{Vignette}

At the Servant Jazz Quarters jazz bar, the bar lady dressed in a dress striped with wide white and black stripes fixes me with eyes not unkind but commanding attention from beneath a lighthouse tower of hair:


‘Do you think,’ she asks me, her eyebrows arching like raven’s wings flying high above the cliffs of her teeth: ‘that people are afraid to love?’


‘Yes,’ I say, without hesitation, for I know I am.


‘Why?’ she shoots at me as if I had made it so.


‘I don’t know.’ And it’s true: I don’t know; but I think that maybe it’s because it makes us feel vulnerable, and I say so: ‘Maybe because it makes them feel vulnerable.’ (I change the pronoun, hoping that she won’t notice.)


‘And is that a bad thing?’ she demands, probably having noticed, and I say it isn’t, but that it’s what makes us afraid.


I feel that I’ve closed the loop and maybe she feels so too and she places a cocktail of her recommendation in front of me; in a gesture of reconciliation, more, I think, with the way that it is than with me, for we have no cavil with one another, and her cliffs give over to a white Dover smile.


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Published on October 30, 2015 04:51
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EDEN by FREI

Sebastian Michael
A concept narrative in the here & now about the where, the wherefore and forever

This is a live feed of my current writing project, an experiment in publishing in blog format.

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