My conversation with the axe-murderer at the Jenkins’ party was really quite awkward. I made excuses for my unchecked curiosity, asked her about victims and her preference for the axe. She wouldn’t talk. She was missing an entire arm. With some remaining important fingers she rolled the stem on her glass of wine. It soon felt like an interrogation and without words she returned to the couch with the other axe-murderers. They laughed it up. By the indoor hot tub there was a group of scantily clad Chinese water torturers reminiscing. Some suicide bombers were walking to the bathroom together. They were talking about later getting together a game of volleyball. I went to the kitchen and got a handful of party mix, pretzel sticks and peanuts mostly, and stood by myself in the center of the room and discreetly transformed into my impression of Frankenstein. Eventually, everyone got a real kick out of that and their laughter steadily grew, fed off of itself, then seemed to close in from all sides until its volume swallowed me whole. ---Zachary Schomburg |
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