REPORT FROM BEHIND THE CASTLE
To deal with the King, one must go behind the curtain in the castle—for the best interest of everything official. This way the people won’t notice. So much. They will not care to notice.
Am I about to marry to the King? There are ladies here. Ladies mounting one another. Together are they the Queen?
Am I about to become the Queen? If I can touch the spot where the Queen mounted, does that make mounting productive? If the Queen is tangible, can she be visionary? Am I to become a version of the Queen or am I joining the Queen?
The King is here. The King struts down the street, twirling his crown, being the spectacle befit for his kingdom. He is not behind the curtain, he is not abiding the decision. Was he the one who made the decision? Was this the King’s decision? Was the King present for this decision-making occasion?
Behind the castle’s curtain I meet with Somebody. My cell phone covered in goo, I struggle heeding this call. Do you recognize substance? It seems a substantial goo. This Somebody promises to investigate and return with answers about my goo. Could this Somebody be the King? Can I be the King too? Will anyone care to notice?

Reb Livingston is the author of God Damsel (No Tell Books, 2010) and Your Ten Favorite Words (Coconut Books, 2007). She lives in Northern Virginia with her husband and son.
