flickr photo
By
Alejandro Escudé
Crime
He will pardon himself
and the pardoning will infinitely
continue, the pools that are his eyes
will mix with other pools,
the entire thingee pardoning itself
before and after the act
or acts—we watched it unfold,
an event in past tense; no one
corrected it for actually taking place
in the present. No grammar Gestapo
burst in driving their beetle-black cars
to arrest the event for wrong tense.
It just happens, though we said
it had happened. Do two wrongs
make a right? You’ll have to ask
him. He should know, or should’ve,
depending on your perspective
or your state of residence.
I remember my boss once
shutting the door that lead
into the Christmas office party
in my face, pushing out before
pulling in, nearly breaking my nose,
because I was late; I snuck in
after the choir he’d invited sang
their last carol. A coworker,
who was an unbeliever, let me in
through another door. My boss
never spoke of it. My nose felt the blow
that never was, or is, again depending
on whether you think a company
or a country should be founded
on laws or traditions. My boss loved
the tradition of the Christmas office party
so much, he insisted we be there on time
and I looked everywhere, we looked
everywhere, but there was no crime.
He’d simply closed a door.
It could’ve been coincidence, though
I’d seen his eye rotate like a gecko’s eye
before spotting me
through the crack in the door.
Alejandro Escudé
Alejandro Escudé’s first book of poems, My Earthbound Eye, was published in September 2013. He holds a master’s degree in creative writing from UC Davis and teaches English. Originally from Argentina, Alejandro lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two children.
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