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Tornado Alley

These kinds of stories are hard to find.

I posted up in a bar between

nowhere and a town named Ida

(probably named after some

sweetheart, that old southern name),

and in the characteristic openness

that I can only find during my travels,

I decided to say,

"hey stranger."

 

It was early in the evening,

he was a traveler too,

but of the trucking sort,

ashen eyes and

pale breathy skin,

we got talking amid

electric neon glow and

the pale blue light

that shown in through the rain.

 

His name didn't matter,

I won't tell you his name,

but the truckers know thumbers

(there are 5000 or so

across the country

at any given time),

and so he told me of a thumber.

 

This thumber was in the thunder,

clothes torn and eyes wide,

and with a mind that was,

at that point especially,

oblivious to the solidity

of the dry towel that was

set on the solid truck seat,

and, what a mess this boy was,

so by appearance, I presume,

it was easy to ask,

"what in the hell happened to you?"

 

It went like this:

the thumber turned those

wide open eyes

(I imagine he was shivering),

and told of how he was

walking, backpack and all,

and of how he smelled a storm

approaching, how when he

saw the treetops bending,

he expected the rain and

pulled a waterproof cover

over his pack just in time,

it started pouring.

 

This time the thumber,

he said he knew he had to

keep going,

he said he didn't like rolling

dice, no, he said it was a cheat

because if you knew enough

about throwing die the die

land the same, they land

the same enough.

 

So,

listen, have you ever

walked through heavy rain?

You get dizzy, but

in some deep part of your mind

in the spray, the insurmountable

lukewarmness stealing

a little with each blow,

you lose yourself,

and that's what I imagine

happened to this thumber.

 

At one point, the thumber

knew ground no more,

that's all he said. He said

he landed one county

over, that's all he said.

 

And by the jingling

of the die hanging

from the truck's rearview mirror,

one of the truckers laughed

and said ********

as the story of the thumber

came around,

what in all hell else could

you say?

And the thumber wiggled

his head and gave a queer

sneeze.

 

Against the neon glow

I peered at the trucker,

you can't tell an honest

man by his eyes but

you can tell it by his breath.

I shook my head and said,

"that's a kind of story that's

hard to find."

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
sean-fitzpatrick
American
Published
May 20, 2014
Lines·Words
94·446
Notes

I'm no writer but I hope someone smiles.

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