His heavy grip fisted a double whiskey into his gut until his head told  him it was not far from bursting. He went home and lay on the couch,  staring at the cracks in the ceiling and in his brain. His brain then  pushed itself into the microcosm of the parallel life. The one he could  have lived if he had ventured free from this day to day, or the one  which could have led him astray in its call to survival, or the other  one he dreamed of as a child, where all the parts of the dream were  clean and unfettered by experience and circumstance, and where fate  ruled the day. 
But none of those parallel lives happened to him.  He lay still and pretended the cracks in the ceiling (and in his brain)  were the branches of a tree, the tree that held all he had been and all  he couldn’t live up to, so full and tight that it was about to buckle  like his headache, down into the floor and through the street, into the  nightly sludge of other people drunk-dreaming the same thing. The sludge  was the color of lost money, of booze and rot, of old feelings that  never leave you, slowly gang greening its porridge brew into a pot  somewhere on the outer shore, where the witches stood near the railway. 
He  had to make a list. A list of things that would save him, a list of  prices he could live with paying. He got up and tossed a shoe that  didn’t belong to him (it was hers, the only one, how does a person leave  one shoe behind) down to the sound of a yapping dog somewhere to in the  alleyway, but the shoe hit nowhere near the dog and its furtively  confident belchy bark. Bastard reminder of another time and place. Funny  how the sound of a dog barking in the country is soothing from afar;  could be wild, running in the distance, reminding of the freedom still  pacing in each of us. But the measly city dog just happy to shit where  it eats and wanting to let the world know it’s fine to do so - well,  that just didn’t cut it. But city people, they weren’t much different,  were they. 
The best part of this late night roll call of  tremulous voices, illegible lists and calvinist shakes is that he Wanted  to be alone. Escaping all the possibilities that could hurt him. All  those people - ego lit their way like a cheap secondhand lamp, the kind  that gets marked up for well-dressed, clean couples at the antique shop  never having style, nor a place, nor anything that wanted its light.  That was most people if you shined the light far enough into them. He  felt no empathy for these clean people with filthy, dim souls, shopping  for happiness and self worth at the matchmakers. Cluttered full of  expectations of what and who their hearts should breathe in. They need  and want for a companion, desiring like the worst case of a beholder  without a muse. The opposite of a companion was usually delivered and  its purpose served quite unextraordinarily so. People often lived  together as two burnt out lamps (like a light bulb making a rattling  noise, you know you just have to throw it away, its no good...)  un-learning the beautiful tides that were offered them before they  fucked it up on their own and were forced to stumble blindly into the  flickering acquiescence of another fool. The other fool would tell them  that this loss of spark and purity was perfectly ok (since they  themselves couldn’t even remember what theirs looked like)…it would all  be ok…for awhile. Marriage and its backseat companion love (more the  scheme of love) shapeshifted into a shady loan offered by the meanest of  men in stiff suits. Self created co-signers to bullshit, bigger and  more faceless than a man and a wife, or even a woman and hen pecked  husband could be - they now only found themselves dirty on the outside,  hissing throughout, unaware of each other while standing at the side of  the road, with a “Will Work For < hissing >” sign. Bankrupt for  someone new to share their same old cracks, self contained skin,  unchanging colours, or their original room with.
There was no one  in his room. Hadn’t been for a very long time. Saying something to  scare them off was usually the best way to achieve this perfect  loneliness. But would he ever give in to that other way – tick tocking,  rock rocking - you wanting to smash their head in if they said another  word about their day, who they think they are, what they want, what they  think they need, all while reading the city paper in front of you. How  did they lose the sense of the Urgency. Whole food chains eating  themselves, universe in constant birth and bloody peril, the mental  cases killing their slaves --- can’t two people together know enough to  put the paper down, toss it into the fire and devour each other from  skin inwards, not just on the first day, but every single day forth? It  was too much for most people’s minds as they licked past and flipped  pages, people’s ideals were whipped from them hourly without the sexy  veil of a lady in leather boots. It usually happened much more quietly  than that. The sadder silent whip removed all the warmth, aliveness and  heart from people, leaving them to die a little down there every day.
But  didn’t he die a little in here alone every night. Or not. It pained him  to know they were so asleep in their freedom, and it pained him to know  he was too, but for these thoughts which accompanied him on his nightly  journey up the bare wall to the ceiling. The branches cracked, reaching  out to him - Jesus on his tree calling out as a warning. Better up on  the tree in the end, than in the mire everyday, choking up the sickly  muck of everyone’s sludge being shoved into his mouth. 
How could  he share this with anyone? Maybe their cracks were in the bottom of the  bathroom trash, or hiding with the feelings he himself tossed into the  bottom of the ocean just for the thrill of someone finding them. Still,  it’s hard to see deep down to the ocean floor. There would be other  nights, other rapturous dreams, other angry slipstreams on which to surf  over all our failures both alone and together; there was tomorrow and  the night after. The cracks weren’t going anywhere, but would he ever  climb on in, or up or over, and see who lay beyond them and if they  really saw. Could anyone every shine their light into his eyes again and  with it, his heart find rapture, and accord. He passed out before this  made any sense. The yapping dog was let back in about 5 minutes later.  The last whiskey he barely touched was still at his side.
~ M. Lucia
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