Wonderland
Page 3
WONDERLAND
Maybe children are always
in training for something.
Always being told to do something
they do not want to do.
Caleb and Michael and I
in jeans and T-shirts and long bangs.
You have to work hard for things
you want
is what parents say,
is what the wind says. The three of us
are skating near the Safeway
and Caleb jumps
off his skateboard,
walks across the street, walks right up
to this other kid and starts
beating him. All hands and legs.
Then he stops. Something stops
inside him. He comes back,
a father
breathing hard, his face like a door slammed shut,
and crosses the street,
returns to us,
some good news
with blood on his shirt,
Attila the Hun smiling, skating
home toward the seventh grade.
MINOR THREAT
A maple
in the middle of all of this, in the middle of what is struck
and who is doing the striking,
in the middle of stitches
and skateboards, of cement and tar and bark dust,
the quiet of its green leaves
greening out in the middle of the neighborhood, peed on by dogs
with jaws like cardboard boxes,
with owners like box cutters
drinking malt liquor, drinking RC Cola,
its leaves making the wind into a body that flies down the street
and scatters in the rusting front yards,
the roots
under us all, moving like medicine in the woody
dirt. The branches in any weather
are stronger than all the kids who swing from them,
who hang from them,
in the queasy Southeast Portland light.
MINIMUM WAGE
My mother and I are on the front porch lighting each other’s cigarettes
as if we were on a ten-minute break from our jobs
at being a mother and son, just ten minutes
to steal a moment of freedom before clocking back in, before
putting the aprons back on, the paper hats,
washing our hands twice and then standing
behind the counter again,
hoping for tips, hoping the customers
will be nice, will say some kind word, the cool
front yard before us and the dogs
in the backyard shitting on everything.
We are hunched over, two extras on the set of The Night of the Hunter.
I am pulling a second cigarette out of the pack, a swimmer
rising from a pool of other swimmers. Soon we will go back
inside and sit in the yellow kitchen and drink
the rest of the coffee
and what is coming to kill us will pour milk
into mine and sugar into hers.
THREE P.M.
This room of my disappearing act and valentine.
This chest that’s blown out and honey it’s really OK.
This record player.
This bed and all the times it’s been made and also drowning.
This sea and foam.
This time I have really gone and done it.
This time of buttons and pencils and surgical masks and seaweed.
This amphibian inner-organ green.
This smoke.
This pillowcase and razors and salt trying to be a human being.
This car alarm trying to be a human being.
This way of thinking and also climbing the stairs to who-knows-what.
This answer.
This couch and cutting board and carrots and lamplight.
This Mojave Desert.
This chrysalis branch that keeps breaking over my shoulders.
This kind of thing.
This going backwards so now I’m like a door in a house you knew.
This cellphone.
This two-way calling of the brain’s prayer, Amen.
This park at night and also yellow lights.
This scary.
This sound of someone on fire and also how the body is all water.
This epilepsy and also the ground opening up and the ground closing.
SIDEWALK
My mother worked like a dog
for so long
it’s nice to see her
be the owner—
There are only, really, one million
two hundred and ten ways
to die.
But my favorites are
your father drinking,
your father breathing,
your father
touching anything at all,
your father
listening to opera, your father
looking at you
and saying I see you. Like Pope Francis
looking at a girl’s knees
when he was twelve and what made him love
Jesus lit up
right as she crossed her legs
in the sign of the cross.
Actually there are only ten ways
to die but I’m too afraid to say.
I’m brave enough
to walk home, though.
Brave enough for the dark
if there’s a cross in it, a telephone pole,
or a weirdly shaped tree,
if there’s a dog being walked,
if there’s a dog at all.
In years to come, when you sign
all your letters
with your mind only, know
that someone is alone
in their bed with a body sort of like the body
you have and that she believes
that she is dying. That she is thinking about
her porous mother
and Scotch-taped father.
You go anywhere in the world,
even inside your own self,
and your mom and dad
will be right there
like two warm eggs
with a little chocolate and blood
inside them. I’m sorry
I was just thinking
about my mom and thinking about my dad
and thinking
about the blue plastic bags
people use to pick up after their dog,
because they love that stupid dog
so much, even though it’s not a baby
and even though they can’t have sex with it,
not really, not the way
you and I have sex,
with a ball and a stick, calling each other
in from the dark,
whispering good boy and whispering
good girl.
FOUR P.M.
I wonder about my brain and how it’s a freeway and also tulips.
I wonder about your post-structuralism.
I wonder about your feet.
I wonder about the time I was twelve and also electrocution.
I wonder about the faces on milk cartons, 1981.
I wonder about what I’ve done.
I wonder about tunnels and bridges and both of them in the sky.
I wonder about my mother and father.
I wonder about the oxygen around your mouth.
I wonder about trees and lampposts and synergy and oxycodone and you.
I wonder about the hierarchy of Mass.
I wonder about the sounds you make and also pillowcases and coffee.
I wonder about what I’ll do.
I wonder about what I didn’t do and then it was two months.
I wonder about the yellow eyes of eggs and how you are not a currency.
I wonder about Justin and how the war is going.
I wonder about his body being torn apart.
/> I wonder about the nightmare of my body and the still pool of your lap.
I wonder about your fingers.
I wonder about paper bags and clouds and also it’s September.
I wonder about hospital lighting.
I wonder about cancer and ginger ale and SWAT teams and their minds.
I wonder about the moon as an optician.
I wonder about how time bends and if I can bend it and also you.
SAINT FRANCIS AND THE PINE TREE
Before they beat me I knelt down
beneath the pine tree
and lowered
my head and placed my hands
in front of me like two plates,
together but lightly
so they wouldn’t break, just like this,
like how a child’s psychologist would do
with two dolls, one female
and one male, and ask
was it like this? My hands barely touching
so that you could draw a piece of floss
between them, and inside
the ten-year-old cave
I had made of myself, I thought
of Saint Francis and how he forgave
everyone and was poor
like me though he could have been rich,
and how he was always standing
beneath a tree or standing
with an animal that lived in trees,
and how he was kept alive by love,
and that was what I was going to do,
I knelt there
and smelled the pine
and said aloud
some made-up prayer
about forgiveness and that’s
when the front of a skateboard
slammed into my face, into it
but also sort of through
my face, like a breeze
made out of wood and metal.
I looked up. I looked up into
the arms and stiff green needles
of the pine tree
and it seemed like a father
looking down on me the way fathers do
though the arms moved like a mother,
and I wasn’t alone,
I had the boys who were beating me
for one, and the pine for the other.
After that I felt like every tree
knew who I was.
That I loved love, though
I had no real idea about it
or what to do. I mean
really what to do.
And then one of the boys held my arms
while another boy held my legs
while another boy pulled down my pants
while another boy grabbed a branch,
grabbed a part
of the pine tree that had fallen,
and waved it in front of my face and said
we’re gonna stick it in you, we’re gonna stick it
up your ass, but was a coward, or he was
also afraid and so just hit me with it
and laughed and then some wind came
because it doesn’t care about shame or kids
and rose up beneath the pine
and with it some of the boys’ brown hair
and the pine tree moved,
and the boys looked off at something else and then
followed after it, whatever unlucky thing
it was, and I sat there alone again
but for the pine and the light in the tree and the wind
and I thought of Saint Francis
and how he might stand up now and hug the tree
and call him brother for had not the tree
stood there and witnessed him, his body,
and so I stood up
in my rugged robe of blue jeans and T-shirt,
and hugged the tree, and kissed it, and thanked it
for not leaving me, and called it brother,
and then never came near it again,
for the following summer I felt God walk away
and chose my cock over sainthood,
and stood beneath a weeping willow and kissed
Angela Marquez and took her tongue
into my mouth and she took my fingers
into her body
and the willow moved above
and all around us,
it held us and kept us
until we were
done with one another
and then it let us go.
FIVE P.M.
I heard the dog crying all night in the car and felt right at home.
I heard the rain.
I heard about what was happening in that place.
I heard the freeway and elevators and landing gears and also nothing.
I heard I was dying.
I heard the room when the room walked away.
I heard the floor when I fainted.
I heard everything that was left over and also someone calling out.
I heard the brain seize up.
I heard about what happened and how it sounded really bad and I’m sorry.
I heard the call to prayer.
I heard white linen and floss and dispatches and a single piece of paper.
I heard dark all around.
I heard dark all around and a seashell.
I heard you would never come back and also the moon.
I heard the moon knocking its teeth out.
I heard the computer start up and the rice cooking and the groom smoking.
I heard myself and wanted to cut it into ribbons.
I heard the party start.
I heard people laughing at me and why shouldn’t they?
I heard I hesitated.
I heard the expression on your face and people speaking in a submarine.
I heard the men in the stairwell.
I heard the biting and pulling and curled-up shaking in the bedroom.
BLACK FLAG
A nest not all the way at the top of the evergreen but almost,
rooted in between two branches
like a tooth,
a paper bag.
It’s winter so inside
no one is home, no warm bodies ticking like feathery clocks,
just the wind in there, just whatever
you might imagine, but it’s beautiful
up there and when I look at it it doesn’t matter
what I’ve become because the nest is all clear even while it falls
apart, even as it melts
in the acid rain.
Who looks at something empty and doesn’t think about what
they could fill it with? No one.
A needle, a body.
A nest.
A needle slipping in between your fingers, in between your toes.
WALKING THE DOGS
I haven’t done drugs for three days so I name each one after
my sister and mother and brother and take them
out with me on a walk, each one taking turns leading, each one the leader
of a pack that was bred in the mid-
seventies,
each leash the color
of glass and the density of a star, I hold each
leash like something
that has returned home after being lost, I walk them under the oaks
and maples, under the lilacs and cherries, they walk
through the shadows like the team
they are, each
caring for the other
like I always wanted them to, each giving room for a paw, a tail,
sometimes smelling each other
to make sure they are alright, we are
all alright, the thing that is not God whispers to me, you are
not alone, you are not
a shovel or
a horse, even the stem
of the rosemary bush is really excited that you have made it this far, see how it shivers
in the early spring breeze, see how it’s a breeze to be with your
/>
whole family,
to be the porch
they all sit on after dinner, mugs in their hands and wine in the mugs, and how
they lift their noses into the wind
and sniff and look to see
if you are there, if you are going to do
what you promised
to do, if you are going
to live and call them sometimes and tell them you love them.
SIX P.M.
This planet that’s in outer space.
This way I am with strangers and silverware.
This exact time and trees.
This looking past your right ear and at the ocean.
This piece of limestone.
This grave I made out of dinner and a bottle of wine.
This bell ringing.
This hammer the size of my closet with me inside it.
This letter I wrote to you with the packet of honey inside it.
This razor with my family history inside it.
This room right now and how it’s outside of everything.
This tired.
This talking and talking and wind and grass and midnight.
This ambulance in my hands.
This is how happy I am with you.
This thumb and mouth and ribbon and ice and asshole.
This Sunday.
This body like any other prescription-filled blue pill.
This weekend.
This ghost in your room pretending to be your older brother.