Jasper, it
just wasn’t the right way to deal. I come see you maybe twice, three times a
year, usually to have some laughs, clink some drinks, be on your side against
the advice of Mom and Dad. Now you’ve pushed me over to theirs. I mean, not really—we’re
all on your side, hoping to get you back. Praying, if that’s what this is.
Talking to you. Trying to get you to talk, explain yourself. Forgive
yourself—just fucking deal.
Let’s go
through this again—no filters, no doctor stepping in. Maybe the nurse will come
by, check this or that, talk loudly in some effort to get through to you, wake
you up, whatever. It’s just been three days and I’ve heard of these kinda comas
lasting for years. Your heart’s still good, they say. Survived the crush of everything
else. God damn it, Jasper, it just
wasn’t the right way to…
So, I
remember when you first fell in love—that’s not too much to say about
elephants, is it? I mean, I liked that
day in Baraboo, climbing a ladder to sit in that festooned box atop the old
bull. But you positively loved it.
Wouldn’t get out. The trainer let you ride two more circles by yourself for no
extra charge—must’ve seen an apprentice in you, lure you into his world,
eventually. And he succeeded, what—eight years later? when you turned sixteen
and could legally drop out of school, run to the circus, throw your life away?
Oops, that’s Mom and Dad’s side again, aint it. I probably encouraged you: kid
sister looking up to learn how dreams might burst out of the box. I didn’t have
any dreams myself—maybe still don’t—so I envied your panache. Wondered why it
had to be elephants, but… why the
hell not?
You said
they had big hearts. No, duh: they’re giants in every dimension. By ratio,
though, dogs’ hearts are bigger, you know. And there are a lot more options
working with dogs… But then you vouched for an elephant’s memory, like somehow
that’s equivalent to virtue. Most folks who cling on to memories become curmudgeons
or narcissists. Or broken-hearted sisters.
Sure, it
was interesting telling friends what you did for a living. Some pulled a face,
like you were monstrous—animal cruelty, all that. One guy said that while
snarfing down a McChicken sandwich, I remember. Others romanticized the idea—nice
to know someone out there still cares about the earth and its creatures, cuz I
always attested to your care of them. Never saw otherwise. Then again, I didn’t
witness your dumbass act three days ago. Nobody did, except Jumbo. Jasper and
Jumbo sharing a private moment. Jasper and Jumbo and maybe God.
Wha’dja
expect, anyway? No change to the program, like ever? Circus kicks you out,
sends their animals to various zoos. You follow, trunk to tail, and beg for a
job cleaning up their manure. The elephants, you contend, need exercise, so you
keep up their routine, tossing them beachballs and stuff, making them balance
on this boulder or that—no more circus apparatus, so you make do with what’s
lying around. You sneak rides on their necks when they’re out on the glorified
safari grounds, the zoo’s petty sense of being ‘woke’. They fire you for
overstepping your bounds. Not gonna recommend you to another zoo or anything to
do with pachyderms. Skills down the toilet. May as well fly to Delhi or
someplace that supplies your demand.
Can’t do
that now, Jasp. You decided to go down with the ship—the Hindenburg blimp, as
it were, minus the media circus. You curled into a cardboard box—LG, with their “Life’s Good” logo of an
ugly face—as if you bought a new air conditioner just for the box. Then you
called out to Jumbo, “c’mere, boy, do your best pirouette! Don’t worry where I
am, just play for the invisible crowd.” And I bet you he swung his trunk to
show his distrust for this stunt, following orders in the dark, manacled to the
memory of your voice…. And you must’ve arched your back in the box so Jumbo
wouldn’t instantly feel its impending collapse. Still, his leg must’ve hovered—like
Damocles’ sword—brainy, big-hearted galoot. At a final command, he pressed into
the LG logo and broke all your bones before tumbling forward himself.
Did I get
that all right? Spirit of the story, at least? Care to add, edit, repeal or
redo? If you’re wondering what the elephant thought of your suicide note,
well.., he’s being held without bail for manslaughter at the county clink,
probably on suicide watch, as these things go. Seems like his trainer, the only
man he’d come to understand, as such, stomped on his heart. J&J 4evr tattooed the old-fashioned
way.
What? Was
that a groan from underneath your mummy wrap? Shall I call the nurse or...; no
hurry, I guess. Huh? How am I doing?
Funny you should ask. You know, being a kid sister I’m gonna damsel through
this like… like a fuckin’ Dumbo. I got Mom and Dad to fall back on. Maybe
develop my own, out-of-the-box kinda dream. I dunno, something like… hedge
funds. I hear that’s got some edge, some rootedness to the good ol’ earth.
Follow in your footsteps, bro.
Okay, so
I’ll shut up now, let you sleep. You know, Jasper, all kidding aside: I don’t
know if these past three days have been much different than the past three
thousand. You were always a pretty good listener; me, a jabberwocky. I really
liked that you took care of your friends, and they the same to you. I never
imagined there was—or is—necessarily
anything you’ve suppressed. No skeletons in your closet, no elephant in the
room. I think that’s a hard trick to pull off, and you can expect me back soon
to big brother me a little more.
Daniel Martin Vold Lamken (2019)

No comments:
Post a Comment