IN MY SISTER’S HOUSE
When I walk up, Zeke-the-Dog
is already in the car.
They're taking him in. Gently
put: helping him die. Gently
put: killing him
with less pain. On the radio,
the Angels erase our eight-run lead
like it’s nothing. Facebook says
Dad was already dying
five years ago when we played
a superhero card game
none of us understood
as the Sound sloughed away
behind us.
In her window photo stand,
my sister is carrying my son—
he carries half his weight
in cheeks among cedars’
fire-resistant carbon,
which is actually air,
bulk of the last hundred years.
Now her boy is that
same age, squalling and settling
as our illusion of progress
ebbs—
we walk in a run, and—
I just can’t.
I turn the volume down.
Fall, when the big leaf maples
around the ballfield become
nameless skeletons, I can see
the smokestack of the detached
crematorium where Dad’s body went
I am so hungry. I eat
one of her grapefruits. And
mix some of the hot chocolate
my boy made her for X-mas.
I might drag down
the giant bag of tortilla chips.
And E’s scotch. I dodged
my chance to pet Zeke
one last time. I was scared.
I think we won, in the end,
after giving it all away.
But really, what a disgrace. Gently
put: what’s the fucking point?
c3 Crew is a father, substitute teacher and downtime mender. His poetry has appeared in Cincinnati Review, Gettysburg Review, Prairie Schooler, Spillway, and The Sugarhouse. Yes, he has some theories on the evolving utility of baseball on the radio throughout his life, thank you for asking. www.c3crew.com