he took my last quarter and dime, pocket lint, the missing ***** of something I’d meant to reassemble if I’d remembered or had time
then wandered off rubbing shoulders with the sidewalk preacher searching for signs of end times in rainstorms or faint rumbles of passing traffic, holding high his Good News in a half-folded forecast for tomorrow;
this exodus - across a patch of crabgrass following a diagonal path of earth foot-worn into a thin gray line defining the shortest distance from his concrete corner to the door of the liquor store justified a sacrifice of hours, the cold lies told:
lost wallet, old mother, car just out of gas
practiced to passersby or filling station patrons, their rumpled tithes reborn into an afternoon sermon wrapped tight in brown paper still warm with silent echoes of amen