Page 154
By Jack Joseph Smith
more willing and dangerous than homosexuality. To him,
these appearances dominated him with a strange trust.
They would permit the sweep of his hand to create lines prevent-
ing his obscurity. The image understood that the
Prankster was not ready for it to take on flesh.
In a soft way he could imagine the possibilities
of it's terror, but a total appearance of reality
coming to him from what was air before would have
only made him stand up to kill, The image he had
carried with him through seldom gardens and many
gottes understood this limitation in their lives
of dream to figure and figure to matter.
He could not play with this ghost. When
training his eyes to see it so that it would be
in life, there needed to be rigid space between
them. It was outside the indelible pressure for-
ces at the ends of a vacuum, where these two fig-
ures could function for the purpose of a one-way
communication into Prankster's soul. This pocket
of distance protected Prankster from a violence
impartial, and protected this figment to eminent vi-
bration ghost from a panic undeserved.
Something was helping him.
Once Prankster noticed the ghost, and it was
never planned, he would hold on to the tensest
moments of his life for the sensation of firm