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Busted
Pipe
Amy Holman
The 11-year-old boy who drove 200 miles in his parents'
car instead of going to school reminds me of the Roman pipe found at the
archaeological site in England. He was unable to handle the bullying at
his school, so he left at 5:00 before his parents would rise for showers
and breakfast. He ran out of gas and was given more by construction workers
along the way and I wonder if he's one of those man elevens, big, tall,
with wisps of what he'll grow to be, instead of one of the boy elevens,
unready to shift into the next phase, because what were the builders thinking?
Then again, they gave him the fuel, they didn't sell it to him, so they
were with him on his journey out of bounds. The boy said he'd driven a
tractor before, not the family car, but this was in the conversation with
the cop at the end of his drive, not with the builders, who, no doubt,
wanted no such clarification to ruin their imaginary escape. Neither the
boy's teacher nor his parents knew of any trouble, and that doesn't surprise
me, at all, although I gather they try to know more these days. My entire
5th grade class, minus two, ganged up on me because they could, and they
were bored, and picked on themselves at home, and we were learning about
sex and it was ludicrous and had to be taken out on someone. Nobody in
Northumberland, let alone at the Vindolanda Roman fort, knew that there
were working alder pipes from around 100 A.D. still trying to feed the
old hospital with spring water. They didn't guess because they were archaeologists
working with what once was, 238 boots and shoes, 1,700 writing tablets.
Every day, the trenches flooded and every day, they cursed and drained
them, until, whoosh, it all made sense. Whoosh, the boy was gone from
home, where the signs were ankle deep.
© Amy Holman

© Dream Horse |
Amy
Holman is the author
of
Wait For Me, I'm Gone, which won the 2004 Annual Dream
Horse Press National Chapbook Competition, and A Writer's Guide
to MFA Programs, Artist Colonies and Grants, forthcoming from
Perigee in 2006. Her poetry and prose have been in Verse Daily,
The Cortland Review, Xconnect, Night Train,
Shade, AWP JOBLetter, Poets & Writers Magazine,
Archaeology Magazine Online, and the anthologies, Making
the Perfect Pitch, The
Practical Writer, and The
Best American Poetry 1999. She guest teaches at The New
School, Hudson Valley Writers Center and Bread Loaf Writers Conference. |
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