my tea, counting off the friends that remained.
Inspired by the vibe in Dave Newman's collection, The Poem Factory, published by White Gorilla Press.
stevejeff
Written by
Mar 2, 2024
Mar 2, 2024 at 1:25 PM UTC
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