You
are sick again, filling your prescription at the counter in a feverish daze, back turned
to the fast walkers who cut through the crowd with shopping cart
weapons, cursing
yourself because you still want a cigarette. You finish
muttering your condition, hand
the
white slip to the coated, vague bodies, and turn around, looking for a place to
linger,
when you see him waiting for his name, sitting in the row of uniform
chairs, one empty
on either side of him. You sit down on his left, notice his
soiled skin, the wide-lined
scars,
the way his clothes hang on his frame as if one move would make them fall,
piece
by piece, until he is naked, another man with the same anatomy, labels on
the parts
that
make him alive. You feel like patting yourself on the back. No one else would
have
gotten
so close. A suited, fat man struts up to your scarred partner in waiting,
studies
his
appearance, asks him if he’d like a chance to better himself, to find a job, to
clean up,
leaves him a thick brochure, and drifts down the aisles with a holy
grin. The scarred man
shakes
his head, looks into you with blue eyes clear as an ache, strong as your
hacking
cough that just won’t go away, and says, You just never know about people, before he
grips your hand and
tells you his name, tells you to take care. There is nothing polite
in
the way his soft, tired voice works through his chest to his limbs, leaves the
thick lips.
Before he even spoke, you
knew him. Before he even took your hand, you were already
touching. A smile,
some kind of tug in your chest, and the joy of strangeness makes you
want
to collect everyone in a circle, close your eyes, listen to each mysterious
song
of
skin and bones, cup your hand around the closest ear, and whisper, Pass it on.
C.A.
MacConnell