Poetry Suite by Anna Meister
“Every kiss & Girl
at my down & ruddy face.”
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A Community
garden sits behind the timber & house
recently purchased by my grandparents
with an envelope of cash. Dirt-cheap,
Grandma repeats, pointing at owl eye
signs that read Neighborhood Watch.
The small lot holds quilt plots
of zucchini & okra, whose flowers I pick
to stick behind my ear like a woman
in a painting.
From speakers, funk horns wail & bodies
move with work. Hands trim & pull,
fill buckets to brim for family dinners.
My mother, braid tucked in a cap, whispers
Grow your roots deep! to our marigolds
& pepper plants in the watering can's absence.
To the neighbors, Grandpa is Mr. George.
They shake his hand & say Welcome
to our neighborhood, say You seem alright
for a white guy. Their laughter is oil in a hot pan,
but I hear only the boys
in the street. Boys my age,
but from a different school.
I push seeds deep into dirt for future watermelons
as they loop on bikes with song. Lips puckered
toward my crouching, they make sounds like bats
& scraped glass. Every kiss & Girl
at my down & ruddy face.
Above their heads, knotted
laces - limb of scuffed sneaker - rest
on a pulled-tight power line. Shoes move
a little like a flag in the breeze.
+ + +
Date Cake
I.
Northern California for the last
summer & you don't know it.
You sleep in a cowboy's house
of windows. Lemon trees & poppy
colored koi, hollandaise spooned
over morning's eggs. Your body
long & pale & changing
too slow beneath a purple shirt.
Nipples like quarters,
sore all the time.
II.
Once your brother goes to bed,
Mom & Dad waltz silent
in the yard. You learn how to make cake
from dates. Flour up to your elbows
like fancy gloves. Knife's glide
through medjool meat & walnuts.
Filling mounded over dough rolled
whisper-thin. Sides folded up, rustic.
This cake is really a tart, you know,
even knowing nothing.
III.
A bite rests on your tongue
like communion. The cowboy says,
"Your parents think you're too young
for dates, but I disagree."
Then his knee slapped twice at the joke
he made, rhythm for their dance
beneath avocado hang. Her chin up
at the sky, a laugh devoured by the night
so quick you question
if it happened at all.
+ + +
The Morning Her Brother Dies, She Tells Us
It happened immediately after your father sang
“Swing Low Sweet Chariot.” She tells us
He killed him & quickly covers her mouth.
+ + +
Summer When Small
The air snaps like sparks
in the wide Iowa sky. For now,
we are country
kids. Have dirt-caked faces.
Around the struck tree, we run
like smoke. Eat cabbage
heads like apples. Catch
fireflies & make our hands
into lanterns. We wade
through rows of herbs
with basil fists. Mom keeps
on her knees in the dirt, reaches
past cages & plucks
tomatoes from their fuzzy vines,
her hands a maddened song.
Smell toasted rice & sausage
& Creole seasoning swim
from the open kitchen door,
the place where Dad sings
Marvin Gaye in an off-key falsetto.
Hear his I know a man
ain’t supposed to cry. Watch him
dance with a wooden spoon.
+ + +
Steve’s
The whole house, shades drawn & dusty,
smelled of cigarettes (rain, raisins) & the filtered
ends, wet from his mouth, lived in canning jars
& ashtrays shaped like canoes. Smoke stung
my eyes & licked the cracked walls yellow-brown,
holding a green painted handprint next to a poem
beginning On Father’s Day & the school photos
sent from California, taken in front of a background
of sky & clouds, William in striped shirts
with wrinkled collars, his teeth disappearing
& then coming back. The stacks of tapes I measured
myself against, every Bulls game Jordan ever played.
& the TV on full blast, the Wheel ticking
while my brother & I became Lost at Sea on the waterbed.
In his kitchen, black & white checkerboard floors
curled in the corners like dry leaves & heavy pots hung
from a rack on the ceiling with shiny copper bottoms
like new pennies. Tall glass bowls filled the counter
& beneath wet towels, balls of white dough grew.
Uncle Steve let me punch the risen mounds down.
I stood on his (long numb) legs in the chair.
Years before I wore orange to his funeral,
we stirred vanilla extract into fresh snow
& called it ice cream.
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