--THE LIGHTS ARE ON ON EVERY STREET
Slow
Down
My
feet were so small then,
little
squirrel paws or beach bird claws,
frail
as star burst,
yet
I would trail after you nonetheless,
panting,
shouting
for you to stop, to slow down,
hoping
you might wonder why.
Later
on
my
toes grew but
my
feet stayed small,
baby
feet really,
booties,
no
bigger than rearview mirror fuzzy dice
yet
still not enough to catch you.
On
occasion a boyfriend might notice
and
then grin wide and leaky black
and
my skin would shrivel
remembering
how you’d outrun me—
your
fast escaping love.
Now
my feet are levitated.
Earlier
they were swollen.
I’m
not sure how you’ll see this, but
in
a moment that door will open and they’ll bring in a needle
and,
soon after, hack my legs off above the ankles.
I
have to imagine you’ll be relieved,
yet
my imagination’s let me down before.
What
I’ll do, though, is first thing when I’m wake I’ll yodel.
I’ll
call out, “Ollie Ollie All-in-free!”
And
hopefully you’ll hear me.
Some
of the Things That Frighten Me
Satan
and dentists and clowns.
My
mother’s cat claw fingernails and the grime beneath Father’s.
Snakes
and rats and old people’s blue-veined hands.
Now
it is
mornings
and Wallingford, our calico, staring at me as if I’m an axe murder.
The
unmade bed, warm on one side,
the
sheets tangled up with nothing.
The
bed.
The
bed.
The
big unmade bed.
Peaches
Rainy
day chores,
the
sky bleak as a Carver poem,
a
McCarthy novel,
and
I am sent to the root cellar for jarred peaches.
Pop
is in Medical Lake fixing a broke down Peterbuilt
and
I’m wearing his too-big overalls that smell of grease and piss and are clownish
on me.
In
the dark, surrounded by dirt and jar upon jar of canned peaches,
I
reach into the pockets,
one
side soft and lacy, the other slick and smooth.
I flick
a switch and lift them to the light,
underwear
and flask,
my
father’s lonesome diary.
The
Prophecy of Superstition
Step
on a crack,
spilled
salt,
an
owl at daytime—
That
a boy so young could be so superstitious was something.
“Keep
on like that and you’ll end up in the nut house,” Mother would tell me.
Today,
down-sized
since March,
single
again,
I
sit on the edge of this mattress
with
all the time in the world on my hands,
lonely
as a cave
but
validated nonetheless.
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