From the porch; from the room with windows and two peeling gray painted doors; from outside where the birds stay silent in their sleep above his head; and from the trails of smoke that drift like thoughts and from the air it cuts; from the always-present smells of grime when dew melts away and leaves its fingerprints of fine powder in the morning; from the cigarette; from the fingers that struck the matches; from the dirt that clings like coffee stains under his nails and shirt; from the smog he breathes, settling in his lungs. It followed him like the stray he fed. It whispered in the air like the sirens that call far in the distance. It was in the clinks of the engine when he drove the rattling pieces of his car to and from work everyday. It stuck to his hands like gloves. If he were to play music, it would pluck at each note. If he were to drive, it would turn the wheel to make his drives last a little longer. It was the memories. It was the pictures of his children, folded down the middle so they fit into the envelopes they sent him. I would see him leave in the night slipping on his running sneakers and softly pushing the door closed behind; he would run down Westheimer. He was like a wave never quite reaching far enough to escape his ocean. |