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    Swing

    Page 20
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      crazy life.

      Without her

      I’d be a one-man band,

      with a played-out sound

      and no audience.

      The magic

      we compose

      is endless,

      immortal.

      We could play

      together

      for centuries.

      If I’m lucky.

      And I love

      the music

      our bodies

      make

      when we’re dancing.

      But there is one thing

      about my girlfriend

      I don’t understand.

      She says

      she doesn’t believe

      in sex

      before marriage,

      but she never

      wants to get married.

      When I ask her, Where is this all going, then?

      she likes to

      get real close,

      eyelash close,

      and say things like

      Let’s live in the moment, babe

      or we don’t need labels,

      and then

      she kisses me

      like we own the world

      and nothing else matters.

      It’s funny how

      going nowhere

      feels like it’s

      going someplace

      fast.

      Texts from Chapel

      7:37 pm

      On your way stop by

      Best Buy pls. Headphones broke.

      Red or purple. K?

      7:47 pm

      They finally left. I

      hate hiding. Wish my dad

      wasn’t so CRAY. He

      7:48 pm

      thinks all the things

      the tabloids say

      about your family

      7:48 pm

      are true. He doesn’t know

      you’re different, Blade.

      He says

      7:48 pm

      you’re going to

      drag me into sex

      and drugs.

      7:49 pm

      Hurry up and get here.

      They’re at Bible study

      ’til 10 . . .

      Leaving in ten minutes

      Sorry. Working on a song.

      Beats or Bose?

      And tell the Reverend I

      only did drugs once.

      The Show

      My father,

      Rutherford Morrison,

      can’t stand

      to be away

      from the stage.

      He has always craved

      the spotlight,

      needs it

      like a drug,

      posing, posturing, profiling

      before millions—

      an electric prophet, or so he thinks,

      capturing concert worshipers

      in the vapors

      of his breath,

      as if his voice

      was preparing them

      for rapture.

      My sister and I

      have always lived

      under the stage,

      beside it,

      behind it.

      The After-Party

      There was always

      another party.

      More loud music.

      More loud groupies.

      Booze

      and still more groupies.

      I was nine.

      He grabbed me

      and held

      a sizzling cig

      in front

      of my face.

      Only it wasn’t a cig.

      He blew smoke

      circles around me

      and laughed.

      My boy.

      The band uncles got

      in on the joke too,

      and I stuck my tongue

      in a shot glass

      full of whiskey,

      soaked it up

      like a dirty sponge.

      I loved making them laugh.

      The whiskey hurt

      my throat and

      stung my eyes.

      But the laughs

      were epic.

      Before I knew it

      I was taking my finger

      and dragging it

      across powdered

      sugar that looked

      like ant snow trails

      on the table.

      Rutherford was too busy

      kissing his ego

      to notice.

      I tasted it once,

      twice, and

      a few more times,

      trying to find

      that sugar sweet.

      But, it wasn’t sweet.

      It was salty

      bitter

      and it coated

      my mouth

      in numbness.

      I woke up

      in the ICU

      frightened

      and embarrassed

      by my father,

      who sat by

      my bedside

      crying

      in handcuffs.

      Hollywood Report

      Rutherford Morrison has kept rock alive for twenty-five

      years.

      His band, The Great Whatever, is credited with

      introducing a new flavor of

      Hard Rock to America with the release of their triple-

      platinum album,

      The History of Headaches. Even after an acrimonious

      band breakup,

      Morrison continued to have an illustrious solo career,

      selling thirty million albums worldwide.

      His music has lasted the test of time . . . until now.

      Eight years ago, he was arrested for reckless

      endangerment of his child,

      and he hasn’t released an album since.

      Most recently he’s managed three DUIs, and a drug

      overdose

      that almost sent him to a rock-star reunion with

      Kurt Cobain and Amy Winehouse.

      Rutherford may not have much time left before

      he falls flat on 12:00. Midnight can be so cruel.

      Who doesn’t feel sorry for his kids,

      left answering the hard questions, like

      How does it feel

      to be the daughter

      to be the son

      of a fallen rock star?

      Who Am I?

      I am

      the wretched son

      of a poor

      rich man.

      I do not hate

      my life.

      I am not like

      Sebastian Carter,

      who found

      his father kissing

      his girlfriend

      and now hates

      his life.

      My life is, hmmm,

      inconvenient.

      But

      if it weren’t for Chapel . . .

      Are You Sure They Aren’t Coming Home?

      Chapel and I are about to take flight,

      two souls on fire

      burning through sacred mounds of

      fresh desire.

      Our lips are in the process

      of becoming

      one

      in her hammock,

      like two blue jays nesting.

      Feeding each other

      kisses of wonder.

      I’m sure, she answers.

      Hands of curiosity.

      What are you doing?

      Kissing you.

      Slow down, Blade.

      Why?

      Woo me.

      Woo you?

      A song.

      Come on, babe, we don’t have time for that.

      But we have time for this? she says,

      puckering her lips, and

      hypnotizing me

      with eyes blue

      as the deep blue sea.

      Those Eyes Will Be the Death of Me

      My gravestone will read:

      Here lies a young man

      who died inside

      the gaze of a woman.

      I watch the river

      in her eyes gallop f
    orth

      fall into them

      dive into them.

      She smiles.

      Those eyes.

      I can’t escape

      the depth of them.

      The song has ended,

      but the melody still rings

      from her mouth.

      I can’t hear a word.

      I’m lost

      in these two comets

      that move across

      my universe.

      I remember

      the first time

      she looked at me

      like this.

      Two years ago

      before he hit

      an all-time low,

      Rutherford threw

      one of his

      Hollywood Rocker House Parties

      which became Storm’s

      pool party

      SLASH sweet sixteen

      SLASH get-all-the-kids-at-our-school-drunk-so-they-

      could-listen-to-Storm’s-mixtape-and-think-it-is-hot

      party.

      While they dove deep

      in shallowness,

      I found a quiet corner,

      a vintage Rutherford Morrison guitar

      took it off the wall

      and started playing

      American Woman

      and any tune

      with a hard groove

      to soften

      the dull.

      Minutes

      or an hour

      went by

      before I looked up,

      and there she was

      sitting

      in the chair

      across from me,

      her legs

      with dancer calves

      entwined

      like twin yellow flowers.

      Her skin, amber sun.

      And those pretty blue eyes

      just watching me

      like she cared.

      Amazing. Keep playing, she said. Don’t let me interrupt

      you. And

      then she got up,

      sauntered off

      glancing over her shoulder,

      leaving me

      thunderstruck.

      Those eyes.

      Those blue eyes.

     

     

     



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