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The Desert

I staggered through the desert, dressed in brown rags, ripped. I was surrounded by flies. They picked at my sweaty forehead, spoiled my food. I had in an old wicker basket two crisp apples, which are brown now, thanks to those flies. My feet are dry, cracked and ****** not from flies— from hot scorpions. They hide under sand and pick at my feet. One day I left my house n’went for a walk; kicked open my front door         walked over the old stone bridge over water bright and blue, for         miles and miles, on footpaths by little rivers, through mossy forests, knee-deep in marshes, hiking over rocky, cold mountains, stammering across the plains. I saw the desert: punched me in the gut. Beautiful, I thought— immortal. A great tornado of sand came whisking from the dunes. I checked my watch: The glass was shattered. The hands were bent crooked. I unstrapped my watch and threw it on the edge of the desert and I sprinted toward the endless tan horizon, kicked off my rotten shoes         to feel the hot sand between my toes and ran. I fell and fell asleep. I was bored in my old, old house. The floor was always swept to shine, my bookcase: big, glossy, oak monstrosity. And no, I did not have a wife, or children. I lived in a sunny village, paved with stone. By the fountain, birds sang, merchants sold felt and mallets. I’m too tired for explanations. And besides, there is no trick, I left to leave, to run and jump and roll and howl. I knew it would end, like this or something similar. I decided to just lie down, and the vultures came like a great black cloud to circle, and the heat, the headache, my body buzzed cooled a dizzy, breaking feeling came and body was freed         like ice smashing to shards . . . on desert floor, old rags drenched         in sweat-body. I open my eyes wide. I keep them open. Tears come to my eyes. I let the sun blind me. I turn over on my side and close my eyes, see red. My eyelids are hot. The vultures caw and shriek like squealing pigs. I’m dizzy and my head feels thick. The vultures will eat me, rip my skin with beaks, and the flies will buzz around me until I’m bones, but I came here just to come here, and I lied here just to lie, and I lived just to live, so then I’ll die now just to die.
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Written by
la-hall
American
Published
Nov 19, 2013
Lines·Words
76·425
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