By Dave Nash
Between
Harrison and Journal Square when writing my fiction becomes non
and I
look upon brown marshes patched with frozen puddles,
refracting
a sullen February sun
gives
way to diesel rigs,
corrugated
containers,
half-finished
landfills
repurposed
for renewables.
I’m
spared when we go under the cut bedrock and new people get on
who
couldn’t have seen the tear,
the
slow drip.
I’ve
sucked it back like a proud pouchy man posing for his picture.
Finally
underground for good
I can
breathe again knowing
I
kept it together for another morning.
Whatever
it was will stay buried
until
I come out from under.
The
slight touch of strangers sharing
this
ride breaks that train
of
memory that
plunged
me into this abyss.
Without
the kindness of crowds,
alone
in my car I would bawl to my job
where
if I just work as hard and
cross
my fingers just right
I
will live the same life for another year until my contract comes up
and
I’m renewed in the same old.
But
it’s another distraction from the real things.
The
things that I wake up thinking about.
The
things behind the things that
make
me cry between Harrison and Journal Square.
About
the author:
Dave
Nash writes on Northeast Regional trains. He is the Nonfiction Editor at Five
South Magazine. His work appears in places like South Florida Poetry Journal,
Bulb Culture Collective, Jake, and The Hooghly Review. You can follow him
@davenashlit1.
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