First
Ride with My Father
Experts say we remember nothing
from
before we’re five or so,
needing
language to record memories,
but
there was that three-year old night,
heat
heavy on our apartment, me cranky
with
sweat. My father strapped me
into
my stroller, and rolled me down
to
Ocean Parkway, gently rocking me
while
he smoked, as cars sped past.
And
as if Prospero had summoned it,
a
soft breeze cooled my small, sweaty chest.
Dad’s
lit cigarette a light in a window,
signalling
that home was waiting,
whenever
we were ready.
First
Driving Lesson
I was eighteen: no idea how to handle
the
wheel, but desperate—a horny teenager
who
believed a car was the key to dirty bliss—
to
learn how to drive. When Dad finally caved
to
my wheedling, Mom declared,
“If
you’re determined to die behind the wheel,
then
the whole family will perish with you!”
So
with Dad riding shotgun, Mom and Jeff
in
the back, in the empty high school parking lot
I
fed a little gas, like Dad had showed me,
then
gulping breaths for courage, shifted into “Drive,”
the
car bolting like a rodeo bronc, Mom gasping,
Jeff
cheering, the wild road beckoning.
Steering
was even worse: all I could think of
was
to imitate movie getaway wheelmen
after
bank heists. They flung the wheel left
to right
and
back again and again, over desperate-to escape-
the-cops
roads, our family Ford careening
like
a bumper car, the engine whining in the empty lot,
until
Dad, his face red as the “Warning” light, shouted,
“Brake,
brake! We’ll get you driving lessons.”
Mom
breathed relief like a balloon with the air
shooting
out, my kid brother laughed, knowing
he
could’ve done a lot better, and I wondered
if
maybe a lifetime on the subway wasn’t a bad idea.
Me
and Parnelli Jones
Among my friends, a ritual
more
sacred than fasting
on
Yom Kippur: when one of us
earned
his driver’s license,
we’d
tool down to Nathan’s Famous
in
Coney Island, for celebratory
dogs
and fries and to stare
at
the hot-pants women, and try not
to
make eye contact with their muscle.
So
with my new license—far
more
legitimate than the deed
to
the Brooklyn Bridge—I informed
my
father I’d need the car that Friday night.
He
looked up from the racing form
and
half-laughed, half scowled,
“Listen
Parnelli,” referring to the famous
race
car driver, “you may have fooled
the
dope who gave you the driver’s test,
but
you can’t fool me. You’re not driving
at
night with your crumb-bum friends.
So
just get used to running errands
for
your mother, until I say otherwise.
“Now,
turn on the Knicks game
and
take a load off; plenty of time
for
you to do something I hope isn’t
lethally
stupid behind the wheel.”
So
I watched and fumed:
the
Knicks, for once,
not
an embarrassment.
A
Country Drive
One morning of our Catskills
bungalow
colony summer
when
I was maybe ten, Dad and I drove
into
the nearby small town, on an errand.
By
the side of the blacktop, two young,
sexy-smiling
women, not bothering
to
lift their thumbs in the universal signal,
just
billowing in their summer dresses.
Dad
stopped, smiling as if remembering
an
adventure from before he’d met my mother.
The
next we knew, they’d pulled pistols,
ordered
us out, one of them planted
a
rose-red kiss on my cheek, stirring something
that
almost made my head explode,
They
drove off, laughing, Thelma and Louise,
or
Belle Starr and Bonnie Parker on a crime spree.
While
I stared at our vanishing car,
Dad
spat words he’d told me never to utter,
and
sighed we had to report this to the cops,
while
all I could think of was that kiss.
And
then, of course, I woke, somehow
twenty
years older, New York City
morning
light cruel as that snub-nose .38.
Breakfast
with My Father
Dad drove his Lower East Side business’
panel
truck to where we ate breakfast, before
I
jumped the subway to my commuter college
in
the terra incognita of the Bronx.
At
his favourite cafeteria,
Dad
always had the scrambled eggs,
hash
browns and toast, and once
he
slipped in three rashers of bacon
and
winked not to rat us out to Mom,
who
kept our apartment kosher enough
for
the Head Rabbi of Jerusalem.
Me? I was addicted to the French toast,
explosive
with cinnamon and syrup.
Sated,
I caught the “D” train
while
Dad drove to another day
of
his drunken thief of a partner.
Thinking
back, I should’ve kissed him,
sprung
for those meals: my way of saying
how
much I appreciated the rides,
the
conversations, for just being with him.
Robert Cooperman's latest collection is BEARING THE BODY OF HECTOR HOME (FutureCycle Press). Forthcoming from Kelsay Books is HELL AT COCK'S CROW, a sonnet sequence about pirates.
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