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The Carved Monkey in the Shop Window

by Jordan789 

Posted: 29 June 2007
Word Count: 248


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So it was, there in the antique window, one sculpted monkey, silver with black streaks of varnish, shining dully alone amongst ruinous garbage: desk lamps, perverse carvings of Indian relics, footstools, and a model airplane from the turn of the century. But for some reason, none of these other items mattered. It was the monkey that held my interest.

I purchased the bust, and was impressed by the heft of the sluggish material, as if it might have gold or lead fillings. At home, I held the piece to a lamp and examined scratch marks in he base. With a penknife someone had carved a date, and a message, “Happy Birthday, Sue.”

I placed the monkey on the desk in front of me, and slumped backward in the chair. The monkeys grin spread freakishly uneven, and a blackness filled each creak and crevasse. I imagined the monkey in the library of a scholar, holding up books on ancient philosophy, and theories of light and sound. Instead, it was a birthday present, probably jammed in a closet and forgotten until the owner moved away somewhere.

I pictured a beautiful woman, blond hair curled out to her shoulders, with a white button down and khaki’s, like Joan. How she held this image in her hands and remembered the man who gave her the gift. How she had produced a placating thank you and quickly placed the carving back into its box, as Joan had done, too many times to remember.






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Comments by other Members



V`yonne at 21:47 on 29 June 2007  Report this post
Doesn't sound as if that monkey went down too well even with Sue, but he did have a knack of getting himself bought. I loved the description of the shpo window.

shining dully alone amongst ruinous garbage:


I loved the oxymoron here. It created a separate space around the monkey perfectly. I loved the sinister grin too. Nice feelings of attraction and horror.

ireneintheworld at 22:29 on 29 June 2007  Report this post
jordan, this is great. you've opened up a whole image of 'wrong presents' and how, often those giving gifts either don't know the other person as well as they thought they did or just didn't think of them as they made their choice.

wonderful descriptions. well done.

irene

Hal Incadenza at 22:31 on 29 June 2007  Report this post
there's a lot more to be had here, but it is a fantastic start. Frustratingly short, but some wonderful images

crowspark at 23:38 on 29 June 2007  Report this post
Some great images here with something brooding in the shadows. I was drawn by the title and I liked the opening para.
Loved
The monkeys grin spread freakishly uneven, and a blackness filled each creak and crevasse.

Thanks for the read.
Bill

Prospero at 09:20 on 30 June 2007  Report this post
Hi Jordan

i was expecting something much more horrific, but in its own subtle way this story slips under your guard and leaves you with an uneasy feeling of failed relationships to which the monkey has somehow contributed. A sort of simian revenge for being sidelined by its more successful cousin.

Thanks for the read

John

tractor at 15:45 on 30 June 2007  Report this post
Hi,

we never know others as well as we think we do and this piece brings that out for me in a creepy way.

Mark


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