Thank you for reading The Gargoyle – my newsletter on authenticity, creativity, and curiosity.
Trying a new format for self-expression: Haiku + Mini-Essay. Let me know what you think?
Haiku #3
Mini-Essay #3
One Tuesday night in April the rain outside and the wine in my glass awaken memories of him – the brother I never had a grasp on; that black sheep, that dark horse, that wild bird; that violet sunset chariot rider, he who departed early.
Two years younger than me, gone at 24 – and there is so much more biography I could share, so much more geography, but that’s not what comes to mind now (the facts and figures of it) and neither is it those epic ceremonial markers (the folded flags and fire trucks and winter bagpipes) but rather what surfaces now is something more fleshy – something like fingernails scratching at the underside of my chest, like teeth biting my bare shoulders, something like rugburns, nosebleeds, and splinters.
Something like reckless backyard games on autumn nights when the air was a deep burnt sienna and the grass smelled the way Fall doesn’t anymore, games like 1-on-1 tackle football, games so fierce we sometimes ripped the shirts off each other; neither of us ever wanted to win another game more than we did those unhinged contests.
Once for some godforsaken reason we placed a small exercise trampoline in the middle of the yard (six inches high, two feet in diameter), so that one man – offense or defense – could use the trampoline to intercept or evade the other man. Honestly I forget which of us had the ball when we ran towards each other like fiends, and we neared the trampoline, and someone, one of us, was going to use it and the other wasn’t and then we both got too close and no one had decided, no one had committed, and so we utterly plastered ourselves into one another, and our hands were down low so our faces cracked together nakedly - THWOCK - front teeth to front teeth, and we both fell to the ground in agony, wind knocked out of us, and when breath finally returned all we could do was writhe and moan in pain, uselessly cupping our hands to our mouths.
Two Football Idiots, shirtless in the yellow grass, bloody gums and lips and tongues, and it seemed like an hour passed on the ground before my skull stopped ringing like a gothic church bell, and when I went to bed that night it still hurt to shut my mouth and have the top teeth touch the bottom teeth.
This is what I remember, what I treasure, what I keep close – us racing, crashing together like orchestra cymbals, the kind of crash that gets a whole theater up on its feet.
End
Thank you as always for reading! Hope you have a great weekend.
This one was great! I received it as part of the Short Reads newsletter and I subscribed through there. You’re talented, man.