The Edge
                         One day the kid showed up with a tattoo of a stapler
                         on his shoulder. The others had tattoos of geckos
                         and fish and the Incredible Hulk, an emerald
                         Lou Ferigno against a background of fire. He'd
                         have been beaten up except they were dazed by it,
                         not just the precise cursive of the word “Swingline”
                         or the luster of the striking plate but the fact
                         of the stapler itself. He got the last pizza
                         at lunch and was touched on the wrist by a girl
                         at the fountain. This made him believe he was real
                         in a way breathing never had. Over the next
                         few months he stopped feeling he lived
                         on the wrong side of the mirror. There
                         was an election & his name was penciled in
                         on a few ballots. The guy with the red Camaro
                         gave him a ride home and let him pick the music.
                         In second period French he stood to ask
                         what Harcourt Brace knew all men wanted to know,
                         if Monique and Evette would join him Saturday
                         on the sailboat. First the teacher cried,
                         then the students sang the Marseillaise
                         because in four years all he'd ever said
                         was como tallez vous? No one questioned the tattoo.
                         Who'd believe he got up to pee and it was there,
                         just as the image of the body of Christ
                         appeared one morning on the thigh
                         of St. Barthelme of Flours. Otherwise
                         their stories differ. St. Barthelme was stoned
                         to death. The kid went to homecoming in a tux
                         with blue cumulus cuffs and a girl
                         embarrassed by anything but the slowest dance.
                         Bob Hicok
                         The Iowa Review
                         Volume 32, Number 1
                         Spring 2002
                         Copyright (c) 2002 by the University of Iowa.
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