full of gas.
He'd had two beers and a couple of shots of Tequila
but his nerves were gone and it had been enough
to topple him over the rim.
I was going to do it, he said.
But I can't get my fingers
to work anymore.
My coordination is off.
Dude, I said,
you invite me over for a beer and you're gonna blow up
the house?
Have I
offended you that bad?
No, he said, I just forgot you were coming over.
You called me ten minutes ago.
It's the kind of thing you ought
to remember.
Sorry, but I haven't been thinking clearly lately.
But he had, I saw, been pretty sharp about that.
If you're going to go
out in a furnace of blue flame,
taking with you all that you've got,
the unsold manuscripts and the wasted paintings,
the photos and the dying plants, the busted
toilet tank, the debts and the diarrhea,
the wrinkled spank
mags
you've had since you were fourteen,
the dirty windows and the bed
your ex- never made,
you'd want to go out with a friend.
For love or for mercy,
for repressed jealousy or old times, for the women
once hoarded and those who weren't,
for the stray dogs fed,
the brotherhood of shared pain,
the anguish of alliance,
our family of lost priests who can speak the word
of the Lord
no more.
I took away his matches and turned off the gas,
laid one into his gut until he was coughing blood,
grabbed the Tequila,
went home and called a girl from high school
I hadn't talked to in ten years.
She was just sitting there
with nothing to do.
Jones Beach, Thirty Years After the
Last Sand Castle
The laughter is hysteria-laced but human, long gone
yet still echoing, sweeping up the beach alongside
the tide, thick with sunlight and seagulls, orange sherbet
in wafer cones, comic books—my father brought me here
before he died and afterwards. We've visited together
many times since-he was gone by the year
I was seven, but he came back at ten,
often in winter when it was too cold to swim
and he'd bring his summer grin and lead me in
where the dunes rose, near the goldfish ponds where
the old men dozed, the showers which swept sand and salt
swirling into the drains of lost time. My brother once
buried me,
my mother buried my father,
my brother and I buried our mother—somehow, I'm
told, this
is the way of surf and storms, the way of worms,
natural, acceptable, eventually affirmed. The others
grow gray, I've gotten some gray, and we wait for the day
to stalk back to the beach when we shall remember
who we are, and why we're here, and how, and when
but I've never forgotten,
and for that I can only blame
my blood and my pen.
The shells are dust,
the kitten bones in the back yard
are earth again, my father's tombstone now bears
my mother's name as well. You never stop learning
about yourself—for example: At the funeral
four months ago, the priest with his distinguished voice
questioned us at length, my brother
taking the cue in his new black shoes, answered—
see, I couldn't talk yet, I had nothing to say—
and he said our father, with his black features
and Mediterranean blood pressure, his weakness
for cancer, was from Sicily and not Naples,
which is what I'd always believed
and now understood to be untrue—
I didn't know my father and did not know myself—
there are realizations still being made every day,
each night,
and some will undermine or redefine or confine.
My outline changes with different angles and lighting,
but my shadow remains mine.
They still point you at your sister—when you were eight
she went off to the special school, a new home upstate
and for a while you visited every year—on Easter—or
on her birthday in the middle of winter. She'd clap
and smile
and .utter in her jittering way—speechless
except for a few half-formed words,
her grunts and squawks, lipstick
thick on her teeth, on her chin,
her name a name you no longer pronounced,
until only your old day and a couple of cousins
went to visit. This is the way of it.
Now the old lady is gone
and the cousins have broods of knee-high
screamers. You're forced, step by step,
into responsibilities that hold too much meaning,
and you walk along the well-trimmed lawns and ease
into the halls of freshly-painted walls. The faces
loom up too fast, too near,
the noises human but not quite recognizable
as you stand waiting for the familiar dance
of a sister you have not seen in twenty years,
imagining what it is she thinks,
what she fears as she approaches from the other end of
her world,
and how similar that might be to your own panicked
contemplation.
Her gaze holds you swaying, perhaps dying
or losing a touch more of mind, the scraping of personality,
and you wonder just which one of you it is
they'll eventually let out of here.
Your scars don't quite travel the length of your body
They end here and here, which isn't quite near
as you think—
the old man is rummaging in the fridge again, screaming
for beer—the twist-tops leave the mark of Cain inside
his palms,
at the throat and under the ears are bags of gray
wrinkles he begs
you to carry out to the trash—this is the history of
fear in action,
set in motion by nature—he was at least as young as you
once, but never
quite figured out how to steer around the sharp curves,
the exit signs always
going by too quickly, the off-ramps cluttered—he
never learned
to shift into fourth gear, to parallel park, to change a tire—
there are things
you must do now for your father, whether he's still alive
or not—you
must polish the picture frames, consume the pot roast,
buy your mother
fresh towels, and wait, there's more—
you must put the dog down, empty the contents of your
eyes, swindle
the neighbor and wipe away the tears—he sits at your
left hand
for a reason, he's that much more able to pry and to peer,
and the world doesn't quite look as ripe anymore—go to
the garage
and sit, turn the key,
back out safely, watch for small children,
never look in your mirror again—it's been a pretty damn
bad day,
and remember—you were never really here.
Maybe it was true what they taught us back then
about the sandbars of sins, the snapping forest traps
of potential failure and fear—perhaps they were
in our backyards all along, like the legends laid out
against the cool stone and brick, the nearby scent
of fresh-cut grass swaying us from the shadows
of apple trees, with
our scabbed knees and swollen hearts.
That was the trick.
The sunlight boiled and poured over our tanned backs—
maybe it was true we were destined to stock our lives
one against the other, comparing trunk space
and our children's faces, tax shelters and plumbers' bills,
the size of our porch swings and car dings
and
manly
things. I was once a bridge troll who sat in
hairy wait
for the marketplace sellers and farmers and troubadours,
all shouldering their pushcarts,
and the drunken city guard who danced with their daggers.
I bore your burden. I demanded my price and I was paid,
or my claws would catch their scornful sneers
and I'd take their ears.
I kept their contempt in a vase,
and their overbearing eyes
and sweetie-pie gazes in a wine barrel. And when
they brandished their golden chests and teeth,
I plucked each upon each within
their easy reach, and although I was the ugliest,
I was the best, and I never needed rest.
Show
me the photos of your babies once more,
delight
in your tiled kitchen, the in-ground heated pool, expound
upon the quiet of the filter, the thrill of the hot tub—glance
sidelong, with pity, at me one last time. My price
has increased. Bring me your carefree chatter and looks
of derision, tell me of each and every precious vaunted
well-planned decision, the power of your flesh,