A desk sat at the corner of
the tiny room, meaning it laid claim to half of one wall, and faced the rising
sun each morning through the window beside it. It was an interesting piece of
furniture: half writing surface and half shelf space, with drawers lower down
and a handy bulb socket stuck to the underside of the first shelf row, above
the writing implement. The bulb that came with it upon its purchase was badly
burnt out; a clear, incandescent one whose model the eventual owner didn't care
to take note of upon replacement (she sheepishly estimated the socket size
after running to London Drugs instead).
It was a handy desk. Cheap-looking,
yes, considering the faux grain overlay and unstylish minimalist cuts. The
drawers had no catch to them and the unsuspecting file-hunter will pull a whole
one out to tragically and inevitably crush their toes, which won’t be the end
of their woes, because afterwards comes the grumbling and shuffling of papers,
stuffing them back into folders, and folders into drawers, and drawers into
drawer-slots.
One upside to a desk that’s seen its fair share of Craigslist
postings and wistful goodbyes driving off atop the back of a pickup truck is
that with its expendability comes personality, and the enabling of its
achieving one. In the first light of its present dwelling, the desk had no
scars to bear—at least not of the intended kind—and was merely scratched and
dented in places where other desks were not stranger to. This was quickly
amended by the replacement of the burnt bulb (the desk’s countenance visibly brightened,
hardy har, however desks might have countenances at all) and the subsequent
hammering of gold thumb tacks at seemingly random nooks and seams of its body
(the desk may have felt severely betrayed then). Whoever pulled this heinous
act then proceeded to string some yarn along tacks stuck beside drawers to
limit their opening, and then ran off to obtain something or other. The
remaining random tacks’ positions were quickly explained when a short thread of
Christmas lights was draped and wired to each, and small, colourful paper
lanterns were popped onto each light. The desk sat unassuming until the ceiling
light was disabled, and the sound of lanterns shuffling and brushes of plastic
on carpet preceded the abrupt and quiet glow of different colours at regular
intervals, framing the desk and almost making it feel beautiful. Oh
yes, it was a desk of character, not much more now than when it was first
methodically assembled, but it held and held up many things, and sat at the
corner of the room like it truly belonged there. Books, laptop, vase, lights,
and all.
Where proses are read
—if the mood fits.
And violets may be blue
—if the mood fits.
5/29/12
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