They once laughed all
the way to the lawn and garden section,
a Nozzle for the
Hozzle,
my mother took me to
the beach,
my father took me to
the mountains,
this was the way of
things
they both came to this
valley for different reasons
I was raised in the
city
as if it were neutral
ground
dad drove his datsun to
the dale of trout
a brown thing resistant
to shine
I picked at the exposed
foam of the seats
like when one
mindlessly plucks grass
his bong wedged between
the seat and emergency brake
the highway whisked by through
a hole in the floor
poles, lures, gaffs
rattled in the trunk
the sandy river bank
two hundred year old
ash
swallowed my feet at
the shore
I dug a worm out of the
Styrofoam cup
dad said it is too big
for the hook
so I pulled it apart, guts
ruptured
I saw my family in the
palms of little hands, torn.
Fuddy-duddy old man mumbles
of women
being like buses
that there is always
another one coming
I caught a fish, an
ugly bottom feeder,
dad said to throw it
back
I couldn’t get the hook
out
it saddened me to see
it float away—belly up
dad read his westerns
and we rode off towards
the sunset
towards home and the
shores
of my mother’s bipolar tide
pools
rain falling faster
than wiper blades could manage
we entered the storm
I waved goodbye
and swung my string of
fish over my shoulder
skipped up the stairs
silent empty rooms
searched
her room was the last
one
Mom. Mom? Where are you
mother?
powder blue cheeks
violet lips—belly up,
head dangling off the side
of the bed
eyes looking at nothing
floor littered with
spilt pills and crumbled notes
how will the moon feel
when the earth dies?
I ran, down, out, into
the parking
turning the corner to
see
his datsun at the end
of the drive
turn signal on
I shouted and waved
frantic child arms at
his rearview mirror
Don’t go, don’t go, don’t
go.
1 comment:
Jesus Christ, Jeffrey. You're a killer. You make me cry.
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