Ezy Reading:
In Vermont
Evan Kanarakis

 

A wrong turn

 

Another new town
And another stop on the road
I was tired with many miles behind me
More still to come
But now I needed rest

 

Another nameless diner
Had the soup of the day
 Another nameless bar
It was a dark, decrepit dive

 

So I went inside

 

Faded carpets and an acrid, sour smell
Old drunks nodding in and out of consciousness
Even as the jukebox wailed with Woody Guthrie
Cramped quarters, jostling past those in stupor on the way to the bar
My kind of place indeed

 

Three pints in, the Irish girl got to talking
I spoke of road weariness
But she knew more of it than me

Six months to my few days
And –almost as if in proof- she drank stronger stuff than I

 

Though slight in frame she had mastered that whisky
And, lean and pretty, it had not yet repaid her neglect
Dark, hazel eyes and brown hair belied her ancestry well
Yet each word from her mouth was pure Dublin
She commanded attention

 

So we talked some more
But she was sad, wistful
Soon her mood darkened
She wept as she told me of a lost brother
I pictured him alone and lost, wandering aimlessly down a forgotten road

 

Three more pints and I made her laugh
We forgot our worries and smiled
I said I was lost in this country but finding her gave worth to an empty town
She kissed me
I was reborn

 

We lay down together in my hotel room
A skilled hand had ornately inked the words to a Gaelic hymn across her back
She sang it for me

 

It was beautiful
The chorus stayed with us as we made love

 

In the morning she asked about my scars
I kissed her
And, understanding, she didn’t ask again
We lingered for an hour until the road began to call us
Parted ways, our souls linked forever

 

And I looked ahead for another wrong turn

 

Ezy Reading is out every month.

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