We'd find my father sprawled on the hard wood floor of the master bedroom, fallen from his scooter—as we called it, hoping names could make things not what they were—and waiting for us to return home grocery-laden. I'm okay, he'd shout, and heavy bags of food would drop. My mother's face. Could she run. And he, always amused at the refrain of our concern as if the strains of panic weren't the dissonance of fear and anger, proof that leaving home could be a danger. My parents wrestled with such tasks—balance lost and found with luck—but me, I simply etched the record with new grooves. The needle sticks sometimes; the clinging notes of home repeat: my father's careless laugh; my mother's pounding feet. ____ This poem appears in the chapbook Halflives, published in October 2005 by New Michigan Press. [buy] |