====================================================================
=======================================================================
====================================================================
The Lamppost
The
inky black of the side street was broken only by a single light. Its amber glow
touched down on the recently disturbed side walk. The concrete had within the
circle of light only one tenant, a young man who could barely have stepped foot
into his twenties. His solid form created an oasis of shadow contained by the
light. The lamppost stood above him, a sentinel in the dark. It was doing its job
well.
The lamppost’s warm light fell upon the messy mop of hair that capped the still
head of the young man. The light slid deep into his increasingly pale skin, and
collected on his cheeks and forearms. He was well lit from above, and not a
visible inch of him was outside the reach of the lamppost’s light. The mercury
vapor bulb continued to shine. Years of wear had done little to hamper its
effectiveness. It was a good lamp; it did its job well.
As the night drew on, the ground beneath the young man continued to darken.
This was not by fault of the lamp. The dark spot was fluidic, and flared with
the reflected amber light. With deep red hue, the darkness continued to spread.
It trailed off beyond the faint boundary of where the light met the dark.
The young man began to stir. Tonight, the constant drone of the lamppost’s bulb
was accompanied by a soft gurgling. This could be traced to its source, deep
within the lungs of the slumped figure. His tensed shoulders loosened against
the grey steel of the lamppost’s supporting pole. It was a very sturdy pole,
and it had aided the lamp in its years of hard work. Held aloft by the pole;
the lamp shone on in the dark night as it had for years and as it would.
Now the gurgling, caused by the dark hole through his abdomen, slowed. The wound
was ragged and deep, and well lit on the surface. The depths of the hole were
lost to the pervasive dark. The deep red of his blood seeped into his once
white shirt. Perhaps a surgical lamp would have revealed more of the grievous
wound, but the lamp had done all it was required to. The lamp was not
ambitious, nor was it able to be. It was a good lamp, and it did only the job
it was made to do.
The
cold sweat of the young dying man slid down from his brow to the end of his
sharp nose. Illuminated along its path and reflecting tiny splashes of light
across his pale lips and sunken cheeks. His unremarkable brown eyes began to
glaze, and the light of dawn swept the sky. His breath rattled once more, a
soft vapor caught in the constant illumination. His life left him as the
surrounding dark peeled away like an orange, revealing a fresh day. The streetlight
fell dark. It was a good lamp; it did its job well, and now that job was done.
Now left in the brightening world was a warm corpse against a cold grey
lamppost.
====================================================================
=======================================================================
====================================================================