Saturday, February 16, 2013

Postings








There were the two sisters, Mo and Maude, from up Bridgeport way. Maude was arrested, cuffed and carted off for her part in poisoning twelve vagrants – wanderers of no interest nor need to no one, while Mo made her escape out the back door and across the frozen creek, but the ice couldn’t begin to bear the weight, so she went under for good.

They reportedly made their own brew, those two, and a lethal one it was, too, according to those that knew. The coroner, he had a hard time with chemistry but he knew poison when he saw it and he’d just seen it a dozen times. The police, they suspected more, but ran into ‘no bodies, no clues’.

They had been a careful duo, out of necessity, not accommodating any man that might pose a threat to overpower them, even though the act itself would take some considerable courage on his part because these two knew how to throw their weight around and were quite the tag team when they needed to be. Like Big Bill Swain, who didn’t go down easy, as the poison failed in early trials, he flailed and broke their vials, so they finished the job hand-in-hand in hand-to-hand combat, a cleaver and an elk rack. It was not something they relished doing, but necessary, albeit messy and distasteful. From that, the lesson was learned and they took critical measure before they took a man in, and they tweaked the potion and dosage to be more potent for each gent and their own safe measure.


Puttering about the kitchen:
“Let’s not get hung up on technique. The recipe is not important it’s the outcome that counts,” Mo bemoaned. But Maude bided her time while fine tuning the stew, taking pleasure in ‘the incremental’.

They had a habit of finishing the other’s thoughts, they did. ‘Speaking Parallel’ is how they described it. In fact, their thoughts could not be more co-joined even if they were not, and for awhile the Doc couldn’t be exactly sure while they were within their mother because their hearts beat as one. (Their father they never knew, didn’t care, and never bothered.)

The men they come and go.
It was their nature, you know.
Harvest Beck was the longest man we had…
…in terms of  residency. A good worker, worked the farm hard. He lost his place when the bottom fell out and was an itinerant laborer working for other folk ever since.
He was good help.
Enjoyed the task. Stayed all three months of spring…
…and well into June.
He thanked us kindly and we parted ways.
…which is all we can say…
…with certainty. Bless ‘im.

While investigating the police thought that it might be best to interview them in separate rooms dare they make one daft from their parallel prattle. But it was a tactic they soon found counterproductive because by putting them in different ‘shells’, they clammed up altogether. So, the investigation dragged on, and it was a damn big farm in which to find a clue. All the while, no one seemed to be looking with earnest conviction for the departed, most reported missing by probation, passive parents, or past partners, but all with little persistence or passion. What no one knew, but suspected, while only one dozen in the smokehouse drew any attention, somewhere lay another two, at least, of Life’s losers lost a sunder.

 Meat pies, they made and sold locally….and they pondered…but came to realize that once tainted by tinctures ‘the Meat’ could kill innocents as well, and if the victim be a child?…lord forbid…blew that idea straight to hell. Couldn’t feed them to the hogs (who could grind a man to ‘nothing left’) for the very same reason; self preservation, since they cured, and subsided on their own ham and bacon. No, they decided, if a man gave up his ghost he ended up a post. They opted for a digger on the tractor, took turns driving the rig, dug a double wide shaft, dropped the cured corpus erectus vertically therein. Then with a few words of solace, marked them all with a cedar split. When the investigators brought in the dogs, they sniffed and sniffed the posts, and a few lifted their legs, but the handlers misunderstood and mishandled them by pulling the stubborn hounds away. So once Maude was convicted and sent to spend her days as ward of the state, it was out of their hands. But make no mistake, there still stands a mighty long fence on that farm to this day.


Thursday, February 14, 2013

raven down


A great darkness encircles 
as Squawking resounds
within a swirling madness
hundreds of crows 
come miles 
to help stir the fray
a swarming
spiraling vortex  
with a soulful racket 
they pronounce 
Raven down
end of days. 

And then it stops and goes quiet.  Sky clear. End of riot. A silence so pious. As if Never here.