—JUST HOLD ON LOOSELY, AND DON’T LET GO
Stories
Tell me a story, kid,
my dad used to say,
as if I had dozens
stashed in my socks,
as if I possessed an ounce
of moxie or nerve.
If he knew how
he scared me,
he wasn’t telling,
and that frightened me more,
his bones made of ancient stone,
his jaw pure Rushmore.
Mother was her own cyclone,
Tasmanian devil, witch, and jackal,
all stitched into one,
but Dad did her bidding—
robotic, fake-eyed blind,
the lashes always with the buckle end—
which weaponized and
made him fiercely unpredictable.
During one installment—
while my youngest brother
screamed and bled—
I thought I saw a teardrop
slip down Dad’s face,
only to realize a second later
the difference between
mercy and muscle strain.
Tell me a story, kid,
he said again when I didn’t answer,
so this time I shooed the cigarette smoke away,
sat down, and never stopped telling.
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