Men Of The Night
Pushing
down hard on the top of the moke’s head,
the
cop bends him into the cell-like back seat
of
the black-and-white,
causing
rain to run around his collar and down his back,
co-mingling
with the flop sweat
(yeah,
the perp had done the crime alright;
they
caught him cold on that), and turning
his
tee-shirt to a swamp grey.
His
arms, cuffed behind his back, are oozing
from
scratches and tears all the while he is shoved,
jostled
and cursed while sirens blast and
radio
code cop-speak fills the squad car,
punctuated
with the heavy thump of windshield wipers
sweeping
across what has turned out to be hell night
and
he wonders what happens next.
Where
you taking me?
To
the station. We have a stop to make first.
The
prisoner looks at his feet, one shoe on, the other
somewhere
on the sidewalk, ripped and wet.
He
wants to close his eyes and run the ragged edge
of
the home-sewn bluejean cuff between his
index
finger and thumb over and over, back and forth,
feeling
the coarse material but that is
impossible
with
his arms behind his back.
Nothing
hurts yet.
Brief
Bio: Gene McCormick is no longer a rampaging, felonious “man of the night.” When
the sun goes down, it is bedtime. Usually.
Gene, your writing and artwork just get more complex and intense!
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