The cathedral bells rang as Sarah’s heart raced like a bullet Today was when Joe would arrive; waiting she was for his embrace Whilst, Richard sat solemnly then stood and struggled Trying to grapple the names of the Apostles
There Sylvia, as Richard would call her: grandma Brewed her special tea; the fragrance brought Richard towards her He recited the names of the Apostles-“Saint Peter, Saint John, and Saint um….” The last name tried he hard to pull “He is invoked in helpless situations” his grandma prompted Without reluctance he exclaimed-“Saint Jude!”
Sarah the mother entered and Richard flung into her arms Without much ado Joe the father jived into the hall All of them hugged and kissed like mad, and Sylvia the grandmother sent a little prayer to the Lord She does that a lot, was brought up in a pretentious Christian family
The Bishop preached the Gospel; all rose for the Morning Prayer to be sung Seeing him standing there singing in the choir made her heart burst with joy Her little Richard singing the prayer; when all was done Richard walked hand in hand with his grandmother And every night she recited him a verse of the holy Bible
Joe’s love for Sarah was taciturn Sarah’s, more strident in approach And whenever mother talked Richard felt That a semblance tarnished his father’s soul
Five years after, the sound of the Shofar made his ears hurt The sound almost eerie made his chest burn Tears incessantly slipped damping his black suit His mother was Jewish, the Synagogue echoing the sound Of the Shofar shouted for itself Making him realize the real reason behind his father’s reticence
In the spring of ’58 his father left With a woman Richard would have never suspected But that was not all spring had to offer Richard fell in love with the girl of his dreams She reminded him of his mother when she smiled But glamour supposedly overpowered this sweet joy
And one wintry night Richard fled from his house Leaving his grandmother to cry She knows not where he is For he never returned to his only lover alive
Roaming he is in the filthy streets of Nogales, Sonora The a Capella that the Armenian Church nearby played wracked his nerves The sermons that he’d heard over the years long back lost their effervescence As the faiths Judaism, Christianity, Islam all seemed a cruel joke Follower of Satan some call him when he walks down the road
Had it not been for the heinous conspiracies of the world Poor Richard would have still loved the divinity But sick he was of the demons of the world’s and his own His ingenuity, innocence, spontaneity were taken away by the supreme His heart no more hurts as madman he hath become
But somewhere in the abyss formed in his heart He wants to believe the priests for once and for all But the ineptness of the cause restraints him each time Once was a devotee now a Pagan he’s forced to be for life