The
Stranger
The
door knocker’s clang sounded once,
startling
us from Unforgotten on TV.
It
was almost time to give the cats snacks
and
head upstairs to bed.
I
clasped the phone in my firm hand
while
my husband peered into a peephole.
“Who
is there?” he called out to no reply.
“It
can’t be an animal that high up
and
no bird would fly in the dark
and
not leave a mark where it landed.”
After
fifteen minutes, we ventured outside
to
the long bone-white patio glowing
under
an almost full moon, the tinkling
of
the chimes in the slow rippling breeze,
an
owl silhouetted up near the chimney
tooting
his plaintive cry, and the psst psst
of
tiny flying creatures. I could smell
the
night jasmine releasing its bounty.
How
many animals were hiding nearby
in
the bushes and flowering shrubs?
Whoever
rang the bell, were they gone?
I
startled from a skittering behind me.
Then
I saw the gecko bend from side
to
side as he climbed along the stucco
from
the porch light busy with insects.
Tapping
my husband’s arm, I nodded
toward
the unintentional culprit
who
shook us from our cosey couches.
Forever
He’s outside now
as usual
planting a cactus
arm
that fell from its
column
the watering can
at his side
as it follows him
over our acre.
He’s planted in
the wash
sustenance and
flat boulders
for the wanderers
as they travel
through this land
we share
with lizards and
rabbits, snakes
and bobcats, quail
and owls.
We’ve hosted
hawks, coyotes,
a Great Blue
Heron, and earlier
today in our pool
and fountain
two ducks, male
and female,
contemplating a
nest site,
circled each other
in
figure eights, the
rippling
etching hearts in
the water.
We sat on the
lounge watching
the ducks gaze at
each other
in their spinning
infinities
so long that we
began to hope
they would stay,
then the pool
shuddered as they
rose with
a whoosh, wings
outstretched,
and flew over our
trees.
When I Bravely
Attended My 50th High School Reunion
Beyond the gazebo
I shelter under,
past the grills,
the tubs of potato salad
and coleslaw, the
lake shimmers
under the August
sun. All those years ago
my family spent
summers at a lake close by.
The same shimmer,
the same sun splaying
over the water, my
brother splashing
near shore in his
search for bullfrogs,
our dog at his
heels--loving the swish
of his tail
through the water--,waves
thudding the dock
when boats passed by.
Summers were the
reprieve from school
where I picked my
way carefully through
the gauntlet of
mean girls as if the silence
of my careful
moccasins in the woods
would protect me
from their disdain.
Those days were
fifty years ago, although
time has collapsed
like a travel cup, taking
me on a trip to my
past, and yet--
I don’t recognize
most of these people,
their edges soft
and blurred like my own,
with lopsided
grins and crinkles around
their eyes lending
kindness and grace
to our eager
re-introductions.
Later in the
afternoon, my cry catches
in my throat.
There we are at the dock,
lithe with long
hair in movement, our
short dresses
jostled by the breeze.
I sit down so fast
on the bench my knees
scream at my
neglect for forgetting them.
But these girls
have lined up for a boat ride.
They are not with
our party, of course.
Their pontoon
swerves away from us,
and we walk to our
cars back into our lives.
Is It Theft if It Fills an Absence?
I
saw my father palm
his
attorney’s antique cane
with
exaggerated pomposity
and
strut down the street.
I
lagged behind, praying
nobody
thought me with him.
The
cane flamed like a fire baton
leading
our thief parade.
My
thieving father could not
withstand
my constant begging
to
return the cane and make
me
clean again, so he swallowed
dirt
and unswallowed the sword
outside
the lawyer’s dark door.
Only
all these years later
do I
suspect him of paying back
the
Man for the birthright
and
surname robbed from him
by
his own physician father
who
denied him three times.
Perhaps
I did understand
elsewhere
than my thoughts.
For
Father’s Day that year,
I
bought him a peace pipe pinned
like
a butterfly to backing board,
the
irony of the gift on land
stolen
lost to me at the time.
When a Leaf Falls
Evenings like this set the girl humming
inside
her toes, elbows and stomach
as if lamplight
has amplified within
and now warms her body
sending her blood buzzing through
its gridded network
Lamplight casts a golden sheen across
the coffee table
which hums, as does
the mother in the swivel chair knitting
and these aren’t the hummings
of the hi-fi
although a Nancy Wilson record
rotates its steam
like the lamplight
The father hums at his basement work bench
and it’s not the paint-spattered radio
tipping its jaunty antenna
The girl would be happy forever except
for that feeling
like a boulder held just above.
She
can’t get too
comfortable
as anything could unbalance it.
An extra star in tomorrow’s sky, rain
or no rain
could re-set it all.
In the morning
sun
will draw dust to the coffee table.
Couch cushions will fray
in that stream of daylight.
A leaf will drop to the sidewalk
where it is crushed
underfoot.
Note: this last poem was originally published in my 2015 book Doll God (Aldrich/Kelsay).
Luanne Castle’s
award-winning full-length poetry collections are Rooted and Winged
(Finishing Line 2022) and Doll God (Kelsay 2015). Her chapbooks are Our
Wolves (Alien Buddha 2023) and Kin Types (Finishing Line 2017), a
finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award. Luanne’s Pushcart and Best of the
Net-nominated poetry and prose have appeared in Copper Nickel, Verse Daily,
Saranac Review, Bending Genres, The Ekphrastic Review, TAB, Does it Have
Pockets, Sims Library of Poetry, Pleiades, River Teeth, and other journals.
She lives with five cats in Arizona along a wash that wildlife use as a
thoroughfare.
I love Luanne's poetry and enjoyed seeing it here.
ReplyDeleteWhat a splendid selection, Luanne! You brightened my day with your shimmering images.
ReplyDeleteI love Luanne's poetry, and these are no exception!
ReplyDelete