Screaming Driver
just came out of the doc’s
office—impressively, I’m
healthy as an alcoholic bull—
and some driver stuck in traffic began
yelling.
something about prison, cursing
everyone…
poor sod. maybe, his wife’s fucking the
young neighbour.
maybe, he never had a woman in his
life.
perhaps, his daughter’s dancing in a
strip joint,
perhaps, his son blows guys for smack.
maybe, he’s all alone, lost it all—
house foreclosed, family left, business
ruined—
and all he’s got left is his dumpster
fire car and
the chance to scream at the world.
he’s only one traffic light away from
death;
in some corner the wrong guys will
stand.
he’ll never be seen again; perhaps,
it’ll be one of the most lonesome
funerals.
I’m in my dive toasting my good health
and
thinking of that poor sod, who may
already be lying
lifeless and mangled in some gutter.
maybe, he’s at home, imprisoned inside
four cold walls,
somehow believing to be superior to
those around him.
“another one,” I tell the bartender;
well tequila
and the sod’s as dead as a Christmas
tree in March.
the fairytale ending I desired—like any
modern editor—and got
a hefty fix of realism. she’s gone, I’m
all alone.
it’s
alright, ‘cause that’s how life works.
I fail
to forgive myself for ever daring to
think the dream could
come true. I knew beforehand
the cruelty of life, yet I
still believed. I was shot down like a
rabid duck by a heartless hunter and,
unlike most modern editors,
I learned my lesson about happily ever
afters.
staring back at the cruel
timeline of past and present
I encounter nothing but the emptiness
that envelops me;
there’s no boozing,
no reveling;
long gone are the rowdy crowds
of a former life,
just like the line of hopeless addicts
waiting for their temporary cure.
into the abyss,
where are the nights
of hard drinking,
of abusing everything and anything?
gone; so simply, so brutally.
nothing left behind,
only the effects on the body,
on health; young death,
that’s fine.
I never truly expected to make it past
30
and I’m nearing the threshold.
coffee, to maintain some sanity;
cigarettes, because there’s one bad habit
that won’t be abandoned.
nevermore, the nights of mad carousing,
the hangover mornings that were spent
drinking vodka out of the bottle.
I close my eyes,
teleported to the place I never called
home
yet was more home than anywhere else;
I miss the blue clouds of smoke
rising from the glass-pipe;
I miss the sea of
empty bourbon bottles on the floor;
most of all,
I miss the two significant ghosts that
couldn’t be lost even in a flooded town
of shadows.
we tried to run,
but we were trapped;
we tried to hide,
but we were out in the open.
the monsters came, dragged us into
their inescapable realm.
we stayed because
we belonged.
midnight was lifted.
the veil was raised, the mist dissipated.
we stayed.
we met a couple of days ago,
in a dimlit dive; we chatted, kissed
goodnight—and she blew me in the
restroom. I cooked some dinner, she
arrived with
two six-packs of tuborg and a small bag
of pot. we polished some joints, drank
some beer,
ate the decent dinner. we kissed,
she went down on me
again, then I reciprocated the favour.
she climaxed, but
I was too tired to continue. we laid
down, she rolled a joint, and after a
few
puffs, I could get it up
again. come morning, she
left, I doubt I’ll ever
see her again; she’ll live forever,
though,
in this lowly, loveless poem.
George Gad Economou - Currently residing in Greece, George Gad Economou holds a Master’s degree in Philosophy of Science and supports his writing by doing freelance jobs whenever he can get them. Has published a novella, Letters to S. (Storylandia) and a poetry collection, Bourbon Bottles and Broken Beds (Adelaide Books). His drunken words have appeared in various literary magazines and outlets, such as Spillwords Press, Ariel Chart, Fixator Press, Piker’s Press, The Edge of Humanity Magazine, The Rye Whiskey Review, and Modern Drunkard Magazine.
good shit, here.....
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