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Jimmy silker Sep 12
That scene in breaking bad
Jessie's been
Relentlessly listening
To his dead girlfriends
Outgoing message
For weeks on end
On a loop
In a tunnel
He sought to pretend

Mid cycle
The provider
Cuts it off
Replaced with
A tinny ersatz ladies's voice

The number you have called does not exist

About one of the loneliest
Depictions that I have seen
I felt my vertebrae tighten
The sadness obscene.
Guilt and longing.
Jimmy silker Sep 11
Time's flywheel
Captures your wasted ergs
And doesn't give em back
It sends them elsewhere
Out there
Acrackling
Down the track.
Jimmy silker Sep 11
Lay on an open hill
On this strong
Autumn morning
The warmth
And the light
Both exciting
And calming
Place a big green leaf
If you can still find em
Over each eye
And go back to reclining
Let the light
Hit the flesh
And filter through
To your own
Feel the history
Of Earth
You
And you
Alone.
No one for miles
Jimmy silker Sep 10
He's got you in his teeth
It's worse for him than you
Cos when he dies
From the absess
You can simply push on through
Out the mouth
Out the prison
Out into the light
Don't look back
Just walk forward
Everything
Will be alright.
Jimmy silker Sep 10
They pulled up
The alabaster floor
And sold it to the Greeks
So finely levelled
Perfect
For bas relief
The British later
Swept them off to London
Along with
Other purloined stones
Rose granite
And
Corundum
I hope they get em back
The return I applaud
Of course then
They'll  have to
Wipe em clean
And swiftly relay the floor.
She left Reno
in a satin slip
the color of hot coins
pouring from slots,
wearing chewed-up tennis shoes,
mirrors multiplying her,
the marquee burning out
letter by letter,
a hush pressed between her teeth
as if saving the last note.

I followed,
a gangly shadow,
mother’s voice in my ear:
life is not a freeway exit.
But she was the exit.
She drove west
through a glittering throat.

In Tonopah she was a waitress
with red stains on her wrists,
the sleeves tugged low,
coffee pouring thin as blood.
In Barstow she was a sun-bleached Madonna,
halo blistered, mouth lit in stained glass.
At a gas station in Needles
she shimmered into a coyote’s shadow
and slipped behind the pumps.
Everywhere,
a new disguise,
a flicker at the edge of vision.
Not the whole leap,
just rehearsal.

Casinos blinked like electric relics.
Truckers called her sugar,
greedy hands counting her ribs
as if she were a paycheck
sweating in their fist,
but she slipped away each time,
her silhouette already moulting-
a serpent skin, a smoke-trail,
a saint’s shadow burning off the wall.

By Malibu the night
had softened to velvet.
The pier at Zuma
leaned into the Pacific
like a broken rib.

She sang once-
low, cracked, unfinished-
and the slip fell from her
like the last lie.
Her body cut into the dark tide,
this time there was no disguise.

I waded in after her,
ankles bruised by rock.
The sea lit with jellyfish,
not lanterns but wires,
each pulse a warning,
each glow a wound.

Standing at the highway’s end-
no exit left,
just the Pacific’s mouth
closing around her.
Entry: recovery and renewal- route: Black Rock Desert to Zuma
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