UPPER PENINSULA EPHEMERA
a postcard for Boog, who grew up in the UP
I didn't want to be the one
to tell you, but the trees are burning, Boog.
There is fire everywhere.
We can't reach Munising
from Taquahmenon Falls
except by dirt road.
Even then
there is so much ash
my mouth tastes of old campfire.
We are in Shelter Bay.
It is only August 4th.
The leaves are unclenching
their jaws from the branches.
By the time they reach the
ground they look like bleeding gums,
they are so red. And lovely.
An entire national forest burned
by one lightning strike.
Everything is more frightening than it ought to be:
the Mackinac Bridge
suspended by dental floss; meteor showers
so close and so bright it feels like Mosul;
a Vietnam vet named Ron Stokes
who is half-deaf and hermitic and
possibly your future self.
Worst of all, Boog, is not that he paints
in a Bob Ross-style, or that he drinks
mainly Busch Light; it is that he goes
entire calendar years without speaking
to anyone, as though his mouth
opens to a tunnel of fire.
This does not stop him from smoking.
But when I see you, you are already drunk,
beer cans rattling like empty shell casings
in your speech. The maple planks
of the table scorch. The folds of the paper
curl and brown, waltz away
from my fingers and yours.
Before I can tell you of the joys of US-2,
how safe we feel so close
to Lake Michigan, your face is red
and your hair rising to the ceiling
with electric charge.
I only wanted to warn you, Boog:
Mr. Stokes looks to be
what I can only describe as spent munitions.
Most of his teeth are rotten, the rest missing,
and you, old friend, have always had
such lovely teeth.
2 comments:
this is my new favorite. ever.
i am really glad you like it so much! another many-draft poem that finally works.
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