He must have had a real name, but the kids just called him Pinky. His nervous, red-rimmed eyes regarded the world through thick-lensed glasses, and his hair and skin were so pale that Teeny bet me a quarter that Pinky couldn’t bleed.
One day, the school nurse came to our class to explain "albinism" and how there was no “melanin” anywhere in his body. I could tell that the nasty boys weren’t listening because they didn’t want to let science get in the way of having a bona fide freak to pick on.
Teeny and me, though, we were fascinated when the nurse projected slides on a screen showing albinos from different races and countries. After school we made sock puppets from Teeny's father’s athletic socks and dressed them up like bleached Zulu warriors and Aztec gods.
It turned out that white hair and colorless eyes were the least of Pinky’s problems, because Principal “Halitosis” DeLosis came into our class one day and announced that Pinky had died from kidney failure.
My Mom made me go to the funeral (she said it was a “good learning experience”) and so did Teeny’s Mom, and the worst part wasn't those hypocrite bully boys looking all sad in their Sunday clothes. It was that the preacher never once called him by his real name, just called him Pinky.
What took you so long?
Welcome. I've been waiting for you to show up.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
The Goldsmith's Anniversary
He dismissed giving her a Cartier watch or South Seas pearls.
Likewise, he rejected furs or wines with old souls.
She was too precious and rare for the nonsense that any man
could give to any woman on any day.
He searched for something deserving of the word “bestowed,” something so rare as to horrify the clerics of ordinariness.
One night while she dreamed, he skinned her fingertips so lightly and slowly that it took till dawn to remove only a single layer of skin no thicker than an eyelash.
For their anniversary, he gave her back her fingerprints, cast in gold.
Likewise, he rejected furs or wines with old souls.
She was too precious and rare for the nonsense that any man
could give to any woman on any day.
He searched for something deserving of the word “bestowed,” something so rare as to horrify the clerics of ordinariness.
One night while she dreamed, he skinned her fingertips so lightly and slowly that it took till dawn to remove only a single layer of skin no thicker than an eyelash.
For their anniversary, he gave her back her fingerprints, cast in gold.
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