Monday, September 23, 2024

Thelma T. Reyna


REPLAY


Press your ear on the child’s chest—

he’s five and in distress—his heart

fluttering like a wounded bird’s,

quivering in little pearl taps you’ll barely feel.


Hold his hand, just twigs chilled

and quaking, fingers in a ball so hard,

nails digging into flesh, so pull the little sticks

apart so you can place his palm in yours.


Look deeply in the child’s unblinking eyes,

so wide, orbs frozen, tears layered clear,

shimmering, stopped, unflowing,

the whites like ice on coal.


Lay your ear near his mouth and hear

his rasping breath stutter like a dying man’s,

uncurl his body from the kitchen floor

and hold him in your lap, hold him close, and warm.


Don’t talk to him, for he won’t hear.

Don’t raise him up, for he won’t rise.

His eyes are glued to his daddy on the rug,

the pool of red spreading dark and fast.


He’s starting school next week, this little boy,

and his dad took off the day to walk him there.

Uncurled, sitting in your lap, his head

tilted to his father, the child’s in distress.


Don’t speak to him, for he can’t hear.

Don’t stand him up, for he can’t stand.

His pencil legs quiver on yours, his silent lips

wet now because his tears unplugged themselves.


In the other corner, on the floor, the cop bawls

like a man condemned, his pistol on the chair,

his red face bobbing in his trembling hands,

as clueless now as when his holster freed his gun.


Tonight the screens will flash the dead man

in his uniform, and tell how he went deaf 

in war, and how he saw his window break and summoned 

help, and how all hell broke loose.



Originally published in the author’s book, Reading Tea Leaves After Trump (Golden Foothills Press: 2018).





VETERAN


His back’s a toothpick stack racked with pain.

His legs are stone on hospice sheets in

Barstow, where VA nurses rub liniment

on his arthritic limbs, days melting like wax

one into the other, his 90-year-old eyes

opalescent murk. 


His convalescent legs slog in midnight dreams

through devastated streets, Sicilian sky 

lit bloody by rockets pulping

trenches filled with men he knew.     

His sharpshooter fingers and eagle eyes 

bring down krauts in trees in the Ardennes, 

and krauts covered in branches to deceive his mark, 

but he’s the best.


His medals sleep in velvet trays in cedar drawers 

now, room 356, because his shelf life tugs him 

from pock-marked fields 

to solitary rooms where walls 

shimmy and run

like watercolors into smears



Originally published in a prior version in the author’s book, Rising, Falling, All of Us (Golden Foothills Press, 2014).




BROWN ARMS


He doesn’t know I watch, or

maybe yes, he does. He carries rocks

in arms burnt browner by the sun, in arms

sinewed and knotted by muscles stretching and

pushing against granite edges of patio

pavers he lays in puzzles beyond my ken.


Sweat veneers his back like varnish freshly

stroked. His knees straddle opened earth, leather hands cupping

moistness as he digs deeper, smoothing loam, opening the

hole, plunging fingers into dirt made soft with rain. Face lowered, 

droplets of his labor anoint the bed.


He hardly rests. He sips from plastic cups I bring to

him with eyes averted from the truth. His dark fingers brush

my wrist, a moment pardoned with a flush, and he

turns to toil that defines his being. Hour after

hour, in days long with longing, his brown arms lift

and move and hold and carry and embrace. 


What does he think while his muscles groan, sweat 

salting his lips and nipples as it trickles to

his pants? I lean against the wall, curtain falling 

closed again, my knees useless.


Originally published in the author’s book, Rising, Falling, All of Us (Golden Foothills Press, 2014).


Jack G Bowman

Fall Nature His mind shits on to October thoughts; dying, hibernation, death, sacrifice he watches the sky for the returning comet, misses t...