On a cold autumn day, on the edge of a railroad bridge, fifteen feet high, a young bulky black kid contemplates the impact, the end awaiting him
on the surface of a historically winding boulevard. Below, service men and women stand wet from rain, stand huddled, foggy with confusion.
A paramedic, understanding the surgeon’s warning, stands poised, close by, blowing curls of smoke from her thin lips. Had I the nerve, or just the access,
I would climb the slick, grassy hillside that leads to the old rusted train tracks and ask the young boy for his thick hands, ask him what he thinks the moment was
like before L’Wren Scott held the rope in her hands, the last breath in her lungs? I’d ask him what he thinks it was like before Don Cornelius planted
cold metal against his head and pulled the trigger? Ask him what he thinks was in the oven before Plath entered the kitchen?