
On a train
Looking out a window
As some other world goes rushing by
Then I remember
How a coffee shop smells
How a hospital smells
How one of those old-time Kmart stores smells
The popcorn and the floor wax
Cheap clothes and plastic
Saddened people
There’s some metallic kiddie ride outside of the store
A big duck or maybe a horse that slowly goes round and round for a quarter
Time slows as a child smiles and laughs beneath a metallic sun
A greasy, littered parking lot out front
That innocent memory pains me
When the young ones were free to feel happy about the slightest things
Back to the time when we had coins that worked
When joy could be purchased for some pocket change
Now we have the orders stamped on our foreheads
Not all of us
Not the boardroom white-skinned nuts
They hate everyone except themselves
Doing God’s work, they claim
Even when God disapproves
And Jesus is too woke
But like I said
I’m on a train
Looking out a window
I’m being sent to the Mass Hole of Burden
A place for the illegal and unwanted
I look at the beautiful homes whizzing by like acid taffy
It’s a momentary flash of the good life but corruption
I punch my brain to dislodge some of my own peace, my own hope, my own will to live
I look up at the guard at the front of the car
He wobbles slightly from the movement of the train
Dressed in all orange
A black riot helmet on his head
An assault rifle in his hands
If someone moves or speaks improperly
He will shoot them
I wonder if he’s okay with that
Has his soul become so corkscrewed that he would revel in it
I look across at the other seat
A man just like me
Same color, same origin, same beliefs
Forbidden muscles and tattoos
His hands are shackled, and he’s been fitted with a collar
Black hair, icicle eyes
He stares at me for a long time
Then he directs me with his head to look at his lap
He somehow has a blade
Silver, sharp, frightening
He manages to hold it in a shackled hand
His grip is tight
I can tell by the bulging veins
He leans forward just a bit
Dangerous
Then whispers as if he’s talking to himself
“When he comes.”
I know what he means
When the guard takes his walk up the aisle
I nod when the orange militant takes his first step
My mechanical heart is pounding
The stranger readies himself
And when the guard is near to us
He jumps up silently like a snake
I see the blade pulse through the air like lightning
A deep groan
No one else in the car makes a sound
The stranger withdraws
The bloody guard slips to the floor
The stranger turns to look at me
A grin of revenge upon his face
But I soon realize it’s not him
It’s me
What do I do now?


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