SEAPLANE
My father pointed out the seaplane flying
in the clear blue sky over Lake Michigan.
We were at the Great Lakes Naval Station
and he wanted to show me where he finally
grew up in the Navy's boot camp.
The seaplane grumbled over the Lake
and tilted its wings in a turn. I chewed
on a bologna sandwich and drank
from a bottle of Orange Crush. The wind
was cold off the lake, even though
it was summer. I wore a small white
commander's cap and a navy blue
sweater. There was the sound of furious
typewriting echoing from an open window.
We returned to the Chevy to let the sun
warm us through the glass and to finish
our lunches. “Look at that!” my father said.
“He'll land right on
the water!”
Like a mosquito landing in a pool
of wine. “What was the war like, Dad?”
He stared at the seaplane. His wide eyes remembered.
“I saw many places and
many things
I would not have otherwise seen,” he said.
“Did you have any
friends?” I asked.
“Lots,” he said. “Some
of them I met right here.”
He turned on the radio and they played
something old, old. “Well I'll be darned,”
he said. He chuckled and he started the Chevy
and we drove all the way back to Iowa.
I eyed the hood ornament as we flew along.
It was a silver jet. It flew low, sometimes below
the tips of the cornfields, sometimes level
with the water of rivers we crossed.
CIRCUS
My dad had this little maneuver.
When his shirt became untucked,
he would unbuckle and unzip
his pants and then file his shirttails
down aft and fore and then redo
himself, even if it was in the middle
of a store. Besides being embarrassing
to me, it freaked my mom out.
“Virgil, what in the
hell are you doing?
This is J.C. Penney's!” Just shoving
the tails discreetly into the engine room
was not enough, I began to call
his ritual “The Wild Thing.”
“Does your old man
still do
The Wild Thing?” Rhonda asked me
when I offered free tickets
to the Shriner's Circus.
“No thanks,” she said.
Who could blame her?
So there I was among the orangutans
and clowns and elephants
and there was ensign Virg
whistling “Anchors Aweigh,”
stuffing his moss-green shirttails
into his unbuckled Dickie's
as the lions panted and their eyes
became alert and 120 clowns
spilled one by one from a smoking
Isetta and howled and laughed
and shot blanks from muskets.
THE FORT
Twelve hours later, I am at work staring
at Mike Johnson's sonnet that says, “Wondrous
wake in deathless glory.” I told them
I'd be pall bearer after all since they promised
no strain on my knee. I'm testing the miracles
and the curses. It's cooling down, not quite
but close to autumn. My mother would
come in from outside with a red bandana
over her head and touch my face with her cold
hands and say, “Brrrrrrr. October”.
Today its like a tepid bath. Maybe in about
an hour, I could have noticed the street lights
blinking on in our old neighbourhood,
right above our rural style mailbox.
I have dreams that it's the middle of the night
and I'm pulling my father's mail from the box,
and there are packages addressed to me also,
decades old, copies of books containing
things I had written. I never knew they wanted
them; now here they are. Nervous grey cats
stare at me from the bushes. I see their eyes
glowing. I know my mother and father
are only ghosts in the house now,
but I still bring in their mail and place it
on the telephone table. I step to the liquor
shelf above the refrigerator and open it
and look at the bottles, the one of crème
de menthe my mother loved, green and fluted
with a genie living inside of it. But it's my father's
whisky I pour a glass of. A small one. I drink
its burn and feel mellow as Thanksgiving.
And now my brother is gone too, and now
I can't see myself in the bathroom mirror.
TEMPEST
I wake and notice my father has parked
On the shoulder and is now outside
Watching warplanes dogfight
In and out of huge billowing brown clouds:
Lightning, thunder, planes, missiles,
fiery explosions. Debris clatters on the highway.
As the battle ends, a massive invasion
Of brown moths erupts. They themselves
Had been the clouds; they drag the ground
With a whirr, a leaf-like clattering.
Their bodies drift like brown snow, bury everything.
When I awake a second time, I am in bed
Sitting up, slumping on a stack of pillows.
Ice crystals tap against the window
And I reach for a glass of water.
I had been the same age as my father in that dream.
We had been travelling west.
THE HOBBYIST
Tunnel of brown glazed tiles
Leading down to where? Steady
High-pitched drip of water
Near the bottom. At the desk
Of the evil scientist, or part-time janitor,
Are these things: a folded pair of eyeglasses,
A pile of beige rubber bands, a Bakelite
Coffee mug, black, two old baseball cards,
Honus Wagner, Walter Johnson, a dispenser
Of hand cream, a small campfire
Of ballpoint pens, pencils
With their erasers eaten away, dented
Thermos jars, clipboards noting
The physical characteristics of moles
And shrews, paper the size
Of poker cards numbered 73 to 80
In large black type, a thermometer,
Empty jug of apple juice, stapler,
Phone, dirty magazine. There are four
Drawers jammed with belongings pilfered
From student lockers: scarves,
Pills, reefers, textbooks, condoms, cigarettes,
Candy bars. There is a wrench
That fits only one thing that is not in the room,
That is parked far away near his ex-wife’s
Flower plot, and is permanently and forever broken.
THE URGE TO PAINT
I want to paint, lay on
Colours from tubes,
Toothpaste dollop of yellow cadmium
On the edge of a small knife
Rasped onto canvas.
I tell you my father with teeth
Is still breathing. You
Zip him up to his stocking cap
Inside a brown sleeping bag
In a second story room
I do not own. He is grateful
When I free him, but I notice
He is quite decayed and you
Were right. I paint
The blue and white mix I call
Oxygen. I inhale
And exhale as I scrape the paint
Across the canvas’s sky, horizon,
Ocean, destruction. My father
Insists we had sped the light
To such a degree that the earth
Is no longer distinguishable
Or necessary. He reaches inside
His sweater for a lighter
And then sets his body to flames.
GHOSTS
There is the story of the bride who caught fire
brushing the candelabra, who took a tumble
down the marble staircase, who broke her neck
on her wedding day. She continues to haunt
the hotel, dancing alone in the ballroom
as the elderly Scottish bellman, also a ghost,
applauds kind-heartedly. “Poor lass,” he mutters
to himself. “Poor wee lass.”
There is the woman with the wild poodle's hair
who haunts the library. She insists I find the book
on The Ecstatic Dance which we do not own.
At night I watch an episode where everyone
catches an aphasia virus and starts speaking
coffee house poetry from the 1950s.
My Kleenex takes a nap on the table
and looks like a weary ghost.
The money in the coin pouch has touched
so many hands, some of whom are no longer
living. I can hear the mouse singing in the rafters,
a soft song like an anaemic wren.
I keep meeting myself as a child who walks
with no shoes down the burning sidewalk, seeking out
the curbing for patches of wet grass, passing
the telephone company's local nerve centre,
the door propped open for the heat,
the women inside with their headsets
and black spaghetti of cables and plugs
and switches. One of them once scolded me
when I made a prank call to a neighbour.
I pretended I knew about Harry who was betting
on the horses. “You don't know my Harry!”
The woman laughed. I hung up and a few seconds
later the phone rang. The jig was up.
All those telephone workers are dead
or in the nursing home now, but one of them
scared the bejesus out of me. Her voice
was so stern and cold and I could tell
her name was Phyllis and she wore
a blue print dress of maple leaves and sharp branches.
INSTRUCTION
In first grade my hands would sweat pools
onto the fake blond woodgrain
of my desk. Math classes made me tense.
They warped my spine and made my neck hurt.
Lift up the curtain of stars and show me
the King's magic exit. They served chili
in Styrofoam cups and offered tiny half-pint
bottles of milk. We ate on mess hall tables
that folded up and were wheeled away
through the gymnasium as recess began
and we beat each other with jump ropes
and blew ground chalk powder into each other's
eyes. I can still smell those blue tiled corridors
mopped daily with disinfectant to keep
us pure. I see the tall nurse in her white
sweater and the red cross pin on her lapel.
I see our hedgehog principal whose name
was Violet. I see our Polish Phys Ed instructor,
Mr. Jotsky, with his net bag of volleyballs,
and with his black whistle dangling from his neck.
We called ourselves “The Hawks” and wore
dark blue sweatshirts on the cold soccer field,
and ran back and forth chasing a black and white
ball made of patchwork pentagons.
We were allowed one point per score.
Stingy. Ungenerous. I visit this place
occasionally in my mind, not frequently,
but just enough to remind me to alter
the details the next time I live through it,
to do something violent or to do something
kind, to alter the axis, to fiddle with the outcome,
to change the scenery. I once sat wide-eyed
exclaiming to my sister we had lived
this 1000 times previously, exactly
the same way each time.
She and I were convinced it was time for a change.
AMISH GROCERY
So many Amish people. The women work
at the checkout and behind the meat
counter and at the deli counter, all wearing
their lacy caps and modest blue and lavender
dresses. They are polite. I order
a lot of sliced turkey and roast beef.
The prices are remarkable. That's why
I stock up on everything: beans,
chicken, spinach, cucumbers, grapes
lemons, lettuce and so on. I buy several
bags of bulk pasta, consider the aisle
dedicated to powdered flavourings
and nuts and snack crackers. Do these people
vote? Do they have a political life?
What do they think of Donald Trump?
Do they elect their own private Amish president?
They take our money but it's more than fair.
Everything is so cheap today and well lit
and clean; it seems like hundreds
of people are shopping. I keep my eyes
glued to the basket and the task,
otherwise the scene of people moving
around like cattle becomes unnerving.
I know outside it is warm, the kind
of early summer day people rejoice,
get naked, ride motorcycles
to their deaths in vine-tangled and unnamed
creeks and ravines. Some kid waits
outside the store patting a beagle.
Is that your doggie? No, I'm just watching
him. Who are you watching him for?
I don't know. The beagle wanders away.
Seems to live here, has the run of the street.
A woman in a wheelchair looks sideways
at the potted pansies on a rack outside.
A man waters them.
Rustin Larson's poetry appears in the anthology Wild Gods (New Rivers Press, 2021). Recent poems have appeared in London Grip, Poetry East, The Lake, Poetryspace, Pirene's Fountain, and Lothlorien Poetry Journal. His chapbook The Cottage on the Hill was published by Cyberwit.net in April of 2022.
He is on faculty in Maharishi International University's MFA in Creative Writing program.
I love your poetic short stories. They have just enough details to engage the theater of the mind. They inspire me to capture my memories of loved ones in the same way. I was just telling my hubby that not many today know the artists their grandparents loved and listened to, and I found that sad. Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Marty Robbins, and Burl Ives. Thanks for being my muse today. I am going to write down impressions in a similar fashion.
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