The Miser
With
horrid bulging eyes an alligator watched intently, a Miser everyday for year’s whist
hidden beneath the pier, at noon he drank his cheap beer, listening to the rich
beats of blues
And soul, reverberating from his radio. His giant wrinkled tail swayed to and fro, the sounds kept The Miser whole,
but also his stink too rank too bold. Mac
daddy of all Mac daddies’ ate his fill of fish and toads in the great lake
where giant beasts roam.
Wretched
man The Miser was, a braggart talking constantly of hidden gold, though, throughout
the animal kingdom complaints arose, and arose, like the lilies pads abundant above
Mac Daddy’s mammoth nose. Oh, how The Miser loved to hunt with his gun and bow.
Sovereign
deer took stand, caught up in the rut, filled with natures’ lust, restrained
but now too much. All their kin, rotting
slowly on the ground, for the souls taken, only to boast...tickets sold to the
show; peacocks cried for their mates, swans lost in the great lake, furs not to
warm, just a picture display,
Only
hungry buzzards smile these sad sullen days….
Pot
bellied Miser, never the wiser, critters downrange, chattered of pain, so carried
by frenzied winds, the plan began with cunning and guise, The miser must die.
Birds
heard whispers of townsfolk, tiring of his greed, critters know where his
treasure lay; a deal was made indeed, on the fourth day of May 1988.
Mac
Daddy would lure The Miser, playing on his greed, to a lair of young gators, but
so busy was he. Searching oh so desperately for his truest, his Queen, One
hundred years together for days he had not seen.
But
on that fourth day May 1988, whilst slithering to the pier, vengeance began
to grow and grow and his rage exploded, like a mighty storm cloud roaring with
lighting and thunder, for he saw his truest, Queen was gone forever, The Miser
was wearing her skin and smiling with pleasure. His instincts took control, he
pulled him asunder, but death was slow, as he rolled and rolled the lake water
red, rank and foamy. Radio playing Fools Gold, I’m coming Home.
All
creatures large and small, laughed and cheered, and I swear to you all by all I
hold close and dear it is the truth. I visit the great lake quite often as I
did in my youth. I sit on the pier, watching the deer and geese playing Muddy
Waters on the radio, while Mac Daddy fills his ears, tail still swooning.