"Gibson jr, Ron - Blackout" - читать интересную книгу автора (Gibson Ron)Blackout
by Ron Gibson, jr. These days I canТt help but notice the measured silence of drought. ItТs like death. I miss the singsong Northwest mantra of rain falling, ticking panes like time. Instead, the mountain reservoirs retreat from their shores, falling back over exposed stumps and Native American bones left naked by centuries of murder. Salmon dive suicidally headlong into turbines, ignoring fish ladders. And lights blink out in response; rolling brownouts becoming the WestТs version of MontezumaТs Revenge. Everybody is paying their penance: inflated electric bills and reservation casino losses. I canТt seem to find any peace, anymore. My neighbor stops at the edge of our domains, his schnauzer shitting on the lawn (usually mine), to tell me he finds promise in a tax cut proposal, like his wife finds promise in goldenrod envelopes with Ed McMahonТs likeness on the front. He then checks up and down our street, and when his conscience feels it is safe to cross, he confidentally whispers that the "niggers" are taking over our town. He warns that our property values will decrease and our crime rates will increase. And he keeps assuring my silent disdain with: "itТs a proven fact." And I canТt help but wonder what happened to the days when years went by without a word exchanged with my neighbors. But now itТs too quiet. Except for the television. News snippets show people flash anger over Boeing moving away, and I canТt help but think itТs time for me to do the same. Time to see whatТs past the dusty rain gutter and gray satellite dish rooftops. Time to canoe through Canadian-geese-shit-filled, man-made ponds, built inside overnight-raised apartment complexes. To see whatТs over that hill, where the landfillТs methane gas torches blaze all day and night. Where 747Тs descend and sink into its fire; an illusion. But itТs no magic. I know what is over that hill, past those freeway overpasses, past those sunset-stained copses hiding the vein of the Green River and traces of a dead serial killer. I know the unmarked territory where fourteen-year-old runaways age exponentially with each trick they turn, and in which all-day-and-night-parked Winnebagos arenТt filled with Okies, but meth labs. I know that Sea-Tac is waiting with a jet. A jet that will take me 20,000 feet into the atmosphere before my bladder bursts like an overfilled water balloon. All the Vicodin-popping parties in New York could not dissuade me of the facts. I flip through the channels awhile before halfheartedly watching the lesbian relationship between Xena and her little poet friend. But I donТt have enough time to worry if IТm just another A.D.D. addled Gen XТer that hasnТt read Douglas Coupland, when the power blinks off. I imagine a huge map, the Western power grid, state connected to state, like firing circuits of the brain, all at once fading into night, like the dark clouds of disease on a CAT scan image. But the seashell silence is broken with my neighborТs yelling. I look out my window, cast in the oily sheen of stars, and see his shadow rush inside his house. I canТt help but notice the peaceful moments before he returns and unloads round after round at imaginary looters, like a paranoid banderillero on peyote chasing shadows of bulls. I duck down, quick, before his crosshairs catch my silhouette. In this dark, nobodyТs safe. Ron Gibson, Jr. is a twenty-six year old writer residing in Kent, Washington. He has previously appeared in The Pittsburgh Quarterly, Stirring, Mindkites, Perimeter, The Storyteller, Poetry in Motion, Identity Theory, Comrades UK, This Hard Wind, The Green Tricycle, A Writer's Choice, New Works Review, EWG, upcoming in Suspect Thoughts, etc. He's been nominated by The Pittsburgh Quarterly for The Best of the Web Anthology 2001, included in an anthology of short fiction in Slovenia, to be edited and translated by Susan Smith Nash, recently included in an anthology entitled: In Our Own Words: A Generation Defines Itself Vol. 3, and received honorable mention in the First Annual Mandy Poetry Contest. |
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