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100 Waitresses – Welcome To The Magical Friendship Squad! http://michaelmurray.ca Michael Murray Writes Things Tue, 14 Aug 2018 21:19:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 100 Waitresses http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-4 http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-4#respond Tue, 14 Aug 2018 21:16:06 +0000 http://michaelmurray.ca/?p=7107  

The couple near the window are speaking slowly.

He has thick fingers and puffy eyes, stubble on his face. A tattoo of an evil leprechaun on his drinking hand and a sadness deeply embedded within. She’s as thin as a knife and has very long, very straight black hair that does not shine. Her eyes are wary, churning. There is something dreamlike about two of them, something beyond their control. He sips his drink through a short straw and says to her, “There is something about you I have been missing so much.”

 

 

 

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100 Waitresses http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-3 http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-3#respond Thu, 12 Apr 2018 20:49:37 +0000 http://michaelmurray.ca/?p=6855 Monique was inconstant.

She loved many people, most of them more than me, and my love was cloying and imperfect. I lost her many times. Days, weeks, months later she would return without tears to my shabby and crooked apartment on Coloniale. And I would attempt ferocity and steely eyes, but I was powerless before her. Oh, Monique in new pants, Monique skating at Carre St. Louis, Monique opening a tin of tuna—each moment an act of singular and irreducible beauty.

Her dreams took on the form of divine revelation. Each morning she woke up astonished, unable to grasp the portent of her nocturnal wanderings, but certain of their implicit significance. They became puzzles to solve, ghosts to tend, arrows to follow.

Watching her eyelashes flutter and knowing at that precise moment she was dreaming, I imagined them taking form and floating like mysterious cave drawings in the dark above us. I wanted to pluck them from the air, to preserve them so we could study them later, but even in my mind’s eye they eluded me, curling away like smoke and then disappearing, a trail of phosphorescence reabsorbed into the ocean.

After she left in the morning I would put on the sweater she had been wearing. Intoxicated with her redolence I would wander the streets breathing her in. Everything shining.

 

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100 Waitresses http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-2 http://michaelmurray.ca/100-waitresses-2#comments Sat, 20 Jan 2018 00:31:10 +0000 http://michaelmurray.ca/?p=6734 100 Waitresses:

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It was almost three in the morning when she walked home after her shift at the bar.

This time, this twenty minutes, was a pause in her life that was always her favourite part of her day. It was like a clearing in the woods, an opportunity to slow things down and start the process of cleansing herself of all the want that filled the pub each night, clinging like smoke in her hair.  All the solitary men who needed drinks, who needed her to pay attention and make them feel valued as they sat there at the bar, searching each night for some unlikely route to love. And there were the needs of her coworkers, always wanting her to cover shifts so that they could either go to a party or recover from one, always needing her encouragement or complicity, and then simply the need to have a job, to get somewhere on time and serve the needs of others, always dressed in a prescribed, deadening uniform that made her feel like a stranger in her own life. All of this, all of this started to fall away when she walked toward home.

And one night she came upon a pigeon lying on the sidewalk.

She barely saw it, but she did, and as she leaned in toward it, the bird spasmed and flapped about in useless, frenzied circles. And then exhausted, collapsed and looked up at her, it’s chest heaving. She did not know exactly what she saw in those eyes, but she could not deny whatever it was that was calling her. It was her burning bush.

She picked the bird up, held it tight to her chest, and took it home. And as she delicately cleaned it in her kitchen sink, it struck her that she had never before felt so whole. Over weeks she nurtured this bird, restoring it to health and flight– and then other birds followed, and then others, and without any conscious intent her life began to organize and cohere around these lost and wounded creatures, and the person who inhabited the body she had travelled within for 37 years was finally discovered.

 

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