Tag Archives: grave yard

Universal Values

She was born hungry and she died hungry.

But her hunger was in name only, for never once did she, between her birth and death, feel hungry. She ate things – delicious and exotic and expensive – but she did so only to be social, like a casual smoker casually smoking among friends. Alone, she did not eat; she felt no desire to do so.

She felt the effects of starvation. But she thought that this was her disposition. Indeed, she grew concerned when she did not feel this way.

She died, only, because I ended our relationship. She died, only, because I was not there to eat.

It took her but a week to starve.

During that same week, I feasted on the bodies of women as a display of sexual rebellion and fear. During that same week, my taste in disposable women became increasingly stringent: thinner and thinner, I demanded.

She died on a Friday, the same day that I unearthed and climbed into a coffin to lay with the skeleton of a woman, the same day I was shot for breaking the law, the same day I sold our companion burial plots to a young, attractive couple in love.

 


The Moment of Anamorphosis

She was certain that we would either get caught and arrested or piss off the spirits of all the people in the ground.

“Look,” I implored, arms spread wide, “this place is so big nobody will ever find us if we choose the right spot.”

“And the ghosts?”
“The spirits aren’t going to be here—unless all these people were buried alive.”

She offered a strained smile of defeat. I took her hand, leading her away from the sunlight, tour busses, and plots of important people.

“Over there.” I gestured toward a gloomy stone that had the rejected air of being cast off by the other stones.

She bent over and gripped the top with both hands while I yanked her pants down.

“Um, wait.”

“Why?”

“This stone has your name on it.”

“Bullshit.”

“I’m serious. Look.”

I leaned over her, my now flaccid penis brushing against her bare ass. I rolled my eyes and scoffed.

“That doesn’t concern you?”

“Why would it?”

“It says you die today.”

Just before my gruesome death, I felt a figure lurch in my periphery and heard her scream—“K! Stop it!”—as the jealous knife of her husband sank repeatedly into my flesh.