Harps
I wrote a novel about an empty room where you capture several hours of an ant eating soap on film. It takes a long time, but you decide there should be a kite caught with its tail in a spool on the nightstand and a spent reel in the background to mimic the sound of a page turning in a picture. Outside you say if anyone stands too close, the movie would be over. When I stood too close, I couldn’t see. I couldn’t even answer your questions because you never call. If you stay here, I’ll have to commemorate each cigarette to the weekends we got too drunk and stood naked by the window and the evenings when we chased each other out in the rain. I wrote each page thinking winter and you said no, autumn—so autumn will have to do even though it was summer all summer long and I rolled down the volume on the radio because we still had a radio and I never meant to say I love you when you sat down in the bed of my pickup truck. Look how nice the icicles on the wire is so much more than we ever telephoned intending to say. Did you know I tossed a smooth flat stone across the pond today and sliced a sizeable gash into the side of my finger? You’re right, the movie is over. Everyone stood too close. The innermost element of a painting is its stain, but you say I make you sad sometimes because I still don’t believe in pictures.
Telephone
You call and tell me about the weather in Spain. There are one thousand nights before we meet and one thousand one hundred and twenty-four hours that follow. I hate when we are continents apart because I love the boundaries we eliminate. When the lake’s outline disappears into the lake, it’s a state of grace, you say. I sense the arms on your watch pause. I hear the tornados lie down after you settle them with your hand. There are storm alarms crossing the ocean and you say this is the only happenstance in our life. I love to disagree with you. You don’t like that I have shoulder tension and sneak into the dining room to smoke pot. You say you smell it before we fall asleep. I don’t remember waking yet. You say there is the promise of an eclipse but the promise stays glued and blackens over the sun. I fail to dissolve in your arms and instead absorb them through a series of photographs we post to the wall in an otherwise arbitrary sequence. It’s tiring, your fragility, but I love it because it weakens me. There are batteries we exchange. There is a man in our dreams who sells raspberries. He claims to love the fire starting on the top of our scalps. I touch him and your hand passes through my hand. In your dream he is on fire and in my dream he is you on fire. There is the flood of cars I dismiss as a banal crisis because they do not move and you say no and shake your finger. Only then does a single red mustang ride by and display the image of its hooves. Only then. Remember how we roved. Remember when we didn’t know how to cook. How did plants grow back then? Why were we so concerned with love if we only lost track of each other? You call and tell me about the weather in Spain. You describe me as a human body protected by a spade, a shield, a heart revolving around an endless series of wire circuitry. I love how we love to watch each other sleep. I remember the whispers in your chest as I open the door to the fields of slaughter where it is my duty to count the men to be enlisted among the dead in the world under our world the world of the living where you beg me again to lower my wings and retire my sword. It nearly makes me cry. The way you suffer to look at me. You say you do not want me to play God on the farm anymore. I say darling I’m so glad that you called but let’s not talk about my responsibilities. You ask me why I always start with those tilling the fields and I say because it’s simple when you surrender to the blonde-tasting grain in your eyes. Through the silence on the other side of the line I hear you calculating the voice that will ask me why does it need to hurt so much. There is only the beginning. There is no answer. You tell me about the headless dogs carried by a chariot in your dream like mine in the gallery with the too bright lights when I pour Perrier into your red wine and cringe because it’s another memory where one of us dies and I’m afraid this time it might be you. Whatever. I’ll do it over and over again if it means spending those five minutes with you at the bar with my head sunk into your shoulder drinking cheap rye as the world tilts on its side and the incompetent DJ slows time a little bit for everyone. You call me and tell me about the weather in Spain. I am not sure if I can come home tonight. In the dream there are skinned lions in the field and there is the field that takes the color of the lions in the field. You tell me to draw it in a picture and I send you an angel singing into the wrong end of his horn. You ask me about the stages of grief and I answer that your eyes perforate my every lie. Please forgive me. I don’t mean to be enigmatic. I just always want to be us. Loved and hated
by everyone.
biography
EVAN KLEEKAMP is a writer living in Chicago. His poems and essays have appeared on Adult, Vinyl, Sprung Formal, Ghost Ocean, and Drunken Boat.