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triptych #4

I found Jesus at the end of the street, up on steps moss-spotted green,

hung on stylized barbed wire sculpted oh-so-sincere. Of all the things

to pass through my mind, the first is Martha Stewart’s favorite color

combination, its steel grey set against the mint green and beige of the

trailer across the street, alone between the trees.

 

I. Everything is green, even the skies, and it reminds me of you, and

the blue of the night that ringed itself around yellow-orange

streetlights. When you’d walk me home, barefoot, and you’d give me

what was too easy to be a hard time, with an air that I have failed to

find in anyone else, and I’d always wonder, I still wonder, if you

would let me know if I was hurting you.

 

II. And the road twists into chalky grey gravel in construction, and

the dry dust fog that forms keeps my mouth shut. It’s sand in my

lungs or your ridicule in my ears. And I knew a long time ago that I’d

met someone who played this hate-game better, the way you lifted

your eyebrows above your sunglasses. But we were accomplices

then, and now we’re just playing alone. Even as your skin changed

colors in the morning light, I could see the way you were changing the

rules.

 

III. And I’ve always loved the way rows in fields unfolded

themselves to their vanishing point when you looked at them rolling

by at automobile speeds, and right in front of you is the part in the

sea, a meticulous divide. And maybe you are two people: you are the

person I came to believe existed, and you are the sterotype I tried

not to see. And maybe I am two people as well: the one who laughs

when you make your mistakes, and the one who wishes I hadn’t let

you make them. We are the same as those green rows: one day we’ll

be dead, dry, and cut to pieces.

 

Lots of houses are orange-yellow peach. The real color of peach flesh,

bright and acidic, not the milky orange of your peach-flavored

whatever, or the pale pinkness of that crayon that Crayola was too

scared to name Caucasian, but an assaulting yellow, slightly less

aggressive than mango-orange. The others are soft pink and off-white,

sometimes lazy cement colors. But there are purple-and-white flowers

that cascade down the walls and over the fences in their May effort,

and it’s ironic to think how thankful I am for the masks of vines hiding

the ugly monotony.

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Written by
emily-webb
American
Published
May 18, 2010
Lines·Words
37·427
Notes

triptych with prologue and epilogue

Permission

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