John McKernan
Way
Midnight
John McKernan recently retired after teaching ten million years at Marshall University He lives – mostly – in West Virginia where he edits ABZ Press His poems have been published quite literally everywhere from The Atlantic Monthly to Zuzu’s Petals. His most recent book is a selected poems Resurrection of the Dust
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Way
Every street in Chicago has zeros or O’s in addresses in every block   I feel right at home here with the slug-dented rusting stop signs above the overflowing wire mesh trash barrels   Blowing snow crusting my VW   Waiting for the Triple-A Road Service   I haven’t slept since 27 hours ago in Omaha but there’s still a tiny bit of me left listening to Dylan’s Christian album tumbling down from that second story window   He knew how to whisper a growl
When I lean back with eyes closed a zigzag of pain limps across the back of my neck   I got a haircut last week at the Barber College and the girl was gorgeous with chewing gum and the kind of perfume you would buy   She used a trimmer at the wrong angle to block my neck and ended up tattooing me   It stung   A line of red dots   Probably infected   Hurts when I touch it
I don’t want to start thinking about you again   But here you are in my skull – probably in disguise – with some of your favorite music   You’re whispering too now We’re having sex right here in Chicago but it’s Spring Break   Years ago   You never screamed but I always sensed you wanted to   Twelve years of Catholic nuns   Silence   A prayerful attitude   Your silence was always able to coax the ghost me out of hiding   Part of you would come out of hiding too Just before you would come you would squeeze your eyes so tight together a tiny drop of moisture would gather in either corner of your right eye It looked just like a tiny tear   I believe one of us was saying   "This feels perfect   This is what I want"   Rolling clouds   The valves of the throat   Blood
Wall of night   Clank-slug of tire chains   Lottery ticket of white light & amber light   I like it when the battery cables spark and a hint of greasy ozone punctuates the sleepy air   Not exactly inside the brain but not under the icy hood either   I’d hate to have to work this time of night in this kind of neighborhood   But there’s always the music and he probably has a tire iron and a pistol in his tool kit
Midnight
Imaginary friends are best although they don’t know what shelf to find the cat food on or how much or the code for the security alarm
Some of our friends return as enemies   They keep repeating   “Listen   I’m not going to say anything   I wasn’t saying anything   Do you know who your husband has been seeing?   Aren’t you worried about your daughter?   About making the world smaller?”
You keep asking me   Why don’t you want to go to Moscow   To New York   To the family reunion   To Maui or Molakai   Why won’t you even look at the pictures?   Do you think the world is only a new venue for terrorists wearing their skull shawls?
Here’s how I remember that day   It was the day after I got the flu shot at the walk-in clinic and my upper arm was black & blue & yellow & green and in the shape of a closed fist   Hard to imagine a single needle doing that much color in one-tenth of a second
That day began rosy with three clouds at sunrise   Something like a soft green wind lifted twilight into our eyes   Later   Much later   You held the plate over the cedar patio the way priests used to give communion and then you dropped it   Something inaudible vanished   Why would you want to make a plate smaller?   I am willing to compare notes
I hate your cell phone   Your voice sounds like the BFI truck behind the pool on Thursday mornings   I’d tell you to get out of the car but I guess some unknowable language is swirling around the Rent-a-Truck in front of you just ready to be hijacked   Even in person it is still an hour before sunrise
Yes   I will close that bank account   Although I have always enjoyed the numbers on the monthly statements   Rhyming and obscene and in certain slants of light and wind — Exciting
John McKernan recently retired after teaching ten million years at Marshall University He lives – mostly – in West Virginia where he edits ABZ Press His poems have been published quite literally everywhere from The Atlantic Monthly to Zuzu’s Petals. His most recent book is a selected poems Resurrection of the Dust
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