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The last drops have been swallowed, And the last vestiges Of post-wage labor Libationary sorrow Swagger slowly off Into the night Across cracked pavement Like slugs after rain. I pick up the chemtrail Left by my father And follow it to A makeshift master suite Wedged between a Rundown groundskeeper Shed and the unkempt Wilderness beside the Desolate bike path In rural Seekonk. The rest of this comatose Town in this overdosed Commonwealth Are separated By enough trees And undergrowth And small Night creatures Calling to each other In the dark That they can't hear The nightly Rattle of .38 Rounds my father Sends flying into the trees. The pistol was my Grandfather's, Brought over from France In 1947. My father cries As he pulls the trigger Over and over Sporatically, Like a Sung Tong, His eyes wild, Darting side to side In milky blue trails Back and forth And up and down Across the dark Chasms of his Eye sockets. When the chambers Of his firearm Run dry he fills them From the box He took from my basement, In his old house, Where he stockpiled Ammunition for Twenty two years. I've learned to stand east Of my father when I make the visits Expected of children When their parents Are old and trapped In the recesses of Their insanity Or nursing home Or empty nest, Because he always Aims west. I wait for tonight's Box to be empty, Then slowly walk To where my father Is huddled, Clutching the pistol Like a teddy bear. He is breathing heavy, And has **** himself. He hears me coming, Turns, and smiles Upon recognition. "I got em good mikey, Got good, not taking My land from ME Mickey, never going Blow south, See it?" I pull the pistol I've Brought from my waistband, The one my father, Gregory Bishop, Gave me on my Eighteenth birthday. The weight in my hand Is deafening, The illegal ivory Is seamless And cold against My palm. I raise my arm, Aim, And pull the trigger.
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Oct 5, 2012
Oct 5, 2012 at 5:28 PM UTC
--Mercy, For Lack Of Actions Past--
The last drops have been swallowed, And the last vestiges Of post-wage labor Libationary sorrow Swagger slowly off Into the night Across cracked pavement Like slugs after rain. I pick up the chemtrail Left by my father And follow it to A makeshift master suite Wedged between a Rundown groundskeeper Shed and the unkempt Wilderness beside the Desolate bike path In rural Seekonk. The rest of this comatose Town in this overdosed Commonwealth Are separated By enough trees And undergrowth And small Night creatures Calling to each other In the dark That they can't hear The nightly Rattle of .38 Rounds my father Sends flying into the trees. The pistol was my Grandfather's, Brought over from France In 1947. My father cries As he pulls the trigger Over and over Sporatically, Like a Sung Tong, His eyes wild, Darting side to side In milky blue trails Back and forth And up and down Across the dark Chasms of his Eye sockets. When the chambers Of his firearm Run dry he fills them From the box He took from my basement, In his old house, Where he stockpiled Ammunition for Twenty two years. I've learned to stand east Of my father when I make the visits Expected of children When their parents Are old and trapped In the recesses of Their insanity Or nursing home Or empty nest, Because he always Aims west. I wait for tonight's Box to be empty, Then slowly walk To where my father Is huddled, Clutching the pistol Like a teddy bear. He is breathing heavy, And has **** himself. He hears me coming, Turns, and smiles Upon recognition. "I got em good mikey, Got good, not taking My land from ME Mickey, never going Blow south, See it?" I pull the pistol I've Brought from my waistband, The one my father, Gregory Bishop, Gave me on my Eighteenth birthday. The weight in my hand Is deafening, The illegal ivory Is seamless And cold against My palm. I raise my arm, Aim, And pull the trigger.
mike-bergeron
Written by
Oct 5, 2012
Oct 5, 2012 at 5:28 PM UTC
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