Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 07/12/24

Hostage Photo

She looked like she was in a hostage photo.
Her eyes seemed too alert, too wide open.
Her suitor had a half-smirk / half smile.
There was a nonchalant air of confidence
On his face, as if he’d come back from
Some bold safari having bagged a trophy.
I pictured them traveling the world again
For no reason, making labored attempts
At making love to prove they still had it
In them. But to be more sympathetic:
What was she to do? Her artistic career
All in a shambles, her hobbies all coming
To nearly nothing and imbued with only
Half-meaning. One has to have a narrative,
Some way to tie a bow around a shipwreck.
If it’s any consolation, their combined income
Would smooth out the sterile edges of such
Negotiations as must inevitably come when
Proof-of-concept prototypes don’t replicate
Well on the open road. The wooden cross
In the background seemed nearly comedic.
Imagine her really believing in any god?
The old, “Well, I try to live as Christ lived,”
Doesn’t really wash with a former Baptist
Like me. I admonish others to go primitive
Polytheistic, like I now do, when begging
The gods for undeserved mercy and help.
These secularized, politicized, mainline
Protestant and Reformed worship houses
Strike me as progressive action groups
With cherry picked Bible & Torah verses
Sprinkled over them. But who am I
To judge the lives and beliefs of others?
Well, I’m told I’m a judgmental prick —
That’s who. As for me, I’ll probably
Do the same thing she’s doing, maybe
Five years from now. Then you’ll get
To laugh at my hostage photo too.

©2024 Mel C. Thompson All rights reserved.

Brother Thompson

Mel C. Thompson is a retired security guard and office temp who is a semi-retired poet-publisher (writing about one poem a month and publishing about one author per year). He was born in Downey, California and has a B.A. in Philosophy from Cal-State Fullerton. In the active phase of his poetry career, he was a desktop publisher and published many authors, most recently Deborah C. Segal and Jonathan Hayes. He is of the Café Babar lineage of the plain-language / spoken word / 1990s San Francisco poetry scene. He also writes short novels, short plays and books on religion and politics. His life has been dedicated to heresy, blasphemy, political incorrectness, red wine, red meat, black tea, slot machines, cheap cigarettes and mood-disordered women. He is currently penniless and lives alone in a Section 8 apartment and accepts blame for virtually anything he is accused of.

Cajun Mutt Press Featured Writer 09/22/21

the pecextat trilogy

1.

but still the rose of sharon blooms a little
just even & the search for the dead rat
futile again
still

now listening to the scanner for weather
check it gainst my hip ache

some testament of faith still or
some indication

that nature the youth ministers warned about
that all my ex-girlfriends’ mothers

saw

some parliament of cast-off owls
wind mad & oppositional curious
eyes wide hungry for more than

what the deacons outlined as what
we had the right to expect

2.

ex
pec
tat
ion

tat
pec
ex
ion

ion
pecextat

x
e pec ion tat

pe e ta x on i

3.

not some AARP commercial this: not like those white backlit Sunday morning ones either you know the ones tween segments of Meet the Press with Tim Russert snarking polite at politicos & praying for one just one just one Buffalo Bills Super Bowl win christ just one then fading into some oceanic dream white sand like St. Petersburg Florida near that giant pink hotel no working people can afford (private beach) maybe a yacht or maybe a calm ratless mountain morning like those later on commercials for ED meds that make you ready when the moment arrives ® & when it does make sure it don’t last more

than 4 hours (poor woman) or maybe it was one of those happy lighthouses before returning to upstate Tim praying for Buffalo cuz that was more likely than the triumph of democracy

come to think maybe
it is
exactly like
that

©2021 Mick Parsons All rights reserved.

Mick Parsons

Mick Parsons’ work has been featured by Train River Press and published in Thimble Magazine. It has also appeared in Unavoidable Disaster, Contemporary Haibun Online, The New Southerner, Pegasus, Antique Children, The Smoking Poet, The Dispatch LitaReview, The American Mythville Review, The Licking River Review, Inscape, and on semantikon.com. He is the author of two poetry collections, several chapbooks, a collection of short stories, and a novella. He’s organized open mics and readings all over the Midwest. He publishes new work often on Instagram (@dirtysacred). He is also the host and producer of the travel story podcast, Record of a Well-Worn Pair of Travel Boots.