Two weeks ago, on a day that I'm making up for this story, I was in the city. I don't prefer the city, because you can't see the stars. They are being snubbed out by streetlights and to me it makes everything seem uglier, without the stars.
Anyway, I was sitting on a ***** riverbank. It wasn't actually dirt though, because people in cities have forgotten what dirt smells like and tastes like and feels like between their toes.
It was the city kind of *****: spent condoms and cartridge rounds syringe needles and bags of brown scraps of metal and wrappers of plastic gooey globs of gum and broken glass bottles.
I won't lie, I had a glass bottle to call my own, about half full of the Good Stuff and I was feeling mighty fine about killing it alone.
When I looked skyward and off to the right, I noticed a city bridge, what with its' running lights and dangling cables and roaring traffic, it was standing in stark contrast to the quiet county bridges of my home.
At this point, and it may have been the *****, but I could've sworn I could see someone on the bridge clinging to a tether swaying in the swift city breeze.
I had only just convinced myself otherwise, that it would actually turn out to be a bag of fast-food garbage hastily tossed out by a careless city-dweller, that the man let go and he fell. he flailed his arms and failed to gain traction and kicked his legs but they abandoned him in midair and he fell.
I was close enough, and listened and I heard him go splat against cold water.
I was jealous of his bravery. I envied his resolve. I admired him. I lusted after his finality.