Ashes in Las VegasA Story by anamezicHad that obligatory last meal with my grandparents before they scurried back to Croatia, tails tucked between their legs. They’ll spend the next year hiding out in her coast’s curves then blame us for “being distant.” My grandfather antagonistically talked over his wife the whole time in a fruitless attempt to dole out some 70+ years of accumulated wisdom. He must have gone flailing through life with a broken net, because all he actually ended up teaching me is that he has a remarkable passion for redundancy. I mean, the poor man must have said, “write everything down or you’ll forget and be a s**t novelist,” while wagging his metaphysical finger at least five times before conceding to a response. That’s not to say I didn’t try and interrupt; I did, to no avail. Because all he really heard spewing from his own olive oil slicked lips was proof that he still had something left to say, something left to offer this world as he prepared to pass through it. All I wanted was to meet up with Jake and spend the evening driving until it got so dark, the streetlights were the only things we could be sure existed. Instead, I shut my mouth and waited until he was done to say, “Wow, that's good advice.” He nodded, the lower half of his face disappearing into the folds of his neck and back again. I couldn’t help but picture a toad in a peacoat and crown, looking accomplished as the water around him begins boiling. My grandmother watched in silence, the war long over. Her husband’s baritone had suffocated each conversation she ignited over the years until she had nothing left to do but drink and smoke cigarettes out on the veranda. My grandparents only spend about two weeks every few years in the United States. Out of these, at least five days are spent in Las Vegas, Nevada, far from the family they're supposed to be visiting. They have a sick enthusiasm for Vegas. When I asked what it was, exactly, that they did there, my grandma started to say something before being interrupted by her husband who found a few ways to explain they basically like to walk around and gamble a little. This evening in particular, they had just returned from one of those trips and my grandfather was looking morosely at his bowl of soup when he told me he hated America. He said, ”We got stuck walking behind these two gigantic asses all tattooed and sipping some meter-long bright blue iced drinks. It was disgusting. I could never live here.” My grandmother excused herself for a cigarette. I remembered how she chain- smoked when I was young and how I used to think the ash from all her cigarettes constellated in bags below her eyes. But that's not why they hang like innocent men, swinging at dawn. All of those words, every last word she bit and swallowed down, weighed on her face until no one but her own husband could ever see her as the woman she was.
© 2013 anamezicReviews
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Added on May 10, 2013Last Updated on May 10, 2013 Tags: las vegas, vegas, non fiction, true, grandparents, family, love, sad, depressing AuthoranamezicCAAbout19 year old from California moving to Brookyln for an education. work inspired by digitization/ philosophy/ degenerate mental health and unfaltering romanticism more..Writing
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