The unequivocal nature of a pointed gun.
‘You had better go now’
He felt his toes in his boots, his knees, his hips, all in a
line - all median, all
intermediate - straighten.
‘Very well'. He turned, buttoning his coat, all but the
buttons at the bottom, so as not to impede his stride.
He turned and walked, conscious of the barrel pointed at
him, leveled at the woolen centre of his back, where the S-shaped curve of his
spine was neither curving down, nor curving up. He was also conscious of the
crunch of the gravel under his feet, and he thought about the spaces in between
the gravel. If it were all lined up so its sides matched and pressed, would
there be much space saved? Could there be beneath his feet, ever, a flat carpet
of stone? Or would the oxygen seep in, disorganize the blocks, separate all the
factions?
And no less conscious was he of the silk of her skirts, the
skirts that he was leaving behind forever. Alas, the poor lover, he who had
tasted of the fruit, and never would again, who would never revisit that pneumatic
delight. He smelt the rich smell of her, like wine in the summer.
At the gate, he lofted the latch, watched the iron scrape
against iron in its frame. He thought about their marriage, thought about their
children in their nursery, the priest at the sacrament, the flowers as he
walked her down the aisle. He thought about the priest and the sightless choir
of stone angels. He thought about the freight of their commitment to each
other, all of the people who knew of the wedding, all of the guests, all the
paper of the invitations, piled up.
He heard the soft rasp of the gun cocking.
He felt his coat crease, felt his human soul bend, as he
stepped out of the gate.
No comments:
Post a Comment