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A man poses at a dimly lit table, a light hangs directly overhead with a cobweb ribbon-wrapped around the steel wire escaping the ceiling. An inverted roulette table, a man betting against the house: It is always this way. Light flickers, flipped on, and off, and on, without a switch with which to assert control. He is alone in the squeaking chair, sipping tea and dipping his crumb-covered hands into the napkin-covered basket of water crackers and salted peanuts. Sitting, he poses for practice, but for now, he practices for no one. The house is empty. In the back of his mind, there is no worry of what one will find upon entering the kitchen: A scarecrow at a table, full of straw and teeth dulled down from night grinding, sitting in, what could be mistaken as, a pensive position. The scavenger hand makes him look wanting. It's partner is propped on chin, accompanied by his half-sculpted smile and the dark-light contrast of his hair and eyes with yellow shining off of his two front teeth. The color is not the fault of stumbling home too late to care for the mouth, but of the old incandescent staring him down and the obsessively clean, marble surface at which he puckers his face. A tapping in the hall stirs his bones and his body darts up. A crow, it seems, with small grey beak has wandered in from the overgrown fields, the fields that haven't been tended to since this boy began taking himself too seriously. The both of them with stilts for legs and no breeze of running feet from scream to sway the pair of pairs. Their eyes connect and neither moves. Who should place the first bet, black or red, and who will set the ball in motion? The light goes off. Denoument is a bad time for a bulb to die. As calm as a hand with razorblade against skin, the scarecrow sits down once again and poses. The bird observes his motion, calls, and waits, but the man moves no more, overjoyed with an invisible audience, a full stomach.
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Aug 16, 2012
Aug 16, 2012 at 3:05 AM UTC
The Nighttime Scarecrow
A man poses at a dimly lit table, a light hangs directly overhead with a cobweb ribbon-wrapped around the steel wire escaping the ceiling. An inverted roulette table, a man betting against the house: It is always this way. Light flickers, flipped on, and off, and on, without a switch with which to assert control. He is alone in the squeaking chair, sipping tea and dipping his crumb-covered hands into the napkin-covered basket of water crackers and salted peanuts. Sitting, he poses for practice, but for now, he practices for no one. The house is empty. In the back of his mind, there is no worry of what one will find upon entering the kitchen: A scarecrow at a table, full of straw and teeth dulled down from night grinding, sitting in, what could be mistaken as, a pensive position. The scavenger hand makes him look wanting. It's partner is propped on chin, accompanied by his half-sculpted smile and the dark-light contrast of his hair and eyes with yellow shining off of his two front teeth. The color is not the fault of stumbling home too late to care for the mouth, but of the old incandescent staring him down and the obsessively clean, marble surface at which he puckers his face. A tapping in the hall stirs his bones and his body darts up. A crow, it seems, with small grey beak has wandered in from the overgrown fields, the fields that haven't been tended to since this boy began taking himself too seriously. The both of them with stilts for legs and no breeze of running feet from scream to sway the pair of pairs. Their eyes connect and neither moves. Who should place the first bet, black or red, and who will set the ball in motion? The light goes off. Denoument is a bad time for a bulb to die. As calm as a hand with razorblade against skin, the scarecrow sits down once again and poses. The bird observes his motion, calls, and waits, but the man moves no more, overjoyed with an invisible audience, a full stomach.
joseph-valle
Written by
American
Aug 16, 2012
Aug 16, 2012 at 3:05 AM UTC
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