Featured Writer: Emmanuelle Vivier

A Stay of Execution

 Nothing else matters

when for months

you will sleep alone

in a double bed

abandoned skin shivering against cold sheets

listening to the weight of darkness

gasping loneliness into your lungs

Nothing else matters when happiness ends

in a few hours

and you throw yourself in each others arms

hooked on each other’s breath

as though you are trapped on a boat

on the verge of drowning

knowing you cannot swim

alone

  

Double Talk

 She asks “how are you” and does not listen

when I answer “my dear old cat is dying”

she goes on and on about her dog

my poor cat long forgotten

merely a prologue to her endless monologue

and it doesn’t matter whether I am listening

as long as I punctuate her litany

with a few “oh-no-really?”

as long as I do not interrupt

to go back to my dying cat

and I wish I could switch her off

like an annoying fan

but nothing will stop this inferno of words

talking through me, above me, beyond me

and I realise I could have said anything when she asked “how are you”

I’ve just been diagnosed with cancer

my husband left me for a twenty years old girl

my house caught on fire

my dog perished in flames

I lost everything

I have been sleeping at the Salvation Army for the last two nights

my boss fired me because I was crying all the time

Her monologue would still have revolved around The dog

and by now, I am long past her insane rhetoric

long past the idiotic dog

no longer do I hear her maddening voice

As I start my own litany

she pauses for air like a swimmer just emerged from underwater

aware of my sudden presence

  

For One Minute of Your Time

 People rot in the overheated waiting room

slumped over hard chairs

foreheads bathed in sweat

Some stamp their feet with impatience

sit on the bare floor

stare at a queue ticket like a prisoner stares

at the key hole of his cell door

Women rock crying babies

whisper reassuring words

struggle to appease them with water bottles

to shield them from a bacterial mist of sneezing and coughing

spreading promiscuously through the room

 

Five hours later

everyone is starving

conversations drag

At last a glacial nurse calls my number

stares at me as if I were a leper

takes me to a claustrophobic closet

where I wait another half hour

eavesdropping on other patients’ consultations

because no one has the time                  or tact

to close doors

 

A doctor enters

addresses me from the height of his pedestal

and after one minute

he hands me a hieroglyphic prescription

then disappears like a fleeting vision

trying to break his own speed record

zooming from closet to closet

 

I waited five hours for this moment

 

Tell me I’m dreaming

A déjà vu from a previous life?

A medieval city

somewhere in the old continent

during the “Dark Ages”?

 

Please, tell me I’m dreaming

Tell me, please

  

Prima Donna in the Kitchen

 Here’s that French chef

in a fit of rage again

he slams doors, dunks down plates

fires pots and pans in the sink

vegetables and breads are flying

crashing to their death

he rips his apron

throws it in the air

nearly trips over fallen utensils

grabs a terrified sous-chef

hacks the air

knife in hand

threatens to go back to France

where he can find real baguettes, real pâté

real wine, real madeleine, real cheese, real croissants

real cooks

he wedges his way between stunned sous-chefs

brooding under his white tower of a hat

high with eminence

he sips his angry glass of wine

swearing the whole kitchen is conspiring

against him

sauces curling into lumps

vegetables turning to mush

soufflés collapsing to nothing

casseroles overflowing

salads shrivelled and dying  

crème brulée set on fire

the cook almost torched to death

what did I ever do to the good God

to deserve this pack of idiots

he sips another rich transfusion

of Beaujolais 

departs the kitchen theatrically

amid a blaze of Oh là là

 

 

 

 

 

Emmanuelle Vivier is a Freelance Translator. She was born in Paris, France, but has lived in South-western Ontario for 18 years. She is an Associate Member with the League of Canadian Poets. Her work (in English & French) has appeared in The Dalhousie Review, Tower Poetry Society (McMaster University), Room of One’s Own, Quills and Black Moss Press anthologies. She isa member of the Writing Salon at the University of Windsor with Marty Gervais.


Email: Emmanuelle Vivier

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