The Ship Canal. The Fremont. And the Ballard. The Montlake,
closed over the cut. There’s the Southwest Spokane Street
Swing bridge. And the University over Portage Bay. Linking
the U-District with the north. This is a city of bridges. One
hundred and forty nine at last count. Steel and concrete
skyways hanging in space. Stopped. On the Aurora. Eight
AM. Grinding a commute towards my grave. Life empty
like the passenger and back seats of my car. And there he
sits on the railing. Legs counterweighted above a concrete
walkway. Back to the sky. The rest of us cantilevered over
a gray expanse. Looks to be a hundred and fifty vehicles.
I figure a passenger in every other one. Two hundred or so
people. Which is how many have chosen, as Sartre put it,
to embrace the abyss. We name this bridge with relish.
Suicide Span. Fremont Falls. Tourist rightly call it the
George Washington. But Jumper’s Bridge rises as the
favorite. For the self-extinctively inclined, its thousand-yard
length, and two hundred foot drop into eternity, serve as a
stage to irresistible drama. This guy’s got to be surprised by
his reception. Half the drivers lean on their horns. The rest,
out of their cars gawk or yell. Jump. Jump. Egg the guy on.
He reels some as he pulls a pack of cigarettes from a
pocket. Lights one and inhales. Exhales. Wind yanks the
smoke overhis shoulder. It’s cold. One hand draws a nylon
jacket closed. Eyes wary, the other reaches down, unlaces
his shoes. Kicks them off. I half expect a priest to show,
bible in hand. Whisper a prayer maybe. Walk him down a
long corridor. Hand on his shoulder. Bare lights overhead. A
cop and two paramedics thread their way fast through a
crush of cars. Toward mid-span where the guy waits. More
police whoop-whoop their way to the outer fringe of the
crowd. A couple of women are closest. Try to talk him
down. He smiles his thanks. But no thanks. He lifts his
arms over his head. Leans into the emptiness. Pauses to
look at us a final time. Back flips into the end of his life.
The mob goes quiet. They climb back into their cars. Key
their ignitions. Crawl away north or south. Disappointed it’s
over. I stand there. Against the fender of my car. Hazard
lights still flashing. The cop who almost reached him walks
over. Looks at me. Why do you think he did it? I don’t know.
I’m just wondering what it felt like to finally stop falling.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Disconnect
I wander the halls of the interred, search the names
etched in marble or granite of those I might have known,
while their lives walk me vault to vault. I’ve come
seeking a last visit with you.
Save the Mexican caretaker, only I and the dead have
arrived for the ceremony that will honor you, bring
each of us a false peace. I fear I will not find you;
it is easy for the dead to hide from the living. We
are near certain they have just stepped away,
out of sight for a brief moment.
But at last I see you, in the rose garden. Sixty ounces
in an ornate urn wrapped in a tasseled felt bag. Atop
a wooden dais, where you can survey old and new
friends alike. Just you and I now, as we share a
moment before your procession of mourners comes
to lean upon each other, and commend your
soul to their separate heavens.
Your daughter and her sons are the first to join us;
your sister and her god take their front-row seats.
My brother would not come when you were alive,
why now? Your first husband sits sobbing, at home.
The second waits in the ground. Faces taut,
each mouth a rictus, as if it is they
whom we bury. A tired minister,
rented from the local classifieds,
takes his place before we gathered.
I do not fear the dead. For me they differ little
from the living, except they do not chatter
incessantly to keep terror at bay. Nonetheless I
am unsettled; you and I have changed in some way I
do not understand. I feel the disconnect while
holding my sister as she sobs. Pours your ashes into
a hole, her tears nourishing the soil to which you
return. I set a sapling maple in your hands; the
migrant porter sweeps dirt around its burlap
edges. I want to ask him who it is we
place in this earth.
Where is the coiffed blond hair, even into your
eighties; the perfect makeup? Your nightly cocktail
untouched. Your kitchen’s air suddenly
smoke-free. Why have you stopped laughing?
No longer seek the lights?
The old grave tender shakes our hands as we file out,
whispers his regrets. I tell him a week has passed,
and still you don’t answer your phone.
etched in marble or granite of those I might have known,
while their lives walk me vault to vault. I’ve come
seeking a last visit with you.
Save the Mexican caretaker, only I and the dead have
arrived for the ceremony that will honor you, bring
each of us a false peace. I fear I will not find you;
it is easy for the dead to hide from the living. We
are near certain they have just stepped away,
out of sight for a brief moment.
But at last I see you, in the rose garden. Sixty ounces
in an ornate urn wrapped in a tasseled felt bag. Atop
a wooden dais, where you can survey old and new
friends alike. Just you and I now, as we share a
moment before your procession of mourners comes
to lean upon each other, and commend your
soul to their separate heavens.
Your daughter and her sons are the first to join us;
your sister and her god take their front-row seats.
My brother would not come when you were alive,
why now? Your first husband sits sobbing, at home.
The second waits in the ground. Faces taut,
each mouth a rictus, as if it is they
whom we bury. A tired minister,
rented from the local classifieds,
takes his place before we gathered.
I do not fear the dead. For me they differ little
from the living, except they do not chatter
incessantly to keep terror at bay. Nonetheless I
am unsettled; you and I have changed in some way I
do not understand. I feel the disconnect while
holding my sister as she sobs. Pours your ashes into
a hole, her tears nourishing the soil to which you
return. I set a sapling maple in your hands; the
migrant porter sweeps dirt around its burlap
edges. I want to ask him who it is we
place in this earth.
Where is the coiffed blond hair, even into your
eighties; the perfect makeup? Your nightly cocktail
untouched. Your kitchen’s air suddenly
smoke-free. Why have you stopped laughing?
No longer seek the lights?
The old grave tender shakes our hands as we file out,
whispers his regrets. I tell him a week has passed,
and still you don’t answer your phone.
A gray crush of coals
When I was a kid my dad would build fires that raged for
hours. Propped upon the floor by elbows, chins cupped in
our hands, my sister and I would lie inches from the
fireplace. Caught in the hypnotic blue-tipped flame and
radiating heat, we were spellbound. He tended these fires
well. Kept them burning with poker and thong. He would
position and reposition oak logs. Provide vents for updrafts.
A hot fire is a clean fire he lectured my sister and me. And
never a wisp of smoke or residue escaped his fiery
destruction. As the blaze softened we’d move closer and
marvel at the embers of red and gold. It was easy to
imagine make-believe buildings. Engulfed in flame. Their
interiors consumed, leaving crimson skeletons charred and
gutted. A blue corona of St. Elmo’s fire. Turned to ash while
we watched. My father was a clean man who cared for
things, little for people. When cinders cracked and flew from
the grate to land on his carpet, his voice would freeze us: I’ll
be a son of a bitch! But eventually he’d lose interest, find
the news on TV or a second piece of pie from the night’s
dinner, long cooled. He would leave little evidence of
previously set fires. Along with the molten pitch that had
vaporized, each log and every piece of kindling was reduced
to a cold residue. When all he set fire to had completely
burned away, he would sweep its remains into a waiting
coffee can. Now I’m older than he was when he unknowingly
taught me his lessons. With wood, paper and kindling lying
on the hearth, I revisit the memories of a child grown old,
the remnants of my first fire in years now only a
gray crush of coals. The only sound I hear, the hiss of my
tears fallen on hot ash.
hours. Propped upon the floor by elbows, chins cupped in
our hands, my sister and I would lie inches from the
fireplace. Caught in the hypnotic blue-tipped flame and
radiating heat, we were spellbound. He tended these fires
well. Kept them burning with poker and thong. He would
position and reposition oak logs. Provide vents for updrafts.
A hot fire is a clean fire he lectured my sister and me. And
never a wisp of smoke or residue escaped his fiery
destruction. As the blaze softened we’d move closer and
marvel at the embers of red and gold. It was easy to
imagine make-believe buildings. Engulfed in flame. Their
interiors consumed, leaving crimson skeletons charred and
gutted. A blue corona of St. Elmo’s fire. Turned to ash while
we watched. My father was a clean man who cared for
things, little for people. When cinders cracked and flew from
the grate to land on his carpet, his voice would freeze us: I’ll
be a son of a bitch! But eventually he’d lose interest, find
the news on TV or a second piece of pie from the night’s
dinner, long cooled. He would leave little evidence of
previously set fires. Along with the molten pitch that had
vaporized, each log and every piece of kindling was reduced
to a cold residue. When all he set fire to had completely
burned away, he would sweep its remains into a waiting
coffee can. Now I’m older than he was when he unknowingly
taught me his lessons. With wood, paper and kindling lying
on the hearth, I revisit the memories of a child grown old,
the remnants of my first fire in years now only a
gray crush of coals. The only sound I hear, the hiss of my
tears fallen on hot ash.
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