The Thought That Counts

by Isaac Weil
Poetry
Now we come to an interesting gas station in the middle of god forsaken hot desert nowhere. Thought sleeps on a small cot behind the sticky counter. He sells chips and cigarettes to those who pass through the desert and dig in the dry soil, which wettins faster than you’d expect. In his green stripe gas station, green as fish in the desert. the old fifties pumps, little rockets to the Moon or Leningrad. Curved and bulging, sleek and fat little thangs. (Write right off that cliff, Louise, write right off that cliff.) In his shit smeared bathrooms and country western music plastic in the speakers, as the floor is plastic on the few lonely boots that pad and clunk by. With the wheezing bellies that accompany them. Like a dog accompanies a boy on his skateboard. On the resonating sidewalk. Leached and yanked. This is where the thought lives. And does he count? He may count the money in the register. He may count the stock of Heineken and Arizona Tea. He may count the wanderers. He may count the potato chips. Who knows if he just counts?

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© 2013 Fresno City College—The Review / Ram's Tale is a publication of student writing and artwork from the Humanities and Fine, Performing and Communication Arts Divisions at Fresno City College. Authors retain all rights to their work.