The day started with Talus stepping into a very small pile of dog poop as he exited the apartment building. The slight slide of his shoe was the first indication of it and the muddied edge of his shoe sole confirmed it. He paused for a brief moment, removed his sunglasses, turned his foot at an angle, and looked down as if there was some question whether or not it was truly poop. It could not have been anything else. The city pavement was cracked and dusty from weeks without rain. Ms. Potter's vines dangled helplessly over the 3rd floor balcony, and the trees stood listless in the morning sun.
Talus put his hand out to steady himself on the building as he tried to scrap off the poop. This action smeared the poop on the pavement and a little farther down Talus's shoe. He paused again, feeling like a horse digging for a morsel of grass, and looked up into the hazy morning heat.
He wanted to return to his apartment, but knew he would be even later than he already was. "The train waits for no one," he thought. Talus was singularly adept at being a no one. As he continued his thought, "so why didn't it wait for him?" Talus was late, as always, because he was caught-up in practicing his violin. Bach was lately on his mind; he played Concerto #1 one for hours at a time.
Now he was simply late for work. He started toward the station, poop in tow, and Talus smelled waffles as he rounded the corner. Waffles always reminded him of opera. His grandmother would ask him to pick-up waffles on Sunday mornings so they could listen to opera from the local radio station and eat waffles. The morning sun glancing off the edge of the table, syrup glistening, and arias circling around the scraping of forks. Talus would watch his grandmother through his thick hair. Her eyes, already dimmed by time, would close at certain moments as if she was trying to remember something.
He paused for a moment and looked toward the smell, thought of the train and sighed. She was gone, and now he ate cereal on Sundays. The spoon scraped through the milk and silence. He descended into the tunnel. The stale air stirred through his thick hair as he looked down at the faded tile of the steps.
"What the FUCK is that??" Jani Jones screeched. It was Trixie Jeans upstairs neighbor Talus Fugue. Trixie Jean didn't mind Talus one bit, he was a nice man, he was kind of an odd one, but Trixie Jean didn't have no means for judging. Talus would practice his violin all the time upstairs, it was soothing to Trixie Jean, but janie didn't have no time for extra noise.
ReplyDelete"I'm going up there, this is ridiculous, it is a Sunday morning, the Lords day" Janie demanded
"Awww Janie, don't be causing a fuss. Its Sunday, we have our babies and we have biscuit, a little violin ain't no problem" Trixie Jean new Janie wasn't religious or nothing like that, she just liked conflict, always had. Back in the old days, the pre baby days, Janie was known for starting a good fight drunk or sober, since she had Strummer she'd gotten better...but she always had that fighting spirit.
Janie Jones marched out of the door and Trixie Jean hurried after her gathering her babies as she scurried. Janie Jones was already at Talus's apartment, she banged on the door hard as she could til he answered.
"Ummm...yes?" he asked nervously
"You must have some fucking nerve playing your god damn violin music on a Sunday morning!" she barked and stomped away.
"I'm so sorry" Trixie Jean fumbled, "She gets angry sometimes, ain't your fault or nothing" Trixie Jean was always making excuses, for Janie, for her babies, for everything.
"It's okay..." Talus mumbled and shut the door in Trixie Jean's face.