Sunday, January 3, 2016

For Pete's Sake

He pedaled up
rapped loudly on my hermit cell door
interrupting a frantic turn to chalk and key boards
facing a Sunday morning deadline—well into Saturday evening.

I turned him away
angry for the interruption
I didn’t even know he’d returned,
for Pete’s sake!

He’d gone to Africa to save his marriage—
          returned with a new ring, tied to a woman he barely knew

Nature
Nature he loved, fought so hard for, robbing him of volition
                    Stealing words, memory, function
Frontotemporal dementia
          Devil incarnate
                   for Pete’s sake.

Still, he played me for the fool—more times than I’ll tell you
just wanted to listen to “this Irish band”
                    stepped uninvited on stage
                    hoisted the bodhrán
                    played,
played as if life depended on it
                    because it does
                             for Pete’s sake.

 Weeks we ate fish and chips
          until I couldn’t eat them any more
          watched sports—
                   cheering Aby Wambaugh on
          he played, I listened
                   I danced
                             for Pete’s sake.

He was taken North
          I moved farther still
                   cell door bust open
                   dancing shoes at the ready
                    “bursting Joy’s grape”
                              for Pete’s sake.

Renée Zenaida, 1/3/16