tadpoles
steve kept two
tadpoles in a large red bucket
in his old
man’s work garage
when i came
over to visit
he would take
the bucket out
and we’d watch
the tadpoles swim around
after that we
went off swinging bats at that summer’s locusts
or building
our fort of twigs and thorn bushes
in the woods
behind his house
i was new to
the neighborhood
and steve had
become my first friend
seeing those tadpoles every day kept me
going
after two moves in two years
two new schools in two new years
i liked
watching them swim around
the knowledge
that they would soon grow into frogs
i also liked the lava soap
that steve’s dad had resting on his sink
the way the deep red color contrasted
with the gray
light filtering through the garage
after looking at the tadpoles
steve and i would wash our hands
and he would tell me that once they reached
maturity
he’d release them near the creek where he found
them
then it became bittersweet looking at those
tadpoles
watching them go from black sperm
into gray-green slugs
with coal eyes and small legs and long tails
those tadpoles were growing up
and steve was losing interest in them almost
daily
he was more
concerned with building our fort in the woods
our jail he
started calling it
i could tell that he only pulled the tadpole
bucket out
for me to see them
it was one day that i went down to steve’s
house
and there was yelling from inside
steve and his
old man
but i knocked anyway
and steve came
to the front door red-eyed
he told me to meet him around the back
when i got there
he had our tadpole bucket sitting out in the
sun
along with a block of wood
a hammer and nails and a can of silver spray
paint
without saying anything to me
steve took one of the tadpoles out of the
bucket
and set it on the wooden block
while it squirmed
he grabbed the
hammer and nails and went to town
impaling the first tadpole onto the wood
when it stopped breathing
he sprayed it
with the silver spray paint
do you want to do the next one? he asked me
i shook my head
and ran into the garage
i went over to
the sink and started washing my hands
with the lava soap
that red octagon building up a pink lather in my
hands
when i shut off the water
steve’s old man was standing there looking at
me
and my red, raw flesh
that soap costs money, he said
before pounding back up the basement steps
when i found steve
he had both tadpoles nailed and spray
painted
to the block of wood
they were sitting out in the hot summer sun
their carcasses waiting to fry
just like
jesus christ at a disco, steve said to me
the hammer
still in his hands
then he went
over to the bucket and dumped the water
it made a
black splash
that rushed
toward me and the sacrificial tadpoles
before getting
caught in a small drain
all of that
life water swirling down into the ground
like it never
existed at all.
John
Grochalski is the author of The Noose Doesn’t Get Any Looser After You Punch Out
(Six Gallery Press 2008), Glass City (Low Ghost Press, 2010), In The Year of
Everything Dying (Camel Saloon, 2012), and the forthcoming The Sun Causes
Cancer. Grochalski currently
lives in Brooklyn, New York, where he constantly worries about the high cost of
everything.
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