Authors: Thomas Dooley
      Â
somewhere. Linden wood
      Â
as cash cow. And a way out. If my father grew
      Â
taller that year, sudden. Reached
      Â
the high altar wicks, a Moses
      Â
in Egypt. Bigger than the priests. What if deus
      Â
ex machina. Or a catcher.
      Â
No rye. Rye watered
      Â
down. Rocks to mean rocks. Not
      Â
glacial. Not a cold hand
      Â
anywhere. A siren sounds
      Â
on skin. Maybe a pie
      Â
in the window. Adults made big gestures
      Â
with giant hands. He wasn't soft.
      Â
Boney, but not folded
      Â
like egg whites, hankies.
      Â
In his yearbook: “Aspiration: farmer.”
      Â
Tall as corn, as noon sun. Only if he grew
      Â
taller, sudden, he wouldn't be
      Â
lightweight linden, maybe a hundred
      Â
proof. She was proof. Girls
      Â
were softer. Maybe his hand
      Â
looked giant. And she lay down
      Â
softly. Like he was made to, maybe.
      Â
At the bar last night
      Â
I couldn't believe it was you
      Â
standing by the men in leather collars
      Â
your layman's jeans and work boots
      Â
the same tough suede I remember
      Â
below your vestment's hem
      Â
at altar boy camp, tea lights
      Â
in our cabin, I always hoped
      Â
you would choose me
      Â
to start the flames.
      Â
Now you travel the decade
      Â
of my spine, your mouth sudden
      Â
on each bone, I turn you over
      Â
my lips drag heat
      Â
from the thin chaplet of hair
      Â
shrining your navel, I hold you
      Â
like a chaperone at a theme park
      Â
when you held me as we looped
      Â
through air and at Mass
      Â
when you placed in my hand
      Â
a body I could eat.
      Â
on a Brooklyn corner, fronds
      Â
of palm, your sachet
      Â
of lemon halves, you ask
      Â
if I'm Jewish, how we
      Â
look like brothersâ
      Â
jet hair, same skin
      Â
a tincture of chickpeas,
      Â
our noses not Roman
      Â
nor button, I want to appeal:
      Â
let me celebrate with you. Listen, my voice
      Â
can match the glottal timbre
      Â
of your prayers, let me unfurl the black
      Â
curls by your ears like scrolls, read
      Â
your thoughts, your oils fragrant
      Â
on my fingertips.
      Â
the Belgian soldier
      Â
his uniform slung
      Â
over a chair back
      Â
creases preserved
      Â
a man with war
      Â
in him yet
      Â
retreats under
      Â
a studio lamp
      Â
his dense sinew
      Â
muscled how
      Â
a body glows
      Â
bronze under your rub
      Â
the artist's knife
      Â
his clay-tipped fingers
      Â
the soldier's blazer
      Â
in the corner
      Â
late sun sets
      Â
fire to brass buttons
      Â
Spindle-heart at fourteen,
      Â
and eighty-five pounds. But you had
      Â
a dusting of hair above your lip, dark stains
      Â
under your arms after relays.
      Â
White-primed, gessoed canvas, I felt untouched,
      Â
untouchable, gilt icon in plexi, I wanted
      Â
your size, a potency,
      Â
yeast that balloons.
      Â
Still I was
      Â
unleavened and wafer-thin.
      Â
Cold tea bag pressed
      Â
in a napkin, my father
      Â
picks at toast.
      Â
Bobby
, his sister says
      Â
there are some accusations
      Â
against you
,
      Â
your niece, well
,
      Â
she goes
      Â
to a therapist
,
      Â
he tells her to
      Â
shit on
      Â
your photo
.
      Â
My mother runs
      Â
to the kitchen and vomits
      Â
in the sink.
      Â
He leans
      Â
over cold
      Â
eggs, what's left on the plate
      Â
my mother comes back
      Â
a damp cloth
      Â
to her mouth
      Â
she moves
      Â
clutching
      Â
the tall chair backs
      Â
breathes in to slide
      Â
behind his chair, it's quiet
      Â
on Mildred Avenue, brakes
      Â
scream down Ingalls
      Â
my mother clears her plate
      Â
reaches for his.
      Â
Her therapist said find one put it
      Â
on the bathroom floor so she searched albums
      Â
for his face the picnic photos
      Â
at the grill his head smoke-capped limp hands
      Â
fanning charcoal then her wedding proofs
      Â
all the uncles in suits and one close-up
      Â
my father bow-tied tipped black
      Â
seesaw at his throat open smile
      Â
his tongue a small peak he's calling to someone
      Â
outside the frame his right hand bent
      Â
in mid gesture his fingernails a bit long
      Â
and in focus the tips the whitest
      Â
I watch the clip
      Â
of you moved
      Â
to pleasure, freeze
      Â
on white pixels
      Â
my hand rolls down
      Â
a slow storm
      Â
I move with your
      Â
thunder, we are twinned
      Â
rhythms, the joy
      Â
you shake from me
      Â
I was working
      Â
in the theater's toolroom
      Â
when my father called
      Â
Mom told me
      Â
about your new
      Â
friend
and I thought
      Â
you can't even
      Â
say it and I squeezed
      Â
a pair of pliers in my hand
      Â
as the paint sink kicked back gunk
      Â
and hung up the phone
      Â
hung up the pliers
      Â
aligning their jaws.
      Â
In the wings it was dark
      Â
I instructed the actor
      Â
playing a waiter
      Â
how to wring
      Â
the grinder, crack
      Â
whole corns
      Â
to coarse pepper.
      Â
he was all angles
      Â
L of jaw, shoulders a ledge
      Â
of granite, I thought
      Â
he seemed biblical
      Â
the perfection of the tribes
      Â
settling into his thunder
                                            Â
thick honeyed wrists
      Â
and I was yielding,
      Â
of linen.
      Â
Darwin would study his dense
      Â
bicuspids, long feet hitting
      Â
the earth, his cock
      Â
slapping thighs, he needs
      Â
me to praise him
      Â
he needs men
      Â
to tell him, or show him
      Â
or show on him when
      Â
that weekend in July
      Â
on the sandy cape that hooks a bay
      Â
the salt a skin on him, moonlight
      Â
violent with silver on him
      Â
the other man's
      Â
bright tongue
      Â
how strangers can validate
      Â
how that man knelt to him
      Â
and he comes home to me
      Â
And then
      Â
a hatch
                   Â
threw open
      Â
a flush of blood, pink-
      Â
cheeked,
      Â
you broadcast:
      Â
They want my sperm!
      Â
You imagine your stuff
      Â
flying through tangle
      Â
bursting to a field
      Â
a privet of XYsâ
      Â
flourish little ones!
      Â
They will spin
      Â
and set in that lesbian womb, form
      Â
bones, push white elbow and
      Â
purple cord into a dark
      Â
pixilated frame,
      Â
fine
      Â
set in them your link
      Â
that quiet boat
      Â
you send into me
      Â
that never finds dock
      Â
I pile books on the bed
      Â
in your place, calculate
      Â
the weight of you, I crowd