The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Jared Carter
WING WALKER
Named after his dad, who walked on Wacos and Stearmans in the Twenties, and hovered above county fairs and Moose Lodge picnics holding on with one hand, waving to the crowd—
B-17 with 26 flights out and back suddenly on its 27th return taking heavy fire through the fuselage, evasive action, no functioning navigational instruments, no way to get back
and night coming on, but no engine damage, and enough fuel, yet no way to get a bearing, no sense of where England lies—crew peering into the haze, everyone quiet, not talking—
so he takes her down, down, down toward Deutschland below, down into open farmland to treetop level roaring along and looking for a chicken coop, knowing farmers everywhere
are the same, that its windows will face south, and sees one at last, and knows where west is, and takes her back up, and at last they can find the way, and know they are headed for home.
ENCOUNTER
This story was told in the town where I grew up. There was this young bricklayer from Slovenia who came there in the Twenties and worked hard laying brick while everybody else was playing around, having a good time. Most of the other bricklayers stole bricks from the job, built houses with them, stole cement, stole tools, but this man showed up on time and always put in a honest day’s work for an honest dollar. He kept cutting corners, banking his paycheck, saving for the day when he could get married. And then one day they put up a sign on the bank that said it was closed. Nobody would get any money back, it was simply gone, and nobody had any work anyway. He had some cash hidden in a coffee-can, and he went to the pawn shop and bought a pistol, and told everyone in town he would shoot the banker—who still lived in a big fine house, and rode to work every day in a Pierce-Arrow, and claimed it wasn’t his fault that the national economy had gone to hell. The banker’s friends all watched out for him. The bricklayer never really got close before somebody tipped the banker off. He would slip out the back door when the bricklayer came up the front stairs. This went on for three years. Then one day the banker kissed his wife goodbye like he always did, and drove to the office, and went up, and wrote a note saying how sorry he was about everything that had happened. Everyone in town had blamed him all along. He had begun to think that they were right. He took a small revolver out of a drawer. Exactly at that moment the bricklayer burst in on him— “Drop that gun, you son-of-a-bitch, I’ve waited all this time, you’re not going to cheat me now!” and fired three shots, shooting out the glass in the picture on the wall behind the desk but otherwise missing him completely. The air was thick with gun smoke. The bricklayer stood weaving back and forth and finally tossed his pistol into a wastebasket. The banker put the revolver back in the drawer. The bricklayer sat down and began to shake. The banker shook, too. They both began to weep. When the cops arrived they were sitting there taking turns at a bottle of brandy the banker kept hidden in the drawer. The cops sat down with them and finished the bottle, and then they helped sweep up the broken glass. I wasn’t born yet, it was just a story people told.
BETWEEN A FREEZE AND A THAW
We leaned gasping for breath, with thick flakes swirling around us—snow coming down hard through the streetlamp’s cone of light—and clung to the old Chevy, unable to push it even an inch from the curb, while the tires whirled and whined. He got out and said, it’s no use, boys, we’re between a freeze and a thaw, it’s neither ice nor water now but something in between, changing back and forth— and I wanted to be far away from there, far from four-sided Hoosier weather and howling winds, wished to be somewhere up high, looking down through the clouds at the land itself, invisible and changeless, and the faint lights far below, showing the way between darkness and dawn.
© Copyright 2006-7 by Cook Communication
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