There’s a horror in the city but it’s always Halloween in someone’s basement in the suburbs the closets are inundated with skeletons each dressed in friendly attire but never opening the door the neighbors always watching through sheer curtains binoculars at the ready instead of candy on doorsteps there’s signs of beware of the maniac with the pistol locked and loaded watching the 6’oclock news no apocalypse is breaking into our windows tonight there’s a hum and it’s making all the locals go mad they still haven’t figured out it’s the cicadas not demons in their trees looking for a discount lunch the desert is a harsh place when the sun is drawn sloppily on the right hand corner of a page the houses all uniformed for the drought to come each manicured lawn is a haunting for the unemployed drunk in the nearby trailer park the ghosts of those whose Christmas doesn’t come in stockings but stalking and restraining orders the spookiest part is not the slasher hotels or the creature feature shows at the bars and clubs but the calm, serene and unsettling manner in which everyone congregates on Sunday morning to be cleansed of impurities, each smile stretching farther and farther until the seconds drip into communion wine until the hours dissolve in one’s mouth like god’s flesh reinvented, resuscitated, resurrected
Arise, my brothers for the pastor is watching there’s a twinkle in his eyes and there are boys missing after every ceremony but no one questions why