The column is blurry, someone cleans it only when their are inspections.
The bookbag has been sitting collecting the sounds that leave the Staten Island Ferry by foot, for God knows how long.
When you get off, everyone looks ahead, but out of the corners an entire black sea of iris' rotates to the aluminum column.
It might be a bomb.
The girl behind the Ms. Anne's counter is skinny almost, but her *** is too big, almost.
Munching on the semi-soft pretzel, you think about empty calories and the corners of your mouth get sticky.
The Ferry won't be back, for another thirty or so minutes.
Somebody takes out a guitar, and starts playing a little Dylan. People form a circle around him. This is the American Pow-wow.
You reach in your breastpocket for the Marlboros, but you can't smoke here, and an official looking person squints at you, just to drive the point home.
******* smoking laws, some places just feel good.
This place with all it's ringy sounds, like the guitar, and phones beeping with texts and babies, deep fathers, and high mothers.
Just to puff and puff and push that sugar down with nicotine would really up this feeling of comradery.
A guy with a gold-plated shield on his breastpocket and a blue-button down. Walks over to the bag.
The iris' move, people keep talking but they're just saying words to make it look like they're talking.
By the time the ferry rings in baritone, the bag is gone; the column is still blurry; the man is still playing his guitar, but there's an emptiness.