not really a scream
Larry the Lobster
looks out upon the smear of color
that is a crowd of human faces.
his claws wave menacingly
in a stream of bubbles.
small children
shrink back behind
their moms -
two smaller lobsters
react self-protectively:
2nd and 3rd prize.
Larry weighs 14 lbs.
and is older
than anyone in Ishmael's
Restaurant today, though
Harry Melvin,
who bought two chances,
is almost as old.
the customers have bought
raffle tickets
to win Larry the Lobster.
827 chances have been sold.
the customers await.
there is tension, expectancy
and garlic butter in the air.
some wear bibs.
some wear Birkenstocks
or Doc Martens
and will set Larry free
if they win him.
some are undecided
but know they'll be on tv
either way.
they hold numbered tickets:
the same numbers are painted
on ping pong balls
with red nail polish.
next to the tank, the balls fill
a large wire barrel
mounted on a wooden sawhorse stand
with a crank on one end.
Ishmael Green spins the drum
slowly. proudly. the idea, the raffle, the
balls, the drum, the tv coverage,
the free advertising, the recipe
for clams casino, the wine list,
the name Larry
were all his idea.
people spill out into the lobby
and from there into the parking lot.
the p.a. system crackles.
Larry the Lobster
was born off the coast of Maine
the same year
as Charles Bukowski,
lived through three wars
numerous police actions
a dozen major changes of fashion
and 10 presidents.
a television reporter
points her microphone.
the camera pans.
two numbers are drawn.
the crowd moans.
a woman nods enthusiastically
her husband's eyes glisten
and children jump up and down.
bubbles slowly rise
in thick clam chowder.
in the next room salad is tossed.
water boils.
steam clouds the windows
and Ishmael spins the drum.
savors the moment:
I was born for this
thinks Ishmael.
the rattle of the balls
audible through the water
in the big tank
sounds to Larry
a little like mating calls
so long unheard
and he turns
tail raised high
as his number comes
up.
Michael McNeilley
© 1997
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