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Debating the Sky

I remember Dad behind the wheel,

elbows out, arm resting on the window,

eyebrows furrowed, eyes darting,

hands twitching in rhythm

with invisible opponents.

He often said on the Los Angeles freeway,

shaking his head and rubbing his eyes,

“Boys, I can't see a **** thing.”

Five lanes of traffic

and two sons scared shitless

at what that meant.

 

I asked Mom once,

“What is he doing?”

She said, “Arguing with people in his head.”

I laughed then.

I laugh now,

thinking about all there is to argue about.

The greedy, the careless,

the cruel, the brutal people

that want more, only more.

 

Mostly, though, it was on the way

to Hollywood Park

or Santa Anita.

Dad leaned over the wheel,

muttering, gesturing,

convincing the horses to run faster,

turn on the juice in the homestretch,

telling Shoemaker to use the whip

and Pincay to take the inside lane

on the final turn.

 

I watched him like a scientist,

like a budding poet,

a child noticing the absurd motions,

the invisible dialogues,

the way his lips moved

like he was negotiating with a stubborn wind,

or providence asleep

at the wheel.

 

Sometimes, Dad drifted lane to lane,

no turn signal, no checking the rearview mirror,

and I'd feel the invisible friction

he was arguing about in his mind.

A swerve here, a sudden pounding

on the brake there,

and I'd think,

he's winning, he's losing,

he's keeping the chaos at bay

with a twitch of a finger

or an angry glance at the sky.

 

Later, I thought maybe it was the horses—

maybe he was seeing the race

before it happened,

like a silent jockey,

mapping every stride, every stumble.

Or maybe he was just a man

arguing with life

and the only witnesses were his sons,

trying not to have panic attacks

in the backseat.

Or maybe he watched Inherit the Wind

one too many times.

He always dreamed of being a lawyer.

Debating gave him high blood pressure

and satisfaction.

 

I can see him now,

that California gray sky,

sitting on the dashboard,

hand out the window,

a conductor of invisible speeches,

making peace with the world,

one argument at a time.

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Written by
thomas-w-case
59 / M / Clear Lake
Published
Feb 17
Lines·Words
71·364
Notes

If you’d like to hear more of my work, I recently posted a long-form poetry reading on my YouTube channel — one or two poems from each of my four books, read in a relaxed, uninterrupted session.

 

You can watch it here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dY2euFFCXLI

 

Thank you for reading and supporting independent poetry.

 

— Thomas W. Case

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