{ Dead In the Water } // Taggerty ☩ Icarus
Oct 26, 2013 13:31:22 GMT -5
Post by loren on Oct 26, 2013 13:31:22 GMT -5
[ i c a r u s f a l l s ]
. vit de district IV .
. un l'homme seul .
. XVII ans .
"You've seen this all before
Life left on the shore
We're smiling all the same
You sail away again"
But really, if you are old enough to purchase alcohol, you'd think such maturity would be accompanied by basic math skills.
"I'm so sorry!" the woman blubbered, rummaging through a bag of bones for the extra change she needed to leave this hell with a bottle of whisky under her belt. I forced out a smile and nodded, as if these seven minutes of her gagging out apologies and me shaking my head with a "No need to apologize, Ma'am," and her piggish snorts as she hunted for spare change I was almost certain she didn't have did not bother me at all. As if I was more than happy to waste precious moments of my life, seconds I could have used whilst being ushered by Death into the abysmal pits of eternity to tell my grandfather he's an asshole or my history teacher that I blew up his car but in all honesty it was a horrible model anyway, a real death trap. And that I did him a favor. I could use my last breaths on earth on a laugh. On a good, wholesome chuckle as I watch that gaudy library near Town Square become embroidered in hot flashes of gold and gleam, fiery dancers in an exotic charade waltz about the beams as Shakespeare and Woolf and Socrates and Austen and Poe would follow me into the dark. I imagine my last seven minutes on earth as unsettled, a spectator who never finished the play, a singer who forgot the chorus to his own song. Because I already forgot my mother's voice, and if she called out for me after I left the fleshed and festering, I wouldn't know in which direction to run. Because I already forgot what my father looked like, so who would I know to look for when my eyes forget how to open. Because that idiot didn't think to bless me with the sin of knowing her face, I w
"It's fine," I say, smiling to costume the complete hatred I had for both the customer and mind-numbing inactivity of my own life. "Are you sure? she asked, a facade of concern imprinting itself into her brow as she reached for the glass bottle in my hands. I looked down at it, the liquid amber sloshing about its crystal confines mimicked the face of a boy: eyes entrenched in ditches of blue from thoughts too big to lie in bed with, skin a stranger to health and sunlight. I'm a gorgeous fucking monster, aren't I?
"Yeah, have a nice day. Please come again," I said, surrendering the bottle over to her. And I watched her scurry away, off to forget a face or find a phantom lover for a night. As far as I was concerned, the only spirits on earth existed in red cups and wine glasses. And they do their best to help heal the wounds we rather wish would bleed, if only until we fall asleep.
The brass bell belted out the only shrill, irritatingly repetitive note it knew throughout the store as the door beneath it swung open. I brought my fingers to my weary eyes and begun rubbing my lids in circles, wishing what every cashier desires of a customer: basic math skills or a checkbook. "Welcome to Theodore's Liquor," I greeted lazily, looking up and about the store, only to find the smallest buoy of curls bobbing behind an aisle of wine. The squeaking taps of adolescent feet trying to steal booze ring as clear to any liquor store worker's ears as church bells in the deathly silence of night.
"Steal anything, and I have reserved the right to kill you."
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