words into weapons and lining him up
for target practice, say that’s kerosene
under the bridge. You did your best.
But the mercenaries I hired to obliterate
my feelings return, with venom
on their breath, and I launch a fuck you,
for old time’s sake, at the bull’s-eye on his chest.
UNCLE EGGPLANT
When I was a teenager,
my parents would go away
and stick me with the job
of watching blind Uncle Harry.
I’d buckle him in the front
seat of my Chevy Nova
and take him with me
on drug runs into the city.
Okay, Har, you wait here —
I’m gonna dash into this flower
shop and pick up the azaleas.
One day, I returned to the car,
and Harry was gone. I sped
home, placed an eggplant
on his pillow, and told my
parents I found him this way.
THE DOLL HOUSE
When my uncle died,
it was decided
to build a doll house
out of his bones.
After some hot water
and lots of scrubbing,
we were ready.
With my sister and I
perched at either shoulder
and an army of screws,
Dad began to build.
A sense of calm came
over the family and
hovered there, smugly.
It was like Christmas
all over again,
only this time
no one got spanked.
THE OBVIOUS
We didn’t deny the obvious,
but we didn’t entirely accept it either.
I mean, we said hello to it each morning
in the foyer. We patted its little head
as it made a mess in the backyard,
but we never nurtured it.
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