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Poetry, Summer 2007
The Token Token by Mark Rudman

 

 

Token woman, ten years back when she was hired

to cover the war; that war; the other desert

war; that followed on Rommell's problems in the war

where coverage was spare; as rare—as water; water

 

still slung over the infantry's shoulder; and by today's

standards a standard issue canteen held about a quarter

of the water we're advised to drink to take the water cure

everyone's advised to—I already said take—take seriously.

 

The convenience borders on the unreal.  And the options,

the options could make a proper-name fancier drool;

that, or go under, sink under the weight of possibilities:

Poland Spring, Evian, Cool Water, Clear Water, and in

 

Manhattan the water of waters, Tap Water, purer than

any and all of the above.  I went blank when faced

with a super-flux of relativity’s shifting,

reversible possibilities. 

 

The shame of drowning in a dried-up riverbed.

“Between shame and dying, I will take dying.”

Add Brita Filters to our heralded reservoirs

and you’re half the way there. 

 

The crack cardiologist whose care I fell into through my father’s

brother-in-law, by habit now prescribes the same universal cure,

water, water and more water, for every non-

life-threatening ailment, but one whose signature symptom was two;

 

double-vision and a sandpaper headache that made a migraine

into a mere malaise.  The young doctor worked under a middle-

aged master known for royal clientele, from JFK to F. Lee Bailey.

He made a bundle on self-help books and talk shows

 

targeting white bread as the ultimate culprit preventing

advances in an overweight and undernourished health the world

over.  My doc was dubbed: worthy successor. 

I just wish he didn’t have answer at the ready

 

when my uncomplaining wife complained of blinding, eye-

paining and brain deadening awfulness and a fever

that would melt generic thermometers.

 

We won't count my bout with encephalitis that no

doc could diagnose and whose symptoms I prefer to spare everyone

rather than run through them again.  O

began my Ode to Water.  And the hard-edged, attractive, intrepid

 

broadcast journalist who knows how to heighten her assets

with tight, bright red sweaters that draw the CNN viewer's attention

away from the unendurable situation that worsens with every sip

of Evian, has mastered and adapted tools from the novelist's trade

 

to the everyday fiction, based on facts if facts are just "what really

happened" to the Marines whose deaths are noted by groups;

CNN can’t spare airtime for names when the commercial break-

ers are waving, gesturing, and pounding on the bullet-proof glass

 

for her to stop; either way, she's schooled in sign and lip-reading,

and a surge of pleasure runs through her the way they lay cliché

on cliché, like cartoons of men; and she squeezes in mention of the five

Iraqis—civilians—whose remains are scattered from the same explosion

 

that took the lives of our four—she can sneak it in now: young men.

Cut.  Burst through door.  Hysterics.  Threats.  But she's elsewhere.

She's cracked open a fresh cool bottle of Evian

and returned to her dressing room to

 

breathe, contemplate changing clothes depending on what the day

may bring.  She likes her beat.  And being invulnerable.

And the sound of bullets whistling in earshot.

From her earliest years

 

she knew she was a thrill seeker.  A concerned

girl; now a woman.  She has seen the gender issues recede.

But she's still a target, albeit a moving one.  Men

will always resent an appealing woman who will not consent.

 

And a simple "no" will always be "what's wrong with me."

She could care less, but works at not being careless

since the slightest misstep can, has, and will blow

anyone, anywhere, on alien ground, uninvited, to

 

instant oblivion.  Try and package that, she muses,

along with the other garbage and ephemera cloaked

in the joker's sober garb and muddled, appropriated baritone.

And then it came, a sure fire way to get fired, report

 

Next

 

Per Contra Summer 2007