Tag Archives: change

Promises and Perils

The problem was this word “anti-venom.” It sounded made up, like it was from a comic book.

“I’m sorry, but we just don’t have anti-venom,” the doctor said mockingly. “We would have to order some.”

“I’m going to die,” I groaned, but she was unforgiving. I removed my scarf to reveal a collection of impressive lacerations, bruises, and bites.

The doctor’s face clouded. She crossed her arms. “Whatever kind of snake did that—you’re lucky to be alive. And to not be in jail. It’s illegal to keep snakes like that.”

I put my scarf back on and sighed. “My girlfriend did it.”

The doctor misunderstood. “When she gets mad she turns into a cobra,” I clarified. In gruesome detail, I told the doctor about her metamorphosis: how her soft skin turns to icy scales, the dead gaze in her otherwise expressive eyes, the expansive hood that frames her face when she is particularly agitated, the disgusting hiss and forked tongue leaking from her mouth, the sinister way she slithers and thrashes about.

The doctor uncrossed her arms and leaned toward my ear. “You’re already dead,” she whispered, a subtle rattle emanating from somewhere deep inside her white lab coat.


And So It Comes to Pass

He stopped, about halfway between here and there, at a country gas station. A pretty(ish) girl was working behind the counter. He asked for directions even though he knew were he was going. Her voice was kind of cute if handled in short bursts.

He stopped again, the next year, at the same country gas station. An awful fast food restaurant had been tacked onto the outside, bringing in a fair number of travels on their way from here to there. The pretty(ish) girl was working again. She had highlights in her hair and paint on her fingernails. He asked for directions again just to see. She didn’t remember him. Besides, thanks to the fast food restaurant she had more menial duties than last year and didn’t have time for guys doing guy things.

He stops again a few years later. The country gas station is now flanked by a motel and a 24 hr. breakfast place. It is busy and he gets kind of sad. He decides not to go in to ask for directions because he feels left behind, somehow, even though he probably shouldn’t.

He pays for his gas outside (something he had been unable to do previously).