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It was one of those black, crystalline winter mornings. There was no moon or stars that could be seen. The coastal storms had harried our Midwestern weather pattern, dosed us with perhaps, a little more winter than we’d previously been ready for.   Out the door, on the street, just before five o’clock in the morning. The air is not still, but doesn’t have much movement to it. This breeze has teeth though, they bite hard enough that everything in me says that it might be a good idea to stop, turn around, get back under the covers, hideout for a few more hours. But, I’m already out here. I’ve chosen the Phillips 66 sign as my adopted moon, letting it guide my steps. I pass by that mechanic’s yard. The yellow IROC Z-28 stares at me with her dim headlights, reflecting the light of that ‘not-a-moon’ moon we’d both elected to go in for.   “I used to go fast”, she says. “Me too”, I say and keep walking. There was a time that I wanted that car like I’d wanted women I had known during years and versions of myself long gone. Really though, I don’t know what I would have done with those yellow fishtailing hips, those screaming tires, that black vinyl-wrapped steering wheel. Yeah, that car was very much like those long-lost lusted for women, in that I’d have been flummoxed as to what to do with them after a while. There are only so many red lights to run, so many hairpin turns to take, holding that yolk for dear life. There are only so many mindless rolls in the sack, only so many beers with bourbon sidecars. I keep walking. That yellow Camaro winks at me a few more times under the light of that gas-station moon. I keep walking. Nowadays we’d both make that same quarter-mile run to the Phillips 66 in the same amount of time. However, she’s all caged up in that chain-link lot. I’m not. I’m free. I’m cold, but where I’ll end up, I’ll fill up on biscuits and gravy, sit in a warm booth, hope that someone has already left a morning paper behind, and stare into the inky, starless pre-dawn sky. Likely becoming hopelessly infatuated with my adopted moon. *** -JBClaywell © P&ZPublications
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Dec 29, 2018
Dec 29, 2018 at 8:36 PM UTC
Adopted Moon
It was one of those black, crystalline winter mornings. There was no moon or stars that could be seen. The coastal storms had harried our Midwestern weather pattern, dosed us with perhaps, a little more winter than we’d previously been ready for.   Out the door, on the street, just before five o’clock in the morning. The air is not still, but doesn’t have much movement to it. This breeze has teeth though, they bite hard enough that everything in me says that it might be a good idea to stop, turn around, get back under the covers, hideout for a few more hours. But, I’m already out here. I’ve chosen the Phillips 66 sign as my adopted moon, letting it guide my steps. I pass by that mechanic’s yard. The yellow IROC Z-28 stares at me with her dim headlights, reflecting the light of that ‘not-a-moon’ moon we’d both elected to go in for.   “I used to go fast”, she says. “Me too”, I say and keep walking. There was a time that I wanted that car like I’d wanted women I had known during years and versions of myself long gone. Really though, I don’t know what I would have done with those yellow fishtailing hips, those screaming tires, that black vinyl-wrapped steering wheel. Yeah, that car was very much like those long-lost lusted for women, in that I’d have been flummoxed as to what to do with them after a while. There are only so many red lights to run, so many hairpin turns to take, holding that yolk for dear life. There are only so many mindless rolls in the sack, only so many beers with bourbon sidecars. I keep walking. That yellow Camaro winks at me a few more times under the light of that gas-station moon. I keep walking. Nowadays we’d both make that same quarter-mile run to the Phillips 66 in the same amount of time. However, she’s all caged up in that chain-link lot. I’m not. I’m free. I’m cold, but where I’ll end up, I’ll fill up on biscuits and gravy, sit in a warm booth, hope that someone has already left a morning paper behind, and stare into the inky, starless pre-dawn sky. Likely becoming hopelessly infatuated with my adopted moon. *** -JBClaywell © P&ZPublications
jay-claywell
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Dec 29, 2018
Dec 29, 2018 at 8:36 PM UTC
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