and find myself behind him, staring
at the sweet spot of his skull, hell itself
must be daring me,
as the adoring roaring crowd gives him more
and more,
and I fight the urge to keep my fists steady
and not let all of our various
paltry and petty hatreds
suddenly spill out
gushing and screaming onto the floor.
I've pressed my face down in graves and breathed in
the right kind of dust, fists clenching dirt so that everybody
who looked at my black nails
used to think I worked as hard as the grease monkey
edging his flaring nostrils into the fan belt,
digging further,
hoping to find out exactly when the interred world
would open wider
yet finding only cut drying flowers.
I used to have a real problem with that sort of thing,
but I'm working it out.
I've learned to stand at the sides of sepulchers
and not leap on in, to stare for hours at the mysteries
of the mud and headstone and exhumed bone
and contain my urges to get under the easy earth.
We all have to heed and feed our inhibiting
demanding perfection-driven needs—
cemeteries have always called to me as they've
called to my entire family. Whichever graveyard
I wander in I'm never alone, there's a familiar name,
someone sitting around just waiting for a visit. I'm shocked
that at 37 I have friends who've still never met the dead,
who know no dead, who've never had to play this particular
shined-shoe, kneel at the coffin game. Me, most of my relatives
lie underground.
I've paid debts to graves,
been laid in graves, I've traveled deep up wombs
into the freezing winter tombs and avoided the painfully
clear trail
of my own insistent doom—I've painted those shadow-tossed
trees at dawn, taken charcoal impressions
of the sleeping stone children at noon, sat in on
rain-swept funerals of those I didn't know, holding
an umbrella for the weeping daughters of strangers.
I have presence among caskets and I'm at home
in any hole. The dark buried intersections are crowded
but the planted traffic is moving.
I was soft and had never been face to face
with a roach before, but this one had climbed out
from beneath the sweetly-perfumed sheet,
humped up my chest, and stood nose
to nose with me, eager
to make contact, to understand, little insect paws patting
and telling me, "Good boy, nice boy," antennae weaving
all across hell, the way a man
might fling up his arms after losing another woman
in the heat—
which reminded me…
I scanned the one-room apartment, like she
might be behind the couch, someplace
under the sink, wedged upon the edge
of her bookshelves, behind the prints and photos
of her other smiling selves.
I'd blacked out after the first ten minutes
in bed as the night folded around and consumed
my cracking gin-soaked head,
and so now was now and now what?
Even Ralph the roach turned his chin
searching for his old lady—
and the caterwauls of the centuries came up
from below,
laughter of a thousand defeated
dreams, never-ending tear-streaked dance
of slaughterhouse despair,
three a.m. shrieking of hideous
bleeding and jagged glass
cut throat.
She was down in the street, naked, running
back and forth from sidewalk to sidewalk,
a couple of cabs trying to ease on past,
her red hair rising
in rivulets of flaming lullabies,
shoulder blades so sharp
and jutting she could spike you between the ribs,
flashing cop cars
around the corner as she tilted and bent wildly
in inhumanly crooked,
broken-necked witch fashion
to look up at her own window, glaring
and wishing the heartache of eons upon those invited
into her own dead end charnel nest.
Ralph bolted one way
and I cut the other,
and we both scurried to our own hidey-holes hoping
the raging ageless exterminator would get
somebody else instead.
When You Look Down to Find Yourself Going
but Not Yet Gone
They tried to teach you back then, when you were a kid,
the right way
to become a man, and a lot of it had to do with having
strong hands,
knowledgeable forearms, the strength of legs, tattooed biceps,
you were only six but that was old enough to start down
the right road
to your father's world of engines and baseball, of sweat socks
and power saws, to begin carrying your own load and
welcome in
the acute understanding found inside those locked tool boxes.
But the old man was swept away by a strong wind one fall,
an ashen monsoon of murder that started deep in his throat
and carried him over the side, buried him while you played
up in your room and stayed inside
while all of them constantly lied about what was happening,
and Mom would wince and shiver until finally you were told
and you used your small fists of frenzy a week after he'd died,
a week too late
to ever come face to face and make fragile peace with your
Dad's fate,
and something in your chest grew too cold and dragged itself
around in dwindling circles, and has never stopped moving
or warmed up since—
and his tools were never taken up although his books were read,
his voice soon forgotten but not his smile or his
undaunted stance,
the way he'd give a straight grinning glance—you went crying
into cartoons and crape paper cut-outs, Mama's boy
surrounded by toys
that held more significance than manhood or the fact that
your daddy
was dead.
You've stood nearly forty years out in the rain, hoping to find
your own gray outline, to prove you have substance and mass,
that you're more than drifting fog, more than the useless pink
roundness of wit and profound rants against God and the grave
and your own lazy fat ass.
Would he forgive you for your slack and your weak back
and everything in you
that to this very day you still lack—would he
be able to stare at you for more than a minute without having
to turn his face and hide his eyes—would he look with a
hint of pride?
Do thirty years of carrying his torch mean anything to him now
behind the veil of night and mist—does he know how
many rocks
of regret you carry on your shoulders as you try to work off
this everlasting debt?
You never learned to use a torque wrench but you still suffer
laid out across the work bench
the way you should, sweating
as much as your father ever did,
full of weakness but perhaps
becoming just a bit stronger now, as you approach his age,
not so squarely settled on all your wrongs, but still occasionally
lost in the storms of fruitless rage
and both of you set about hammering the nails in
just where they belong.
Up over the division bridge of archaic balance
between logic and faith, your taste and your teeth,
losing some of both but coming out ahead
of your last enemies whose names escape you
they'll be back
The returned dead, gnats in your ears
violent muscles on the rise, attack
dreams boiling under the tongue
the way you champ down and turn blue
and turn green, crimson, and whisper women's names
who no longer have faces, these scarred fingers
that once roamed freely against her throat
and her throat, and hers, and her creamy perfumed wrist,
gone now without a trace
Odd how you feel like you're falling when you sit up
and how mired in your own tired fires you've become,
how your sister stares in disbelief,
your wife holding a broken wine glass, your brother
still ready to kick your ass, your son pointing, neighbors
peering through the back window fainting, the cops
breaking in your front door, mother wailing,
your dead fish gaping, the dog needs to be fed
and you have absolutely no idea
just what the hell you might have done or said
At least the old man is laughing, Christ knows
how he does it, lying in bed like that
with Mom vacuuming out the grit of his tracheotomy
handling it so well, the hose in his lungs, dinner on the stove
Even the cat is half out of his head, crawling in the drapes,
seeing ghosts, he's begging for a lobotomy.
You, yes,