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Buried alive (once again) By Chris Gage I try my father’s shoes on at the mirror in the front hall; they were handed down from him like a temperament or bad eyesight or anything else we can’t explain but look foolishly right into and, like a Columbus sifting through the pages of a photo album, say, “That is not my uncle, that is the first man to have ever called a wrong number” and “How could that be me? I was born from the pictures on a deck of cards.” “I am believed to have discovered the trajectory of tumbleweeds on my own,” the last three words hanging sweet in the thickened air. I’ll wear these shoes through the day, work the leather of the heel into a smile again and when I walk, if I didn’t know better, I’d swear I could hear underfoot the sound and squeaking of yesterdays turning over in their graves. |
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Document last modified on: 01/23/2000