The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Jacqueline Powers
HOW FAMILIES DIVERGE LIKE EDDIES IN A STREAM
Okay we were first cousins and maybe he loved me more than he should but his is a sad tale a cautionary tale like a made-for-TV movie but all his almost sincere charm easy smile couldn't save him from bam! time after time bam! or his mother turning a blank though loving eye.
He fought back the only way he could when he smashed that kid in the head with an iron. I mean, what's a boy to do? He was sent away for awhile they called it reform school back then and it was school all right he learned about meth and skank and angel dust and knife fights and Hell's Angels and how to almost survive in a lack-loving world.
He was just sixteen when his daddy keeled over we went to the movies that night took all the kids and he leaned his head on my shoulder and cried and cried he was so happy the old man was finally dead. Shoulda killed him myself, he said. You're so beautiful, cuz, he said.
I don't see him too much anymore just weddings and funerals. He never did make it to prison just the county jail a time or two like when he got into a fight with a chain saw, lost half his nose that time. The other guy survived, too.
Lost his grown-up baby sister about that time to the false-bright, fog-promise oblivion of heroin. No one ever dared tell him their new step-daddy raped her at thirteen. They knew better than to stir up trouble, though he's grown calmer over the years. I think.
AT THE BEDSIDE OF THE ETERNAL MATRIARCH
Her last breath was the same as her first, hard and grasping. And in between was hard, too, with no childhood to speak of, eldest of fourteen except one died a baby, scarlet fever they said. Mother's little helper and school in jealous fits and starts before the glove factory assembly line and row house in Philly with her own 2.5 children, black and white linoleum floor. How we hated that sauerbraten smell, castor oil swill spill. But that was later.
That was just the way things were then, they shared what they had slept four to a bed and we didn't know no different back then she always said, smiling, shaking her head. We didn't have nuthin' but we had enough, she said.
These were spare-strong people. Her daddy was born old. His eyes lived somewhere else, as if long deprived of choice hands bent like a pretzel. He hardly ever spoke out loud. Her momma never spoke at all, but worked the ground with egg shells and coffee grounds, birthing roses big as cabbages.
In the end her face an intaglio white-cold, marbled stone-- an effigy of itself. They woke us in the dark so we could share that last breath which was really no breath at all.
ETERNITY IN A RED LEATHER TOTE
This bar is smug with the brittle smoke taste of conversation. All around people sizzle in an effort to come together, while nonetheless setting themselves apart. They coyly seat you in the almost empty second floor, just inches from the only other person in the room, who you carefully avoid looking at, instead pulling an unused secret from your new red leather tote, although, when you accidentally meet his green gaze you can't help but wonder, Is this the next man who will sop up my juice slick with a rasping tongue? It would be so easy and anonymous, so vile and unlovely, viscous and unimaginative, but isn't that the point?
At home you've grown impatient with my carping on eternity. But I will find you next time around like I found you this time, that simple necessity, okay, call it what you will, call it need, call it delusion or bone-black nothingness beyond the death dance of despair. I say, Because it doesn't matter. I say, Because I know the taste of you now.
EASTER MORNING
This is no bird-dappled Easter Morning, sunstruck, no, just you and me staring, and an empty house, those colored egg dream kids climbing trees, throwing sticks and stones, some broken bones gone now, the occasional half-drunk hilarity has faded, and I wonder, did we stand or did we fail, or does it not matter in any case, now that our time has come and (perhaps) gone, and you on the floor on your side in the kitchen, fingers twitching, plates and dishes scattered, ambulance and sirens rushing, wailing, a corpus wired for sound, bleep-blips, red/green lights flashing a silent prayer, a rosary of sorts, though it's not time, there's time enough yet for all that and more, but this Easter Morning we will make our own way, unfettered, unbound, search out wild orchids in the shadowed crotch of chilly trees, forsythia in a jelly jar, abundant, and spring rain, while in the pond a thousand fish waiting to be born.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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