Don't 
Drink the Water
No 
subject was safe
with him, 
especially
the 
weather.
I watched 
as he worked
the aisle 
of the bus,
moving 
from seat to seat,
diagonally along the rows
attempting to engage
the 
unwary in conversation,
"Lousy 
weather we're
having, 
isn't it?
I'll bet 
you don't know
why 
either, it's them
weather 
satellites 
the 
government's been
putting 
up in the sky.
Messes up 
the atmosphere,
that's 
really what
they're 
for, who do you
think 
they're called
weather 
satellites?
I'll bet 
you never
thought 
of that before
did 
you?  And that's 
not
the half 
of it.
The 
government's been
putting 
stuff in our
drinking 
water,
supposed 
to be for your
teeth but 
it makes
people 
crazy."
"That 
would explain
what 
happened to you,"
I said, 
"Wouldn't it?
I'll bet 
the moral
of the 
story is:
Don't 
Drink the Water."
"Who are 
you anyway?"
he asked 
me.
"A 
government agent 
in 
disguise." I said.
He turned 
pure white,
pulled 
the stop rope,
muttering, "I think
I'll walk 
from now on."
I haven't 
seen him since.
The Grand Marshall of  Nowhere
Settling on the rickety, out of balance
bar stool, he said, “There’s a warrant 
out for my arrest. On another planet.” 
Most people making a statement
like that would be totally disregarded
under the assumption what he said 
was just some obscure shock value, 
in-the-moment thing or maybe
wishful thinking as in, “Hey, someone
out there, somewhere, wants me.”
Even if somewhere was some indefinable,
unrecognizable place in the cosmos,
and those doing the wanting were so
alien, we couldn’t begin to envision
what they were like and what they wanted
with him. Though we were welcome, 
of course, to make a few wild guesses. 
Maybe it was the way he looked, 
that bold attempt to achieve instant recognition 
that had largely succeeded. His look included
several outstanding features, not the least of
which were: a mostly shaved head,
now patched with stubble after inconsistent
attempts at grooming, remaining, exclamation
point waxed locks, stretched down the back
of his skull in a line, each dyed a garish 
neon-like:
red, blue, green, yellow. His mascara highlighted 
eyes with tattooed tear drops at the edge leaking 
red down  his 
pocked marked cheeks toward 
leather vest and pants. Gothic scrolled lettering 
on
each forearm in black ink said : ZAK SABBATH.
His alternately gold capped and tobacco brown 
stained teeth, had never been brushed in this
lifetime ,and an unhealthy cast to his 
unfocused
eyes, suggested the unnatural yellow tinted
iris implants hadn’t taken and his sight
was shaky at best, so when he spoke
it was to a moving shadow somewhere
behind the bar, “I expect they’ll be here 
to pick me up soon.  
Might as we have 
something to drink while I wait.”
“Like a Brother from Another Planet.”
“Just like that.”
“Stay away from the jukebox, it’s been
serviced.”
“Oh, really?  
What did they do to it?”
“God only knows.”
He looked over toward the wall recess
where the infernal machine sat, emitting
its timeless, neon glow.  His staring became
so fixed, so intent, you might think they
were communicating. 
And maybe they were.
In their way.
Life 
Cycles
They are the 
worm people,
who sleep on 
funeral parlor castoffs, 
barely worn 
sheets, a hundred hot rinses 
could not remove 
the scent of death from,
an odor they 
wore like second skins, 
peeling off as 
if once upon a time, 
they’d spent too 
much time in the sun 
and now all 
memory of it must be shed, 
revealing an 
unnatural pallor of time spent 
in airless 
caves, stagnant barroom holes,
inhaling each 
other’s stale breath, 
rust flaking 
from unwashed-for-decades
hair, no longer 
dandruff, but something
scaled, bed bug 
sores or skin ulcerations,
partially 
healed, leaking fetid fluids they
share like 
communicable diseases,
drinking the 
welfare checks of long-dead
relatives they 
claim as alive, forging
signatures, 
census forms, keeping the bodies
on ice in deep 
freezer chests until the power
fails and a new 
life cycle begins.
