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I was at an old strip mall, in the coffeeshop of a department store, sitting at the counter, talking with a man, when the lights went out.
He said his name was Joseph, and that this was nothing new. I could hear him shift on the naugehyde cushion, hear him slide his forearm across the counter to the sugar caddy. I think the generator should come on, that this (situation) should right itself, but it doesn't.
People start feeling their way around the booths and aisles searching for markers, to make acquaintances in this place.
He said, finding my shoulder, "This happened once before, in New York, in the 60's. Lasted a long time. 9 months later there was a record number of babies being born." I nodded, thinking about what it must have been like. All stumbling in a black city.
They must have felt thrown back into the dark ages when nobody talked. Endless and open corridors, formless, slick ponds, split open wounds.
I heard people crawling about on the floor, shuffling on all fours, imagined hands out in front, antennae flexing out and long, feeling for form. They slid out and away into the outside.
He said, finding my shoulder, "I'm going to take this sugar. Shhhhhhhh." and I heard the little packets shift against each other, Florida against Georgia against New Mexico. The tiny photographs crumpling, crude granules sifting from one end of the envelopes to the other, gathering in the paper corners.
The hiss of small rain coming from his shirt pocket, an overturned hourglass mumbling low, cupped in flannel and stitches. He stole away on the linoleum with the others, like some great family of ants, chests close to the ground, carrying away the contents of this place. First the sugar, then the silver, then the dark.
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