Heir to the Throne
Just
as my father is getting ready
to
check out of Hotel Earth,
my
nephew swims through my sister’s
birth
canal and when the two sets
of
piercing black eyes and bald heads
meet
they smile as if gazing
into
a mirror. When my father takes
a
bow and exits the stage,
his
grandson takes up his passion
for
cooking and reading and writing.
I
see my father’s smiling eyes
and
hear his laughter as I watch
my
nephew receive his diploma
in
English and recite the works
of
Steinbeck, Hemingway and Poe
to
a classroom full of students
who
find him humorous and brilliant
and
writing short stories in his office
while
his wife and children sleep
just
like his grandfather, my father.
And
now on my nephew’s 39th birthday
I
watch my father ‘s tall slim body bend
over
the backyard grill as his grandson
flips
sirloin steaks in the sunlight
and
serves them on paper plates
with
the grace of his grandfather
who
is somewhere grilling steaks
and
teaching grammar content
his
grandson is carrying on
in
the kingdom he built for him.
Larry
and Gerry Gene
Closer
than cousins,
better
than big brothers,
Larry,
Gerry Gene and I
ride
through our childhood
Larry
as Roy Rogers,
Gerry
as Gene Autry
and
me as Dale Evans,
with
our dogs, Smoky, Pepper,
and
Tootsie trotting behind.
After
high school Larry joins
the
Army and Gerry gets
married
and I move
to
Billings to work
on
the Gazette. In a Billings
Bar,
Gerry, his wife, my sister
and
I drink foaming beer
in
mugs as the country
crooner
sings cheating songs.
A
big man grabs me with muscular
arms
and pulls me on his lap,
and
as he rubs his red beard against
my
face and tries to kiss my cheek,
I
struggle to get away. Let go of me,
I
protest. Gerry and the others laugh.
Don’t you recognize
me, Cuz?
the
stranger says in Larry’s
voice.
I laugh and hug him tight.
When did you get home?
I
ask. Now Gerry is gone, leaving
Larry
and me to connect on computers
with
the help of our grandchildren.
Uncle
Worship
My
mother’s brothers
and
brothers-in-law
were
my teachers
and
preachers.
Uncle
Jack taught me
to
drive a car
in-between
his divorce
and
dalliances.
Uncle
Bill and Uncle Frank,
carpenters
like Jacob,
taught
me by example
marriage
is forever.
My
other Uncle Bill,
a
policeman, taught me
the
law works when he caught
my
grandmother’s swindler.
Uncle
Emil, the train
conductor,
with a red
nose
of a circus clown,
taught
me to laugh.
But
it was Uncle Roger,
the
frugal businessman
and
Rock Hudson lookalike,
who
taught me the most
when
he rode his bicycle
as
he did every morning
across
a busy street
and
a car wrecked our world.
The
Big Red Barn
My
father lifts heavy
bales
of hay stored
in
the big red barn to feed
Zephyr,
his Arabian, Sissy,
my
Shetland pony and Francis,
his
friend, Buss’s mule.
The
barn sits behind the house
daddy
rents for twenty dollars
a
month on a residential
street
in a small Montana town
in
the nineteen forties and fifties.
By
the time I am a teenager
and
all the animals are gone
at
2 am one Sunday morning
we
wake up to orange flames
shooting
against a charcoal sky,
sirens
screaming, voices
shouting,
smoke billowing
and
watch the old barn burn.
Firemen
find Marlboro butts
and
declare the fire arson.
My
mother blames the couple
next
door leaning on the fence
laughing,
smoking and chugging
Coors
like they are watching
a
fireworks display on July 4th.
But
my money is on Ricky
and
Johnny who brag in school
how
they bash the brains
of
cats with baseball bats
in
the barn as we sleep
while
they suck on Marlboros
and
blow smoke in our faces.
Friday
is Fish Night
We
were not Catholic or religious
but
every Friday for supper
my
mother would fry trout
my
grandfather, uncles or father
fished
out of the Stillwater River.
In
Billings, Butte and Yakima
my
friends and I would gather
at
the All You Could Eat Fish Fry
where
we would chow down
on
battered cod, chips and coleslaw.
At
Fisherman’s Wharf
and
the Seattle Water Front
on
Friday’s we’d dine on fresh
crab,
shrimp and sushi
with
a salad or clam chowder.
Every
Friday my mother-in-law
would
flour and pan fry fresh
bass,
bluegill, perch or trout
my
father-in-law caught
in
the fishing holes of Southeast Idaho.
.
It’s
Friday, my husband says,
in
our home in the Arizona desert
as
he fishes from the freezer
Wal-Mart
salmon, Swai or tilapia
and
pops it in the microwave.
Sharon Waller Knutson is a retired journalist who lives in
Arizona. She has published eleven poetry books including My Grandmother
Smokes Chesterfields (Flutter Press 2014,) What the Clairvoyant Doesn’t
Say and Trials & Tribulations of Sports Bob (Kelsay Books 2021)
and Survivors, Saints and Sinners (Cyberwit 2022,) Kiddos & Mamas
Do the Darndest Things (Cyberwit 2022,) The Vultures are Circling
(Cyberwit 2023) and The Leading Ladies in My Life (Cyberwit June 2023.)
Her twelfth collection, My Grandfather is a Cowboy is forthcoming from
Cyberwit in 2024..Her work has also appeared in Poetry Breakfast,
Autumn Sky Poetry Review, Poetry Hunger X,
Lothlorien, GAS Poetry, Art and Music, The Rye Whiskey
Review, Black Coffee Review, ONE ART, Mad Swirl, The Drabble, Gleam, Muddy River Review, Verse-Virtual,
Your Daily Poem, Red Eft Review, Beatnik Cowboy, The Five-Two, Impspired and
others.
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