IT WAS A NIGHT WHEN FLIGHT HADN'T YET BEEN INVENTED
He had a face like a FOR SALE
sign that had been there for ever
with the kind of moustache that smart-aleck kids
would draw upon a poster of the Mona Lisa.
His eyes were kind - DalΓ-ish as when the great painter
announced his own greatness.
Behind him a yellow half-moon
posed perched upon his head
as if it was his own peculiar particular pet
otherwise he was nondescript
a no-one that no one would notice.
An announcement announced that the flight to Dublin
would be delayed indefinitely.
Outside the snow was impossible.
It was a night when flight
hadn't yet been invented
and only snow took to the air.
I only noticed him because a tear
silently and slowly trickled down
his left cheek and hung suspended there
for a century it seemed before falling on the book
before him that he wasn't reading
only holding as if in defence against the world
and I wondered what his grief was.
It was our first Christmas without our mother and I wanted to be there for my father. But the snow was fearsome and no flights were to be had...you had to go to the airport and stand in line outside the closed terminal to have even a chance to maybe be lucky. After three hours I got lucky and made it home. An old man was sitting on his suitcase and holding a book upside down. pretending to read and crying silently to himself.I was in the same state myself and his grief was the embodiment of mine. Looking up at the darkness as giant flakes of snow fell upon us it was as if we had been transported back to a time when flight hadn't yet been invented and the heavens were inviolate and could not be touched.