Philosophy
of Rent
We've lost our magic. Our instinct for mystery.
Most bold questions have pat answers. Whatever's left---few manage to pay
attention.
How I long for a day when the classics are read
aloud from atop a balcony to studious listeners drawn to every syllable.
Perhaps I'm daydreaming abit. Foolishly expecting culture from soulless mall addict’s
intent on spoon-feeding corporations. Mindlessly they dump their slave wages
into the awaiting tentacles of ugly giants. The fat and prosperous merchants
who in turn dump their garbage into our drinking water.
We've lost our minds. Our fear of freedom is the
root of all trouble. The cardinal reason we as a people are exploited over and
over again. We are too willing to trade a piece of liberty for peace of mind.
In the end it can't be done. But you already you know that in your heart of
hearts.
Why bother listening? Fear is a friend beamed in from skyscrapers
built by the lowest bidder. Grab that remote switch to something more soothing.
You can't fight City Hall. You can't change the World. It's somebody else's
problem. You don't want to get involved. Not in my backyard! Daddy will walk out. Mommy might start
drinking again. And my God, "what would the neighbors think?"
These are but a few thoughts running through my
mind at the precise moment I forced a nervous bank clerk to fill the bag. One
could smell her fear...or was that something else entirely? The instant
realization that her shopping days were over. It was almost necessary to remind
her---the bank had insurance, she did not. What loyalty could such an oversight
instill?
Very little I assure you, there was a gleam in
her eye. As if to communicate---"take me with you." Maybe diamonds
are a girl's best friend, but right now I can live without both. A gym bag full
of cash and the sight of smartass suburbanites kissing marble is enough
inspiration. Thank you.
None of those good citizens care about anything
but themselves. The men had no chivalry. A sea of white shirts pissing their
pants. I've seen more courage in a baby nursery. The magazines say women want
romance. I say they want these gutless gold-card holders with little alligators
on their shirts.
Women know romance is a fantasy sold by women
with the exact same gripes. A man like me, wavering a gun around, is probably
more excitement than any of these ladies will see in their boring bedrooms.
The police arrived at a bank swarming with shaken
but unharmed customers. The entire bunch much too impatient for questioning. They're
all eager to race home and share a sexy crime story with a friend in front of
the nightly news.
I fairly divided the money between my three
assistants. Two underpaid bank guards and a single mother: three victims of the
American Dream. I'm still amazed to find believers in this fairy tale. But such
is life in the land of the free.
I have a young child to feed and a naive woman
who expects an island paradise will guarantee happiness. If only she weren't
the mother of my child. If only I could explain to her the wicked ways of the
world. If only the rent were as sunny as that island paradise I wouldn't mind believing in myself.
Mark Antony Rossi is a poet, playwright and author of eightheen books. He is an award-winning writer with upcoming work in Albatross and Yellow Chair Review.
Tags:
Short Fiction