Schadenfreude, by Stephanie Brown
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If this were a movie, the sound of sizzling would
foretell disaster
because you’re walking out of the room leaving
something cooking
because you have too many burners going
There should be the sound of trumpets, thin and
mournful
You’re going to walk into your murder.
It begins to smoke.
All the same I’m humming.
The attacker hides behind the door.
I’m whistling a happy face.
Minutes before you start shrieking, again and
again
before the plaster falls down around you
before the strangulation begins
folding up clothes and putting them into
drawers--your back
turned--
while the skillet, in close-up, keeps sizzling.
Minutes before the shrieking and choking.
The cupboards become lit.
Watch the doll’s mouth melt.
This audience won’t pity you
like big round workers who don’t get pity
when they step on bus steps in the morning and
make the bus
sag momentarily. Like wizened-up bodies
holding canes, heads bowed under golf hats
on their ways downtown--
This audience will laugh--
the way your eyes bulge out and your tongue is
unhinged
how you return to find a kitchen filled with
smoke
when we all know it’s your gluttony that’s caused
it.
(It’s the way you locked your lies up in the closet
that’s led me to hate you.)
So when your doom comes--
a knife thuds into your back, let’s say,
or an arrow is shot into your ribs
or a razor is pulled across your face
or you trip on a roller skate near the open cellar
stairs
or you walk into a sliding glass door
or you are hung from the shower curtain rod in a
plastic white shower
or you are stabbed with pinking shears
or demoralized with an ax handle
or beaten down the spine with a rake
or forced to swallow some golf balls
or sliced at the waist and the wounds salted
or if you merely carpet-burned your arm on the
carpet
It will feel great to watch
you get it
or at least to see you experience
some slight, future discomfort,
chagrin,
embarrassment.
From “The Best American Poetry 1995” edited by Richard Howard. (Touchstone/Simon & Schuster: $13; 303 pp.) Originally published in The American Poetry Review.
Copyright 1995 Reprinted by permission.
* STEPHANIE BROWN will read her poetry at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books today at 1:30 p.m.