Empty
Jennifer Lagier loves Friday night tequila shooters with all the dead snakes she has encountered in myriad bars.
He
used to take time
to
hide the dead soldiers
before
I got home,
mixed
alcohol
with
oxycodone,
marijuana,
cocaine.
Didn’t
want to hear
lectures
about his liver,
drunken
tumbles,
missed
work days.
Now
he doesn’t bother
to
camouflage the vodka bottle
with
bags of frozen vegetables,
too
hard to find
after
a handful of norcos,
two
or three bottles of wine.
By
midnight,
he’s
unresponsive,
video
games blaring,
booze
spilled on the carpet.
I
check respiration, pulse,
my
heart on empty,
wonder
whether to
celebrate
liberation
or
dial 911.
Hammer Time
Tonight
you are volatile,
pound
yourself into me
as
if I am an enemy
you
need to vanquish.
Screaming,
you throw
a
computer mouse across the room,
slam
the t.v. remote
against
my glass table.
You
take another bong hit,
pour
more shots of Crown Royal,
scowl,
dare anyone
to
incur your displeasure.
I
remember my father once told me:
if
your only tool is a hammer,
then
every problem looks like a nail
you
want to batter.
On the Town
The
barrista at Fermentations
shows
me the sixteen stitches
over
her eyebrow, tells me
how
the local physician’s assistant
sewed
her up for only $35.
She
promises an introduction,
my
insurance against
future
tanked-up disasters,
says
when I move here,
we’ll
be best buds forever.
At
Mozzi’s, old drunken hippies
play
rotation pool.
Nailed
to the ceiling,
a
wagon wheel light, signs
from
bankrupt local businesses.
Over-the-hill
sluts shriek,
expose
more side boob
than
necessary,
take
up all the bar stools.
A
bright yellow poster
hangs
on the door:
Guys: No Shirt-No Service
Gals: No Shirt-Free Drinks
This
is my kingdom;
these
are my people.
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