The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Dean Smith
HILARY'S MOON In the hours before your passing, a low-hung moon, strange and enormous, illumined the Potomac. One night removed from the solstice, its white-gold reflection flashed in the branches. Stopping along the riverbank, I watched it blaze across the water, awaiting your soul. DELIVERY ROOM, 2004 Christina pushed harder in the thirtieth hour, squeezing my hand as our daughter's blood-flecked head emerged, and the doctor sliced once at the air for practice, then lowered the scissors. I looked away at CNN showing photos of flag-draped coffins for the first time snapped on loading docks, air strips, and cargo holds. Julia spilled into the world, placenta attached, writhing in the doctor's gloved hands. In my first official act, I snipped her cord. Faces from high school yearbooks flashed across the screen: men and women from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Michigan; blown from their vehicles, downed in hostile fire, their shortened trajectories completed in Basra, Najaf, Tikrit; places their proud parents would never have dreamed of, while their babies lay swaddled beside them, newly born.
MY FATHER'S GUN, #3 My mother's high school sweetheart gave me my first toy guns: nickel plated Colt .45s, mother of pearl handles, leather holster. Before joining the marines, Mickey proposed to her. My mother flashed his ring. "I almost was your father," he tells me each time I see him. He's still in love with her. My father vowed to watch over his best friend's fiancee, then moved in for the kill. Dad pulled his trigger first. Mom gave back the ring. I was born. PULLING THE TRIGGER Tulips on a banquet table blood orange, succulent, remind me of you. Their lustrous cups as though rimmed with sugar open from silver vases. I ask a waitress, "Can I take some back to my room?" On the road, I want you close to me. "Not now," she says. "Check back in the morning." I consider stealing a clutch, like I did a first kiss after a botched attempt to show you the city from my roof. Your lips never opened. By morning, the flowers had gone. .357 Stuffed in his sock drawer and loaded with hollow points I thirst for an assignment. So long since he's touched me, I can't remember how it feels to fire round after round at the target. Most of my peers scored leather holsters around the waistlines of police officers, hit men. He whispers about me in secret, trots me out to a girlfriend on the side. I make him feel good about himself. His children don't want me, hold my nozzle with two fingers like a piece of soiled laundry, believe I'm here to bolster their father's sexual potency. He will shoot someone before it's over and I will be blamed. LAST PHOTOGRAPHS, TILGHMANN ISLAND Herons captured on a fallen limb against a backlit grotto of sand, the blanched light like Monet's Cathedral at Rouen. I linger there clicking off shots, locked into their hunger like a tabloid photographer. Next, a texture shot of oysters shells dropped through a packing house floor for one hundred years until they rose out of the water into Avalon Island. I point my "gun," twist the zoom lens into a shrieking osprey's mouth as I move closer to her children. And here on the dock, in peach baskets, freshly netted jumbos, their sea-green back-fins half-cloaked in shadow. Out in my kayak at dusk, I wait for perfect light to shoot the head of a rockfish as it glints below the surface, dumbfounded, bodiless. A bald eagle flashes in the white oaks. I knock my camera over the gunwale. The water swallows it whole.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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