Those Border Niños Would Go Home, Too
The gossip started years ago
and ruined lives, burned everyone.
No one ever tried to stop it.
This Russian couple came to town
and carved a life from land
they had never seen.
They could have moved years ago
since money's not a problem.
The husband is an engineer,
the wife a psychotherapist.
Neighbors never speak to them,
never have, never will.
At the festival that summer,
the couple tried to meet neighbors
and struck an iceberg.
Elmo at the Dew Drop Inn recalls
"they liked hot dogs topped with kraut"
but "they had heavy accents."
Now Elmo and the neighbors swear
if they had sent the Russians packing,
those border niños would go home, too.
A Death in the Family
Sometimes it helps to learn
a relative has died
a close relative you haven’t
seen in years and didn’t plan
to see again because
you haven’t talked in years
and wouldn’t talk again unless
you met in heaven or perhaps in hell
and God or Satan said
it’s too late now to harbor hate
why not shake hands--
and that may happen yet
if the two of you should soar
beyond the clouds or
plummet to the coals
and find yourselves together
in the same place forever.
The two of you always knew
where the other one would go
and too late now you both
may be surprised.
The only difference between
Judy’s father and mine
is my father didn’t drink.
When we were tykes
they’d come home from work
in a rage every evening,
her father drinking into the night
and mine sitting in silence
in a tiny parlor playing
ancient reels and jigs
on a huge RCA Victrola.
Her father wore a tie
and carried a brief case,
and mine wore coveralls
and carried a lunch bucket
into the alleys of Chicago
climbing light poles to fix
dead wires so all could see.
Her father came home neat,
mine soaked in sweat.
But they were twins,
Siamese if you will,
each miserable in his own way,
driving wives and children nuts.
I always wondered if Judy and I
had normal fathers, if we
would have been
scriveners as adults.
I know I would have gone
to law school and railed
in court in behalf of
the innocent and guilty
and made wads of money
I’d be fingering now instead
of sitting behind a keyboard
at dawn still typing.
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Donal Mahoney lives in St. Louis, Missouri.
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