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just another day, this eve of May with April's abnegation of her title, the queen of time just another day, when the mother marked an "X" on the calendar, holding her breath with hope, her coffee in one hand and the red pen in the other, the hand she used to make two slashes to bring your boy a fraction closer to home he was to arrive alive and well in a fortnight, neatly packaged, like a belated  mother's day gift a reasonable thing to expect, the eve of May, since you, his father, had arrived the same way, after her same hand, younger, more dream driven, had brought you home with the same crosses but you, the man for whom she waited, all those eves ago were wrapped neatly only long enough to see April's thirty crosses, May's eager ambitious start, and you came unwrapped, leaving your uniform on the bedroom floor in a heavy heap you said reminded you of what you left behind, not in the steaming stench of Mekong’s paddies, but in the quiet lanes of your hometown, in the high school where you met her, the church where you married and where you were sure you would be buried ‘twas not yet to be so, your eve of May passed, along with thirty five more, though you were there, walking the same streets, to you, the crumpled green garments were still in a heap on the floor, even though she had buried them in a drawer years before you did not mark off the days, for they made you wonder if their end meant your homecoming and not his, an infidelity you felt you watched March march by, and April finally relent when “they” came to the door, neatly packaged themselves, ***** and filled with well formed words--you did not hear them, though you saw their lips move, and you watched your wife walk past, to the ancient kitchen, the kingdom of the calendar, and make a final "X" this eve of May just another day, when another mother's son   who was crucified in the desert would become a mystic memory
0
May 1, 2014
May 1, 2014 at 4:24 PM UTC
the eve of May
just another day, this eve of May with April's abnegation of her title, the queen of time just another day, when the mother marked an "X" on the calendar, holding her breath with hope, her coffee in one hand and the red pen in the other, the hand she used to make two slashes to bring your boy a fraction closer to home he was to arrive alive and well in a fortnight, neatly packaged, like a belated  mother's day gift a reasonable thing to expect, the eve of May, since you, his father, had arrived the same way, after her same hand, younger, more dream driven, had brought you home with the same crosses but you, the man for whom she waited, all those eves ago were wrapped neatly only long enough to see April's thirty crosses, May's eager ambitious start, and you came unwrapped, leaving your uniform on the bedroom floor in a heavy heap you said reminded you of what you left behind, not in the steaming stench of Mekong’s paddies, but in the quiet lanes of your hometown, in the high school where you met her, the church where you married and where you were sure you would be buried ‘twas not yet to be so, your eve of May passed, along with thirty five more, though you were there, walking the same streets, to you, the crumpled green garments were still in a heap on the floor, even though she had buried them in a drawer years before you did not mark off the days, for they made you wonder if their end meant your homecoming and not his, an infidelity you felt you watched March march by, and April finally relent when “they” came to the door, neatly packaged themselves, ***** and filled with well formed words--you did not hear them, though you saw their lips move, and you watched your wife walk past, to the ancient kitchen, the kingdom of the calendar, and make a final "X" this eve of May just another day, when another mother's son   who was crucified in the desert would become a mystic memory
written in the middle of the night, the last night of April, commemorating the anniversary of a family being told their son was killed in action in Iraq
spysgrandson
Written by
American
May 1, 2014
May 1, 2014 at 4:24 PM UTC
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