Lost
on Colfax Avenue
By
John Calderazzo
Walking to the Tattered Cover bookstore past the lacy battlements of
Denver East High and Pete's Greek restaurant, I hear a faint scrabbling
of plastic on concrete. Not far down an empty side street I see a shaggy
figure in an army surplus jacket waving a blind man's stick and turning
uncertainly in the corner made by a locked warehouse and gray retaining
wall. He takes a half step this way, then that, a green beetle trapped
in a shoebox, one antenna gone.
He stops, letting
his cane rest on the cracked sidewalk. I almost call out, then remind
myself to give him time to work back through the bent geometry of his
memory. Once, in a mangrove swamp in Florida, I lost myself in the late
afternoon, paddling in circles in a canoe, snail-encrusted roots curving
everywhere out of water, living walls too high to see over and too delicate
to climb, threatening to crumble like branch coral under my weight.
Ten thousand mirror-image islands darkened as the sky turned orange,
then faded while mosquitoes closed in.
I willed myself
to stop paddling. Then gravity began to show me the way, a ghost current
I calmed myself enough to feel, following my breath out of myself, letting
the flow tug me, finally, into the Nirvana of open water, where the
line between silver sea and silver sky had disappeared. Like easeful
death, I thought, not a place, but a state of mind I might float into
the way this blind man cornered by concrete and his daily life might
soon arrive at a calm center, as he stands in a garden waiting for flowers
to break open, their fragrance laying a path of stones in whatever direction
he needs to go. But now he waves the cane and turns again, and though
I haven't moved or made a sound, he stops and faces me. He crooks an
arm, lifts it, waits.
John
Calderazzo's stories,
essays and poems have appeared in dozens of magazines and literary reviews,
including Audubon, Bellevue Literary Review, Georgia Review, North
American Review, Orion, The Runner, Witness, and elsewhere. His
books include an over-the-shoulder nonfiction writing guide, Writing
from Scratch: Freelancing; a children's science book, 101
Questions about Volcanoes; and Rising
Fire: Volcanoes and Our Inner Lives, a personal travelogue which
looks at ways in which volcanoes around the world have affected human
culture. A former fulltime freelance writer and now an award-winning
creative writing teacher at Colorado State University, he has had his
work cited in both Best American Essays and Best American
Stories. He’s presently working on a book of poems.
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