Archive Page 2

DILUVIAN NIGHT

A cavernous space beneath the building, dim artificial light, splintered chairs and tarpaulins in a sacrificial heap. The seduction of the woman next door.

She lowers her anemic belongings into my arms. Dust rises over the foundation, a placid orange haze, vague decline of desire.

A body might bend into the walls, never to be seen again. I pretend not to notice the hem of her satin nightgown caught on twenty years of darkness. My nostrils burn as she unbuttons her threadbare sweater, the fabric sheens over ample hips. She says: Put this down where it will not shatter. I brush past her in the stairwell, full of ink and solvents, catching the scent of earth on her hands.

This woman wipes the film of neglect from the leaves.

She will draw a bath as I cut the vines from the north wall.

She will wrap her black hair in a towel as I lose my footing and slip.

(Someone knocks. The light recoils behind her as I cross the threshold.)

RUNNER

RUNNER (ORIGINAL SCRIPT)

Look at him riding the bus on a Wednesday night

He eclipses the sun

As a child, he ran in circles around the swing set

He has his limits

The 5-minute and 45-second mile

The fire in his lungs

The wind driving him back around the far turn

At times he thinks it would be possible to run all day

He says: I will go home
and find an open road
and run past whitewashed barns and wheat fields
and look up at the thunder clouds
and wave to trucks as they grind along their way

He will find something simple and uncluttered

He will fall into the straightaway
with such velocity
time will curve
starlight will bend
the track and the field will accelerate through the seasons

and all the time he will remain the same

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