waiting one's turn... For the Third Son of Slam contest |
Trapped within grey walls, randomly positioned, varied shapes twist and recoil with solo screeches and complaints, every now and then, glancing at a cactus plant and a side table of dated journals, a sorry arsenal against tedium. Someone must have lied: “Life can be mended.” For now, it is ended here, while we wait to go on stage, as if in the cage before an execution at San Quentin. A tall nurse, her bosom swaying, opens the door ajar: “Called on an early emergency, the doctor’s running late. If you can’t wait with ease, re-schedule please.” “This is the only day I can take off,” a man with sallow skin and cracked lips replies, his eyes fixed on the floor, for he’s not a breast-man but into twins of a lower altitude. A while ago, he was staring at the flip-flops of the young beauty flexing her feet with pink-skinned soles and broad, pedicured nails. No one leaves, not even the woman, sabotaged by cosmetics, who whined before while she hogged a corner chair. During the sign-in, we were glued to an imaginary line drawn at the nurses’ station with sliding glass window, left open, through which secretaries’ voices leak, ordering lunch from Friendly’s next door. “Sandwich, chicken salad, soup. Get the cajun, never mind fish, it’s a loser’s dish.” And we wonder when the first sentence will be served on their brittle plate. |