He Went to the Bahamas, His Luggage Went to
Saudi Arabia
There is little reason to pack
if your luggage will not be joining
you.
And he sat on the suitcase, trying to
keep everything down.
Imagined some hairy dumb Stasi Queen
from Customs
demanding he undue all his hard work.
So Father Interpol could take a gander
at his folding prowess,
rifle through the wholesale
unmentionables.
Everything delayed that had not
already left the ground.
All the sniffer dogs lost to cocaine
heaven.
And boarding the plane with an air tag
tucked away with his ratty toothbrush.
Sitting in economy, waiting for the
stewardess to come by
and smile at him in noticeable anger.
Taxied around the tarmac like a child
that must be rocked
to keep from crying.
He went to the Bahamas, his luggage
went to Saudi Arabia.
Someone has to go to Mecca.
Visit Chop Chop Square during “off
hours.”
The resort he was staying at in Nassau
gave him a room facing the beach.
Folded his welcome towels into the
shapes of many
non-threatening animals.
And that fine brown gentleman behind
the pool bar
who didn’t speak a lick of the Queen’s
English.
Pointing to a sign that said he was
trained in CPR.
Pouring doubles and triples of
everything
like the rest of the known world
was happening on someone else’s dime.
Mechanically Separated Cars
The auto body shop over on
Delilah
looks like a scrap yard with hydraulic
lifts.
Mechanically separated cars
behind large bay doors that don’t
close properly.
Makes you wonder about their body work
when they can’t even get the doors to
their business right.
The shop foreman is always yelling.
Like a bullhorn with a massive beer
belly.
Sweats surly daredevils through his
shirt,
stale whiskey on the breath.
His employees pulling things apart
that they don’t seem capable of
putting back together.
The prices on a large whiteboard
behind the cash.
Scrawled in tiny blue chicken scratch
which is barely legible
and seems to change every day.
Ah, to be a greasy pinup girl on the
wall!
The things I would see and hear.
Take a card, leave a message.
Oil spots like fists brought to
punches.
He Said the Hadron Collider Sounded Bad for
His Insurance
Even basic interaction terrified him,
which explained why the guard was
always up
and the camera always off,
and when someone told him about all
those
experiments they were doing over in
Switzerland,
he asked why they couldn’t just stick
with chocolate,
said the Hadron Collider sounded bad
for his insurance;
they had a good thing going with their
chocolate
and now they had to go mess with his
premiums
which kept going up each month like
that gong
at the top of the strongman’s hammer
at the county fair
that always made you feel stronger
than
you really were.
If You’re So Gutted, Why Don’t You Become a
Bloody Fish?
The threat of nuclear war is the same
as the threat
of anything else.
Your immediate fear and compliance are
required, nothing else.
Now, it is your many public claims to
be “inconsolable!”
If you’re so gutted, why don’t you
become a bloody fish?
Blow bubbles for the Hubba Bubba
lobby?
You remember that sickly pink
packaging?
They sold the damn thing as an edible
tape!
Can you believe that?
I’m still too stuck on where we were
to ever worry about where we could be.
I have never been that big on the
theoreticals.
If you want to feel bad about
something that hasn’t happened,
go right ahead.
I’ll be cleaning mushrooms over the
sink
like Generalissimo Oppenheimer.
For an early dinner at my place.
Assuming I still have one.
Swami Salami
Meat is a grinder,
suctioned blue lid Tupperware squares
of refrigerated crumble,
and this Swami Salami I roll up right
here
in front of valet parking
that I got from the many plastic hair
guard shave ladies
gossiping their way through another
shift
at the klutzy 3-second rule
delicatessen,
gloved and bagged and brought back
home,
so I can run the oils through my hands
like striking it rich while pats on
the back
ride the rails out of Time
and planes fall out of sky like
unscheduled confetti dropping
off the radar in blip blip
panicked hand your headset
to a supervisor
real time.
Ryan
Quinn Flanagan is a
Canadian-born author residing in Elliot Lake, Ontario, Canada with his wife and
many bears that rifle through his garbage. His work can be found both in
print and online in such places as: Evergreen Review, The New York
Quarterly, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Red Fez, and The Oklahoma
Review.
Another "good Canadian boy" (Don Cherry). Loved these.
ReplyDeleteThanks!!
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