Midnight Hour
After midnight the dogs roam the yard,
our
well-travelled road gone quiet.
Barking,
maybe
other dogs, perhaps coyotes,
their
cries carry over miles.
Stars
glisten from onyx heavens.
Meteors
cascade,
burning,
burning, burning to the ground.
Why
are they in such a hurry to arrive?
Mesmerized
in such dark tranquility, a lone cotton tail sits, the somber Buddha.
The
flash light’s snare catches red eyes aglow,
a
doe, my aloof accessory, ambles by the thicket,
searching
for dangling apples.
We
bask in our solitude.
Spiders
dabble in the darkness of maple trees, crafting webs,
thread-like
tapestries,
intricate,
circular and symmetrical,
beyond
human hands.
Resting
low on the evening horizon,
the
half-crescent moon,
both
confidante and chameleon
knows
my secrets and vices,
and
bears witness to words spoken in silence.
She
comprehends what is better left unsaid.
A
black stallion and a dappled mare
slam
their bodies against the doors of the nearby barn,
wanting
food or freedom.
I
am not so different.
Cool,
autumn air intoxicates.
Nearby
wood burners salt the night with ash.
What
is lost and what may be
exist
like reluctant allies.
I
can create any world that I want here,
for
these five minutes,
possibility
and hope breathe,
forgetting
or accepting negotiable.
Fraudulent
sunrise steals in,
clamouring
for dominance, insisting on light and clarity.
The
grumble of the farmer’s four-wheeler echoes through the forest.
Bears
Death robbed me of those I loved,
not stopping at one, collecting more than Its share.
Conversation eluded me.
Daily tasks confounded me.
Black bears would be the salve.
Alligator River Refuge, home to the Lost Colony of Roanoke,
the Hatteras Witch, Black Beard, and the ghost town of Buffalo
City,
known for moonshining and the slaughtering of bears,
is where peace would be found.
Close to sundown, so deep in the forest,
now I haunted the old gravel mining roads,
watching and waiting.
Limbs of the loblolly pines, heavy with evening dew, lazed over an
abandoned cabin,
humid air nearly suffocated all.
Howling red wolves startled a barred owl, sending it scurrying
into the night.
Cicadas kept time with a deafening cry,
as a lone water moccasin slid across the swamp.
Mosquitoes bit and bit and bit,
piercing the skin, sucking blood as the sun slowly shrank from
view over the Pamplico Sound.
Leaves rustled,
and like dark apparitions prowling into view,
the bears appeared,
first one and then another.
Kneeling on the embankment to the thicket,
separated by only several yards,
I shared the night with these mystics,
no longer hunted in this place.
Their massive black bodies lumbered along,
fur often damp from stalking through streams.
Amber eyes blazed in the darkness.
We needed no words.
We sat across from each other without fear.
They could kill me in a heartbeat.
At times, I might let them.
They are my link to the past, something primordial, something
beyond reason,
and guide me as I endure my present.
The sanctity of the wilderness offers solace to those who seek
it.
I feel safest in the woods, where there is the most danger.
I can hear my thoughts.
And I know that I am not ready to leave this world just yet.
Father’s Day
Today I didn’t get to wish you a Happy Father’s Day.
Though your arguing and grumbling are still fresh in
my mind, I recall the hope for a good word here or there: proof
that you were still in there, a body bruised and beaten by age and illness.
Mom wishes that you weren’t so mean toward the end.
You couldn’t help it, I tell her, not really knowing
what else to say. You were sick, I tell her.
And now you’ve given me your glaucoma, a gift that
keeps on giving.
That’s one present that you could have kept.
I have to ask myself if the heart issues will be far
behind, not to mention the strokes.
summer, one
big, horrible blur, you had me following you to more hospitals than I can
count: Unholy whiffs of Clorox and urine, brightly lit hallways that seemingly
went on forever,
And the pained moans from those in dark, dark rooms
that I quickly walked by.
Even back on Father’s Day, you were hospitalized.
I remember tossing the card that I bought for you into
the closet, thinking that I’d send it to you this year.
It couldn’t be sent.
I bought a card for a guy that I met in a bar in North
Carolina, who said that he collected daughters, as he was always helping out a
stranded surfer girl or another, and his daughters were grown, and his wife was
deceased.
But I couldn’t send it.
There really is no replacing you or letting another
hold space for you.
You drove me crazy when you’d throw paper wrappers
from straws out the car window.
I think you tried to crush my shoulders when you
hugged me.
You embarrassed the hell out of me one time in
particular when you were in the hospital, demanding that my best
friend—formerly a nurse there but now an administrator—come and take care of
you.
But I loved you.
You taught me how to tie a bow with the strings on the
apron of my Mrs. Beasley doll.
You took me mud running in Snake Hollow, and we had to
walk that bike home when we ran out of gas.
You told me everything would work out when I told you
that I thought for sure that I’d flunked a philosophy test in college. (I
didn’t.)
You even tried to put my first marriage back together
again. (But I think you liked the second husband better.)
Mom always tells you to have a good day in heaven.
I hope you did, Dad. I hope you did.
Ghosts
When you least expect it, they show up.
I’m not talking about apparitions, poltergeists, or things that
crash in the night.
But what catches my attention are the spirits.
I stand, stare, in stunned disbelief, making a fool out of
myself.
The saying everyone has a twin comes to mind, but the differences
are always so slight.
That’s probably just to keep us grounded, to stop us from becoming
completely unhinged.
As near as I can tell, there are two figures wandering the streets
of this town,
Both the spitting image of my father.
The first embodiment I’ve seen a few times—always on my way to
church:
There’s Dad, I’ll
say: The ball cap, cane, walking shorts, plaid button-down, short-sleeved
shirt, and always, always, the white athletic socks pulled up nearly to the
knees.
I giggle, thinking that somehow, I’ve made my father proud of me,
knowing that
I’m still trying to be a good Catholic.
I saw the second one yesterday, smack dab in the middle of
Kroger.
Poor elderly fellow must have thought I was a Manson sister or
worse.
Even a sense of good manners couldn’t alter my gaze.
The hair slicked back with whatever the modern equivalent is these
days of Vitalis,
The tell-tale white hearing aids protruding over the ear
lobe,
The grizzled face and grim countenance of a man who didn’t smile much
in later years,
The brown pants and dress jacket worn even in August, even on a
morning of 70 degrees.
I was so taken aback that I filmed the unsuspecting soul with my
cell phone to show my husband.
Astrology, Tarot cards, rocks, and runes used to be my
guides.
With every feather found, my heart would flutter.
Though I’ve stepped away from that world on my journey to inner
peace, some mysteries remain.
Who am I to question a penny or dime laying directly in my path?
Saturation: The Story of a Life
Moments
of desire,
the
old Dry Dock bar or the Crystal,
dives
with pool tables coated with Bud Light and Marlboro ash,
stolen
afternoons in parking lots,
hair
becomes an unruly mass of tangled curls,
Western
Civ classes missed,
lies
told,
but
the kiss that just wouldn’t stop.
Endless
walks through the woods,
more
escaping,
well-worn
dirt path zig-zagging around the colossal pines,
thick
tree roots exposed like bones,
a
canopy of oaks and sycamores shading all that’s wrong in the world,
the
never-ending piles of papers needing graded,
the
judgments, the expectations, the demands, demands, demands.
A
daughter’s duty.
Hospital
rooms of pastel paint
and
obscene wallpaper with obtuse geometrical squares,
reeking
of urine and ammonia,
the
beep, beep, beep of endless monitors,
mysterious
calls of code yellow or code green from ubiquitous loudspeakers.
Tim
Horton’s on the bottom floor as expected as the sun rising.
Reality’s
relentless grip like
the
strong stench of day-old coffee and stale doughnuts.
Margaritas,
the raspberry, the blood orange,
the
celebrations for the hospital dismissals
or
the commiseration for more days,
difficulty
coping, hard to see the world as any other way, agony,
short-lived
joy, always taken away.
What’s
it like not to have a go-bag?
Finally,
falling
into a slumber on the couch,
head
on beloved’s lap,
one
good dog in my arms,
the
other,
at
my feet.
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