I’ve been in the habit of telling my parents a story – that
I have a job.
After all, stories are indeed part of it. There is the usual
narrative of course, which is never seen as such but instead as ‘normal’
– that I get up at 6 am with the appropriately misted eyes, straighten by body into a collar and a pair of shined
shoes. They praise my dedication to ‘occupation’, the assumption stops
them reading into things anymore.
But I sift through stories, I cannot assume anything.
For every week-day morning I go to the town library. I stay
there at 9 am, in the fictions section, beginning ‘A’. Then at my ‘lunch break’ I board a bus to the next
small town and go to the library there,
again to the fat laminated ‘A’ in the fiction section. I will ‘work;
through them, I will gain experience, I will earn - nothing.
Why are they hated, those who gain yet earn nothing?
But everyone is
assuming, happy in the knowledge of my ‘occupation’. The old women who observe
me, cross-legged in the corner, nursing
the book over my knee, think I am ‘on break’ from the office. The librarian may
think I have been jilted by a partner, a
lad working as a town centre apprentice clerk or something similar.. (meaningless
phrases)
Yet the only intimacy I have, the only solidity beyond
assumption, is the book; the smoothness of the spine, the beautiful sensation
of turning pages. In a place so public it makes my skin creep. And the connections. The delicious sensation
of seeing people, reading. Sometimes I will go and pick up the book after they’ve
pulled away and hope to follow the lines
that they did. Best, perhaps, most savoured, those books bound in tarpaulin or
a fixed fabric, so the title cannot be read. It makes the ‘outsider’ ‘guilty’ (ah, what
apostrophes can mean) I have to imagine the genre as it works its way across the
readers face, over their mouth, into their eyes. I see people reading and disappointed,
exasperated, angry, I heard a man mutter he wanted advice that was ‘easy to
understand’. I am trying reading people reading. I know that I feel something different, yet in
a string of words, we are monetarily connected. Sometimes, library books have pages so worn the edge of the paper has begun
to curve.
Like the slight curve of my palm as I wish I could
offer this to you.
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