Balsa Wood
I found ourairplanes today,
father-sonskeletons hidden high on the shelf.
Some are intheir boxes like unspoken words
waiting.
Others are stackedlike half-constructed sentences.
One plane—anAircoupe—banks left,
skinless balsawing lifting the ceiling.
I was eight thefirst time I found it.
Early onemorning
in the center ofthe living room, you left
a box on thefootstool. White with an illustration
of a man in anairplane waving.
I waited for usto finish what I started that day. Waited
for hands tolift more than imagination through the air,
Bernoulli’sprinciple applied to the soul.
The skinlessplane banks left into shadows.
Shadows likepartial memories, shapes
and movementsblurry since we closed your eyes
nine years ago.
What a vomitousrelief,
that daymalignant fingers slipped you away from us
and from yourperson decayed. There is more thanthat day
—thatblood stank dab of glue—which separates
and brings ustogether. Folded in its white box,
this papery skincould have lifted our living and dying
into deeperheights. Watch as I cut it tosize.
Feel it stretcharound us.
Like Rain
I.
In a small busheavy with people,
I find myselflost in a tangle
of a language Ialmost but still don’t understand.
So I listen withmy eyes and the faces around me
tell stories—
a basket besidea green field of small red
peppers,
a courtyard witha black bicycle from the 1950’s, and miles
of road made ofstone bricks,
the footsteps ofgenerations.
I hear thebreath of a hundred
coal burningwinters,
see the gnarledfingers of labor’s life.
Sometimes theyoung stand to let their elders
sit but thedriver never comes to a complete stop
for anyone.
Pressing againstmy arm, a bundle of green vegetables so fresh
a caterpillar isstill busy.
When I was aboy, I pulled half-eaten leaves and
watched as thecaterpillars kept eating.
When I grewbored with the back and forth,
back and forth,
I would tossthem onto an anthill, then watch the frenzy
overcome theants
and soon thecaterpillars.
Boys are likethat somedays.
But standing inthis bus I am not that boy
or the country Iam from or even a foreigner.
I am justanother person trying to get somewhere…
theold man from his field,
the woman to themarket,
the small girlholding her grandfather’s pant leg
—blackhair pigtails, pink jacket—
smiling back atme.
II.
The Japaneseteacher is far
from your 101years (and counting).
Her hair is grey
but straighter
than the lasttime I saw you.
I watch as heraging fingers unzip the pocket
of her purse,reach in, search around inside until emerging
with two smallchocolate bars.
She smiles asshe hands me one, a satisfied motion
in her gesture,as though she knew
I was nowremembering you. The way
your hands wereso exact
when tying a knot.
The way you usedyour middle
andring fingers
to hold then tuck the end through. Your chickens
in their coopsare a favorite memory, the smell
of theirwaiting, beaks probing holes in their caged fate.
I always triedto escape the shade of your umbrella.
Onlya short distance from the bus stop to
your home butlong enough for the boys to laugh.
I guess whenyou’re a boy, an umbrella is only
for the rain.
III.
Four fourtwo. What a number for a Chinesebus.
Seven thousandmiles away and your baggage is still mine.
The first andonly car you bought new—1965 Oldsmobile 4-4-2—
Big, heavy, andfaster than your friend’s Camaro.
When I said Iwanted to restore it, I meant that I wanted us to restore it…
preferablywhile you were still alive. Afterall,
I’m not the onewho left it sitting in the Arizona sun and monsoon rains to die
a slow death ofcancerous rust and neglect.
I tried my bestto finish your backyard.
Your shovel wastoo slow so I used a dump trunk. Many, many, dump trucks.
But of course,as you always warned, the loosely laid dirt was no match for water
and gravity anda half-assed job. The monsoonsturned dirt to mud and the mud slid
down the bank ofyour yard. So I proudly placed adrain pipe,
stout withconcrete! I looked outside duringa fantastic storm and the yard was underwater—
thewhole damn thing looked ready to slide into the wash!
I sloshed my wayto the drain, reached in and pulled up handfuls of sticks
and leaves. The drainpipe groaned at me! It actually made noise…
like the lowhowl of a strong suction, like theyear I felt myself sucked down
drownedmy way through darkpipe lostchurning lost
way back lost memories knowing only nothing
aboutyou thenI then spewed out coughing somewhere someone else
Time Lapse
One day treeswill push the wind
Our eyes willteach the light
and the lightwill see what it shows
One day the grasseswill strangle
the mower Paints will peel
from theircanvas to become life
One day oil inthe fields will curdle
Black soppeddinosaurs will trample cars
The air willbreathe once more
One day thegrass we lay upon will remember
the weight ofus, the curve
of our willsagainst all of Earth
Our distancewill melt into Spring
into streamsthat gurgle and pop
our story intomemory