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Wednesday, 20 February 2013
It's Always Good To Run Here At
It’s always good to run here at
the end of a bad day and find
her, absent-mindedly twirling
the end of her once-long, sawn-off
tail and pretending to read. It’s
always good to see her smile and
offer me a hug and a beer.
Even though it’s winter, she wears
a sleeveless dress like the Queen’s, pale
yellow, sequinned, and velvet gloves
that go over her elbows. The
gloves make her fumble with her beer,
but fumbling makes her fetching and
many of the locals eye her
hopefully. Sure enough, one of
them walks up with swagger and a
grin and he says Aw shucks, as though
she’d started a conversation.
Please please please ignore him, I think.
But Miss Crocodile can’t resist
attention and when he says she’s
enigmatic, then waits for her
to reply, she falls right into
the trap and lowers her heavy
lidded eyes, black-lined and swept with
irridescent blue. ‘How’d you get
to be so smart, sweet heart,’ he says,
turning her book over to squint
at the title. ‘I always go
for the ones who make me think.’ Well,
I think he makes me squirm, and not
in a good way. ‘Excuse me,’ I
say, grabbing Miss Crocodile by
her gloved arm. We get up so fast
her pearls swing round and whup Mr.
Multisyllables in the face. He turns
red and says ‘Stupid bitches.’ I
guide us to the ladies’ and hope
she didn’t hear that. Sometimes it
hurts a lot to have your heart kept
safe. I dare say mine has known some
awful pounding. ‘I’ll never be
hurt again,’ I remind her, ‘But
it won’t stop some from trying.’ At
first I think I see tears in her
eyes, but then I realise it’s smoke
curling up from her nostrils and
the corners of her mouth. ‘You don’t
worry about me, darlin’,’ she
says. ‘I’m part dragon, mama’s side
of the family.’ Her fingers are
smoking too, blue-tipped like her eyes.
I laugh harder than I ever
have, until my sides ache. But we
wait an hour and twenty seven
minutes before we leave the room.
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