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The Wrong Pie

Walking back onto the street around nine O’clock

Pizzerias, Clubs and white guys with dreadlocks

Moving like sea urchins with an urge to mock

Hey 2 for one at Roxy’s for black rubber *****

 

I’m carrying two bags of groceries; One with a pie

There are no stars in the city. Just the moon in the sky

I move lazily and tired as evening joggers pass by

“God I wish I was more active.” I say with a sigh.

 

I ascend the stairs because the **** elevator is broken

One flight. Two flight. ******* wood surely is oaken

2 minutes of climbing the obstacle that’s unspoken.

I suffer for being the Asian, the part-Korean token.

 

I reach my apartment, music playing through the wall

I feel worn out and about ready to fall

But I walk in and proceed, feeling anything but tall.

The time has come. I walk to the kitchen from the hall.

 

I live with three roommates: Sam, Dean an Owen.

Sam is shut in his room. He’s a DJ and I think Samoan

Dean is weird. Don’t ask about flagellated protozoan

And Owen is a reader and blogger. Just plain Owen.

 

I place the groceries on the counter, I stumble.

Owen is reading and I hear him mumble

“Did you say something?” I grumble

“Wrong Pie.” He says, his words fumble.

 

“What?” I don’t understand

 

“Wrong pie.” Owen says again.

I point towards the pie on the table. “What, this?”

“Yeah.” He says.

“What’s wrong with it?”

“Everything.”

“Like what?”

“Well, it’s the wrong pie.”

“How?”

“It’s apple.”

“Yeah, so?”

“But I thought you were going to get cherry?”

I shrug my shoulders, “Yeah but they were out.”

“Where did you go?” Owen asked, but he knew.

“Just that corner market.”

“Well why the hell did you go there, you know they don’t have **** there.”

“Does it matter? I got most of the things.”

“Yeah, most. Not all. You didn’t get the right pie.”

“Does it matter?” I tell him. Owen closes his book.

“I think so.”

“At least I got a pie. You guys said, ‘Hey man, make sure you get a pie’. You didn’t say get a ******* cherry pie!”

I try to calm down, but the blasting of dubstep remixes warp my thinking process. Owen leaves the kitchen and knocks on the doors. He tells them I’m back and that I ******* up the groceries.

“I did no such thing!” I yell, “You ***** think you told me what to get but you’ll all too into yourselves to ever know what the **** you’re saying and you come off as ignorant over-privileged ******** Yeah Owen you’re so unique” I mock sarcastically, “Must be why you dress exactly the same as every other hipster here, going online and vlogging about the same **** a 12 year-old in suburban America would talk about and his ***** probably haven’t even dropped.”

Owen’s eyes are wide, never seeing this side of me before. Sam and Dean open their doors to see all the commotion.

I walk back in to the kitchen and grab the pie.

“Here ******* I toss the pie as hard as I can so it hits the ceiling. The tin tray falls to the ground and the apple crusted pie is splattered, stuck to the ceiling like an IKEA fan made of butchered apples.

I open the door. “Dubstep is just edited noises of transformers having ***

I slam the door and leave, walking back downstairs and onto the street

 

 

Roommates ******* **** I was tired of their **** and rules.

They used me for their homework, Working me like a mule

I’m barely able to pass my classes, let alone graduate from school

So trivial to help them just to earn my cool.

 

I flipped up my hood and rushed through the streets

I didn’t know where I was going, I didn’t care who I’d meet

A slice from Death Metal Pizza, a drink from Fat man Pete.

I need to let loose. Relax and take that invigorating leap.

 

I stumbled upon an old movie theater, playing classics, new and old

“I want tickets for all the shows.” To the box office I told.

I bought popcorn and milkduds. I think my chair had mold.

And watched as Al Pacino was out of jail; being paroled.

 

Carlito’s Way, then intermission

A glimmer of previews then Pulp Fiction.

Ezekiel 25:17 and blasts of omission

From Jules’ and Vincent’s handgun ammunition

 

After the credits roll I get three hot dogs and a large soda

Next movie: The Evil Dead, enough to put me in a coma

AH ******* demons Killing like the cancer of lymphoma

Scaring me and making me spill my watered-down cola.

 

Next was the Monty Python to ease the chills

Ensuring talking fish, puking and hilarious thrills

I really enjoyed the collective animation stills

I was relieved from the films and I had my fills

 

Now I had a good place to come and let loose, relax and laugh

And I wouldn’t have to display my clustered, boiled wrath

To my ******* roommates. Maybe I’ll move out on their behalf

We’ll see how it plays out. I’ll write a **** Off” graph.

 

But thanks to them I found a new way to survive

Which is better than the alternative; a desperate suicide

Watching movies late at night is better for me than to die

All ascertained from the incident of the wrong ******* pie.

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
trevor-gates
26 / M / American
Published
Apr 11, 2013
Lines·Words
84·913
Notes

Please forgive me for that middle section just being a straight narrative. I thought it would add comedic effect. This whole thing started out as a short story. I was converting everything to the rhyming scheme but I just loved what I originally had for that part that I just kept it like it was.

Lot's of fun in this one. i couldn't help but laugh to myself some of the ridiculous rhymes (or lack of) I was trying to squeeze in.

Good references in here to Pulp Fiction, Carlito's Way, Monty Python's The Meaning of Life and The Evil Dead.

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