Oh shit in neon lit up his mind an instant after
he heard his voice say it, the “I'm scared of dying.” He'd meant
it when he said it, he thought, but with the oh shit came a
deeper understanding of how he really felt at that moment. Well, how
he felt now, not at the
moment he'd blurted it out. A more philosophical construct had
winked at him soon as he'd said it, calling him first on using such a
colloquialism, as if he'd lifted a lyric from “Old Man River” or
regressed to something a child playing in a sandbox might say, and
reminding him he'd long before conquered with sophistication his
primal fear of personal finis.
His blurting it out had come on a whim. Nothing more, he
decided, and began probing for the whim's derivation. An instinctual
breakout? Was he losing control, his cognitive authority reverting to
rationalization? He suspected this is what the shrink was thinking,
had been striving for, employing professional dicta to unveil. He
watched her ballpoint execute swift, exuberant swirls on the legal
pad, while her face, he saw with a flicked glance, yielded nothing
save studied dispassion.
He knew she believed she had him. And maybe she did.
Ordinarily he dreaded blushing, so much so that merely thinking about
it could bring it on. He felt the heat rush to his face now. A flash of
panic, then the realization his blood betrayal should signal he was
onto her trick. She must know he was no fool. He wanted to sigh with
relief that this instinctual eruption might be saving him from the
other.
Out of control yet, though, riding his hard drive. She'd
found the chink, happily noting nuances. Dangerous. What the fuck, he
figured, and sighed, remembering almost too late to keep his lips
apart.
''Riding his hard drive'' oh yes,yes,yes...................Hmmm. Good one Mr.Paust
ReplyDeleteYou have an ear (eye?) for the entendres, Roy, even those wholly unintended. Thank you.
ReplyDelete