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 142 pages $10.95 (paper) ISBN 0-932511-20-1 $16.95
(cloth) ISBN 0-932511-19-8
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The Last Man Standing First, the voice
of my father. First, the rasping death rattle of his voice calling
me. His voice everywhere, surrounding. Each way I turn, his voice
equally there, calling my name. Boy, rattled the voice. Boy. I start
in each direction to go to him, but I hear the voice everywhere so I
stand still. Boy, says the voice, its rattle thinning, hollowing. A
thick fogbank rolling in over the water, father's figure rising from
it. Father's figure draped in blue, a blue gown, his face swollen
and bruised. A smear of yellow on his chest, a badge of yellow
pulsing in the blue fabric. I rush into the water, shouting his
name. Father! Just as I am about to dive and swim to him, he holds
up his hand, commanding me to stop. I stand waist-deep in the
freezing water. Murder, he says. I am murder. Is he saying murder,
or mother? I can't be sure. Boy, Father says. I am put to death. No,
I shout. No! The figure continues to rise, to swell as a corpse
might after days in the water. It points at me. Boy, it commands.
Find the one. Punish. Father! I shout, as the figure loses its
structure, collapses into the rolling fogbank. Above the whispering
I hear one last word. Sign, the deathsound says. Sign.
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