As the streetcar persistently creaks
and change is deposited and
passengers scramble,
fearing that without quickness they will fall prey to standing.
They’re lazy
or just tired.
At “Car Stops”,
people stand with beads around their necks,
beneath the sign,
potential passengers,
or rather definite passengers
for regardless of vacancy,
they will push their way into the streetcar,
even if they end up paying $1.25 to stand.
The ones who stand
and grasp poles for support,
stare anxiously at the passengers lucky enough to get a seat
and wait for the creaking streetcar to come to a stop,
praying that with that stop
more passengers will get off
and they can fill their warm seats.
At its final stop,
everyone is forced to get off
and for this time of year expend some energy
and walk the rest of the way.
At this time of year,
the stop is much sooner
an inconvenience that everyone deals with
because of the nonstop partying,
making up for the walking.
For now,
the streetcar stops just before Napoleon,
and for those who know it,
in front of the Mater Campus,
an almost pointless addition
to an already large school.
After this stop,
streetcars cannot go any farther,
not with people filling in every hole they can possibly find
on the neutral ground.
The streetcar tracks are no longer a method of transportation,
but rather a place for
latters,
chairs,
and human bodies
sometimes police horses.
On the final day of the partying,
a man walks toward his car,
there he sees people he deems familiar.
Two of the three,
drunk.
As he passes,
he notices the woman,
around 60,
has taken on the age of 4.
In her current state,
walking has become some sort of an enigma
and her vest has become troublesome.
She mastered zipping it,
however she failed at putting her arms in the holes
and because of this failure it has ended up around her ankles,
confusing her,
crippling her.
Walking is impossible.
As he passes,
he notices the man,
60, 70, or somewhere around there,
forgetting reality
and entering Sazorackia,
a land invented two years ago,
by a somewhat drunk father and uncle.
He notices the creaking streetcar as it passes
and kindly offers toasts to its many passengers.
He toasts Sazorackia,
realizing its greatness
and succumbing to the ways of the Sazorack in his hand.
The man laughs,
along with the passengers,
who have crammed themselves into this streetcar,
left without room to breathe
much less move.
To them,
this was better than walking.
The man laughs too,
also at the passengers,
he will reach his car
before many of them reach their stops.
This makes him feel better,
for in his mind this is winning.
Because he beats them to his car,
a victory has been achieved
no matter how silly it may seem to every other outside party.
Finally,
the streetcar reaches its den,
another party season through.
Tomorrow it will resume its regular route,
and take back its claimed neutral ground.
And creaking resumed.
Darby, age 16