Poetry

Smoke Break
The smoke runs thin
by mid-morning
The river is once again
worth waking for
I approach the water,
spread my arms,
wade,
then rise
and between exhale
and the next flick of flame
I am, briefly,
the elusive kingfisher
father
has been looking for
all these years
A Pinch of Brine
On Not Finding a Gideon’s Bible in the hotel room
No matter, Dad said,
pushing in the empty drawer
between two sun-stained
beds in a hotel room
on the harbor.
There’s always next year.
He threw open the French doors,
stepped into the west-heavy light.
A trawler blared, followed
by the low groan of skiffs
headed for the Sound.
The room filled with salt smell
so strong you’d have thought
the walls were sheathed
in ocean spray.
Dad looked back at me
and my sister and inhaled.
Smell that, kids?
That’s Heaven, we’re smellin’.
No doubt about it—
Heaven, and a pinch of Brine.
I Eat Dirt
I was a wee boy
all bone no brawn,
as scrawny as a peapod,
mighty jealous of the way
father cared for his crops
with perennial love—
kissing the tomato’s tender bruises
and mourning the remnants of the lettuce
after the deer’s late-night dinner.
I was young,
not yet accustomed
to the ways we grieve,
so hearing him speak
of his own late father
with the cucumbers
was strange,
but how could I forget
that night stargazing
on the hill behind the house?
I was bewildered less
by the endless expanse
than his spiced flirty whispers—
He was talking dirty
to the chili peppers
when he thought he was alone,
crooning on about the way
they caught his mouth on fire.
“Baby, your heat is all I need,” he said,
or something equally egregious.
And while
I was not interested
in dad’s hotness for the habanero,
I was convinced he loved his fruits
and vegetables more than me.
How he stood over them,
smiling as if his small plot of Earth
were sacred ground.
One summer day,
humid with scattered rain,
I called his name again and again.
Naturally, he was too busy
tending to his nursery,
whispering tenderly
to the blight on the leaves,
praying for the plants’ salvation.
I wanted to be blessed
by his whiskey breath, too.
I wanted to be just as beloved.
It was then,
as I watched him whistle
while he worked,
a grand idea sprouted
among my naive neurons.
I figured if I ate
straight from the womb,
where the roots took shape,
I too might grow into a life
worthy of his praise.
I filled up a plastic beach bucket
opened my mouth,
and turned it over.
You know what happened next, don’t you?
Yup,
I drank the Earth
as if it were a good
ol’ fashioned stout.
The thing about stouts, well,
they’re an acquired taste.
I spat mud and muck,
rock and rubble.
I swear even a few worms
slithered back up my throat.
Choking on tears, I shouted,
“Daddy, I eat dirt!”
He dropped his spade,
plucked me from the ground,
kissed my cheek,
and smiled
as he cleaned out his garden
from between my teeth.