Junkyard Circus
words by Max Lees
illustration by Jennifer Fong-Li
It begins with a silence
beneath the tinted sky
where only a word
or two tumble out
a slot in the door
and risk being lost in the wind.
Deadbeats wander
and pick through
immature mountains of debris,
old books and warped jeans piled on top of
burnt pages of journals and graves for dogs.
The train makes its hundredth stop
at the maze of mirrors,
on a charted course going nowhere fast,
so fast that the passengers are put to sleep
and the conductor doesn’t notice
the tapping on the glass
above
and around—
The clowns cue the music,
laughing through tear-shaped painted eyes.
The tapping forms clouds that start to rain,
and the band gets louder and lights dart faster and
fog consumes the faces, the train, the junk, the sky.
But nothing to fear inside colourful tents and sugar boats—
Poets and acrobats perform
their greatest,
most wildest,
totally improvised
gravity-defying
masochism tango
against yellows and reds
of their grand stage,
flying so high they almost catch the scent of rain
but plummet back down,
followed by pink parades of pachyderms,
mice and technicolour drums,
piano keys and trumpet bands
blasting till their lungs give out
while monkeys swing from end to end,
no balance beams or high theatrics,
just chaos, noise, and high showmen,
shouting with their laughing gas,
it’s almost gone!
come while you can!
the kids in the back laugh hysterically
like it’s the funniest damn show they’ve ever seen
(and it is), and place bets on when the storm
pounding and pooling on the roof
will finally—
Crash
the party
with thunder, then silence, then rain.
Leaving only a child who sits and stares
at the junkyard circus black box funhouse
and a hole in the sky with a patch tacked on.