These gatherings had become somewhat regular, A short drive for most involved, Having stayed behind once the mill closed (There were the odd out-of-state license plates, Mostly Florida and the Carolinas, The vehicles' occupants sporting incongruous tans, And they were treated with a certain reserve, As if they had breached some faith, Had broken some covenant) And they were invariably in the morning, Leading more than one wag to note Well, at least we're all on first shift now. And the talk outside of Wiegert's, Shambling old funeral home a little more care-worn With each generation of the family it fell to, Turned to such things as Butchie's unusual good luck, How he'd remained more or less unscathed by the mill, Losing only the tip of a pinkie finger in a roller (It was said that, back before the dining room At the Montmorenci House Had been converted into a tattoo studio, You always shook hands with the left and right To ensure a full set of ten fingers in the grip.) And how he had, even though he was among The most reticent of men, been a regular At the retiree luncheons at the diner up in Wilcox (The timing of such events subject to certain vagaries As an infrequent February snow storm Or the less uncommon changes in ownership) And how he once explained his presence, And then only when pressed, By quietly noting Well, I figger my will-be's To be a solitary thing, and the only folks I share my used-ta-be's is all of you good people.