Wisps of grey
hair half-surrounded the rouge planet, it’s smooth surface blazon with glare
from the nearby sun, bobbing amid the stars and galactic effervescence,
speckled by liver spots and eyebrow wrinkles.
“Captain, we
are approaching Planet Kantor. Shall I lower the shields?” Kevin asked,
blank-faced at the controls.
“Not just
yet.” I responded. “The gravitational pull seems rather strong here. We can’t
risk any further damage to the shuttle.”
Kevin nodded
his silent approval, studying a sudden outcropping of craters that had formed
in our path. With a flip of the controls he gracefully evaded the obstacle and
piloted the star-craft back on course, drifting amid the suspended ruins of a
once great planet.
The fantasy
and subsequent phone conversation ended when Kantor finally did arrive, with his high-gloss baldhead
and sweater and slacks and golf-shoes. I closed the phone on Kevin—call you back later—just as day gave way
to a pale blue twilight, summoning sundown, and Kantor drove his golf-cart up
to the door, grinning about his game. I cleaned his clubs and loaded them into
the back of his Mercedes.
The ride home
was cold and late and I crashed on the couch, exhausted, at 9:30.
Again.
KANTOR, Bob
Kantor—late night, last-one-out, golfer extraordinaire.
Last one out.
1 comments:
Dude I felt like I was there! So well done. Kantor would be PROUD.
Post a Comment