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I watched your gracefully long, inflated fingers stretch out to dial a digital code on your silvery, slatted intercom, requesting, no, demanding, that Joel hustle his way through the humble halls to your dominion from the flaccid factory at the opposite end of the bulky building that you now so proudly owned, never willing to proffer credit for the generous growth to anyone but yourself. Sitting on the seventies colorific plaid sofa in the expanse of your stately second floor office I watched you shuffle papers, take a long drag of your slim menthol cigarette and call across the hall to a father unlike your own. Her father. That unfit, unworthy, plain Jane wife of yours. But he wasn’t really hers, because they were all hustling for you, weren’t they? I heard my Papa call over to you in his kind, quiet way, to ask you to go easy on the poor sucker journeying to your jurisdiction, which made your sky blue eyes crinkle with obvious revulsion at the thought of going easy on one of the many indolent soldiers doing your bidding in the catacombs of the facility, the likes of which you rarely, if ever, set that size 16 foot of yours. Immediately changing face, I watched as an enormous mustache-framed smile unfolded over your classically Russian, hand-carved vanilla face, like an animated Asian fan in a Geisha’s dexterous dance. You looked at me in boyish anticipation as you asked me, “Where shall we go for lunch today?” When Joel entered the vaulted, double doorway, he made no sound as he tread on the luxurious gold-threaded carpet that had been laid merely one week before, at the disgust of your father-in-law. As he entered, Joel’s hunched-back frame curved due left and anxiety clearly riddled his fearful face. He began to whimper aloud, like a bleating animal in line to be slaughtered, as your booming base bravado shook the white walls and made, even me, wince in astonishment. It was the first time that I saw your potent power, the likes of which I dared not ever ask to be directed toward me, the eldest of your clan and the most subservient of us all. I learned early on that Daddy knows everything important to know, that Daddy rules the rectilinear roost, that Daddy should not be questioned, even if my childish certainty told me otherwise. You needed me to believe in you. It was your right to be followed as a censured book of law in the judicial system of life. Once Joel’s injured suit of armor thumped its way out the detached double door, your face lightened five shades of pale and delight beamed through your bright eyes like a small child tasting the salty sweetness of your very first kaleidoscopic-colored candy. It was time for me to name the extravagant restaurant of my choice. It was once again you and I against the unworthy, wretched world. My know-it-all, darling Dad and your gifted little angel, the extension of yourself in all the best ways, granted I kept my mouth from moving and my words to a pleasant, flattering tone, like the finely spun fibers of your newly acquired, gilded carpet. Where shall we go, my foolish father? Direct me, for my innocent eyes are yet short-sighted to an intelligence such as yours. Help me get up from your stately sofa and build me a faulty foundation on which to stand my worthless and wanting self so that I may be worthy of the peripheral love that so far has eluded me.
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Feb 25, 2018
Feb 25, 2018 at 2:12 PM UTC
Foolish Father
I watched your gracefully long, inflated fingers stretch out to dial a digital code on your silvery, slatted intercom, requesting, no, demanding, that Joel hustle his way through the humble halls to your dominion from the flaccid factory at the opposite end of the bulky building that you now so proudly owned, never willing to proffer credit for the generous growth to anyone but yourself. Sitting on the seventies colorific plaid sofa in the expanse of your stately second floor office I watched you shuffle papers, take a long drag of your slim menthol cigarette and call across the hall to a father unlike your own. Her father. That unfit, unworthy, plain Jane wife of yours. But he wasn’t really hers, because they were all hustling for you, weren’t they? I heard my Papa call over to you in his kind, quiet way, to ask you to go easy on the poor sucker journeying to your jurisdiction, which made your sky blue eyes crinkle with obvious revulsion at the thought of going easy on one of the many indolent soldiers doing your bidding in the catacombs of the facility, the likes of which you rarely, if ever, set that size 16 foot of yours. Immediately changing face, I watched as an enormous mustache-framed smile unfolded over your classically Russian, hand-carved vanilla face, like an animated Asian fan in a Geisha’s dexterous dance. You looked at me in boyish anticipation as you asked me, “Where shall we go for lunch today?” When Joel entered the vaulted, double doorway, he made no sound as he tread on the luxurious gold-threaded carpet that had been laid merely one week before, at the disgust of your father-in-law. As he entered, Joel’s hunched-back frame curved due left and anxiety clearly riddled his fearful face. He began to whimper aloud, like a bleating animal in line to be slaughtered, as your booming base bravado shook the white walls and made, even me, wince in astonishment. It was the first time that I saw your potent power, the likes of which I dared not ever ask to be directed toward me, the eldest of your clan and the most subservient of us all. I learned early on that Daddy knows everything important to know, that Daddy rules the rectilinear roost, that Daddy should not be questioned, even if my childish certainty told me otherwise. You needed me to believe in you. It was your right to be followed as a censured book of law in the judicial system of life. Once Joel’s injured suit of armor thumped its way out the detached double door, your face lightened five shades of pale and delight beamed through your bright eyes like a small child tasting the salty sweetness of your very first kaleidoscopic-colored candy. It was time for me to name the extravagant restaurant of my choice. It was once again you and I against the unworthy, wretched world. My know-it-all, darling Dad and your gifted little angel, the extension of yourself in all the best ways, granted I kept my mouth from moving and my words to a pleasant, flattering tone, like the finely spun fibers of your newly acquired, gilded carpet. Where shall we go, my foolish father? Direct me, for my innocent eyes are yet short-sighted to an intelligence such as yours. Help me get up from your stately sofa and build me a faulty foundation on which to stand my worthless and wanting self so that I may be worthy of the peripheral love that so far has eluded me.
uandmeandmymonster
Written by
Feb 25, 2018
Feb 25, 2018 at 2:12 PM UTC
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