Fiction

Zamboni Driver’s Lament

MATT ROBINSON

i know hate, its line-mates. believe me. you kids have, i’m sure, wasted—all early morning anxious and weak-ankled—their first impatient shuffle-kicks and curses on me. no cage contains a stare that well. and despite my perch, i too know damage: precise, zeroed-in maps of possession and loss, traceriesstep-chiselled into moments that loop around and into—through and across—each, the other. at my worst, i am my own recurring dream, forever turning a corner. and because i am always, when push comes to shove, behind glass—seated, and away—i’ve become a fan of jealousy, can pick him out in the looping confusion of warm-ups. i have his sweater hanging somewhere on my wall, his cards tucked in a box under my bed.indulgeme. tell me: can you understand what it is to be something most others only wait, grudgingly, through; endure?i can and do, can and do. i am a common cold, the advertisements that linger too longbefore a feature. and though you may never see this, the lights—i can assureyou—go down each night; the scoreboard’sbulbs snap and flicker, then die. but the ice, it seems, will always be there: a constant woundto dress, a scar i run myself along and over.

Tags

SUGGESTIONS FOR YOU

Fiction
Paul Dhillon

Severance

I had screwed up in making us blood brothers. Outside of basketball, we were different

Kate Cayley

Monsters

 The vines were biding their time, full of life force that did not care about her or how sorry she was

Fiction
Angélique Lalonde

Lady with the Big Head Chronicle

I am wholly unimportant—just a witness to her shapeshifting, possessed of a voice that can be compelled into song by the land’s unfolding