March 26, 2013

William Walsh

THE OLD ME

Tuesday there was a knock on the front door
that broke up my marriage with the mattress.

I felt compelled to answer
and there I was standing on the other side
of the door
through expensive cut glass
but thirty years younger.

Stepping outside to welcome
my 20/20 vision back where it belonged,
the younger me
threw a pie in my old face
then ran down the street
hooting and hollering
shedding articles
of clothing
until all I saw
was a firm
naked butt of a guy
I hardly remember.

He was much faster
but still, I ran after him
with chunks of pie falling
off my face (at least he remembered
peach) and I yelled out to him, “Wait!
There’s so much I need to tell you
about what to expect, especially
that girl from New Mexico.”

But he did not stop
and I don’t think he was listening.

Down the street
there was a beautiful young girl
running naked toward him,
her light brown hair
flowing everywhere.
And running behind her, an old bag
of a woman I slightly recognized.

The younger me drove off
with the younger her
in a yellow Volkswagen
convertible, Night Ranger
blaring out “Sister Christian”
from a pair of new speakers.

“Take me
with you,” I yelled.

Her hand gripped the knob
of the stick shift
and as he clutched,
she shifted gears
for him in perfect
automotive harmony.

They were laughing
—not at me—
but for the future.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

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March 19, 2013

Vance Voyles

AFTER

Kitchen tables,
rumpled Kleenex,
heavy questions loom.
Girlfriends murmur,
softly cutting,
from the other room.

The boy was purple
paisley buttons,
titanium leather band.
A fragrant fellow.
Nervous laughter.
Did things get out of hand?

Drinks were steady.
Dinner raw.
The fish.
The rice.
The soy.
He complimented.
Understood you.
This lovely, lovely boy.

You let him in.
You silly girl.
Your sisters call you ho.
They never ask.
They just accuse.
Did you tell him no?

Detective now
is softly speaking.
Do not veer off course.
Just another one
intruding.
All they know
is force.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

__________

Vance Voyles (Police Officer): “Six years ago, I was working a homicide where a girl was strangled and dumped by the side of a retention pond in Central Florida. As I approached her, I saw what looked like purple flowers stuck to her side. Upon closer inspections, the flowers turned out to be formations of blue-bottle flies foraging for dead skin cells. Official reports don’t allow for contemplations on scavenger insects. I have been writing creatively about moments like these for the past ten years. I was doing it to keep my own perspective. I am finally sending some of these things out in an attempt to change yours.”

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March 3, 2013

G. Emil Reutter

SHOULDERS

for Moose

it was a decade ago, he was my friend
and I his. lives in shambles we traveled
from bar to bar drinking shots and pints
always surrounded by friends and girls
as the nights traveled into morning. As
our cash flow depleted so did the friends
and girls. We left as we came, alone,
stumbled to the nearest diner.

it was a decade ago, he was my friend
and I his. the monkey climbed on his
back as loneliness hunkered down on
my shoulders. both in a place never
anticipated or craved. I have only
seen him twice as the loneliness lifted
from my shoulders I am hopeful he has
shoved the monkey off his back.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

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February 26, 2013

John J. Powers

PROOF OF SERVICE

No
inkling.
A subtle
shift in the
substratum.
The knock
unannounced,
rolled-up petition
of dissolution
in the doorjamb.
And now your
whole happy
has-been life
is sliding,
tearing free,
inexorably,
like
sunny
California
into
the
sea.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

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February 23, 2013

David S. Pointer

HOOVERITES AND JARHEAD MPS

The FBI agents
came from Glynco
to train with us at
Marine Corps Logistics
Base, Albany, Georgia
conducting building
searches and various
law enforcement training
techniques and scenarios
while offering the Marines
a tongue lashing letting
them know they would be
losing every training task,
but those kids could really
climb rope-n-rappel into
Hell faster than Satan, and
they didn’t have any
superior attitudes weighing
them down like the high
bureau officers on loan

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

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February 21, 2013

Dean Olson

YELLOW SAILBOAT

Channel Obstruction

She is a pretty girl, swinging
gracefully in the gentle tide
and light puffs of winter,
sun catching her bright
yellow and throwing it all
around the harbor.

The shipboard computer tells
her secrets: age, pedigree,
where she lives, the name
of her owner; but not why
he dropped here to swing
with the impulsive wind of winter.

She is close to the channel.
We can leave her alone in an
easterly or southwesterly,
which is most of it this time
of year, but if the wind veers
west, she will be in trouble.

I imagine her owner as
a ne’er-do-well with a scruffy
beard; his unwashed hair and body
sleeping it off on the beach
with another woman. It’s not
the first time he left her alone

like this, showing her age but still
very pretty, drifting at the edge
of a busy channel. You are too good
for him! We will keep near you;
take you to a new home
when the wind veers, as it will.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

___________

Dean Olson (Harbor Patrol Officer): “I noticed the yellow sailboat on our first patrol. The wind was picking up and if it veered she was anchored near enough to swing into the channel. I ran the boat but came up with no current phone number. Each time we patrolled the area my affection for her grew and I became more peeved with her lubberly owner. I wanted the wind to shift, giving me cause to take her alongside, coddle her. The wind failed me, so I wrote this poem to remember her.”

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February 7, 2013

Suzanne Kessler

MERCY

darkens the girl
in the green bag.
Mercy the child,
beautiful and deep.
Feed her dirt
with a copper spoon,
paint three finger holes—
a purple dolphin
in her small room.
Touch her curving leg.
Mercy the child,
the noose,
the chair, the table,
the empty space
she was.
Better dead
or blind
or deeply placed
than merciful.
Drive mercy
into bird throats,
tree hands,
the eyes of grasses.
Walk away.
Leave mercy
to the shovels
and fools.

from Rattle #37, Summer 2012
Tribute to Law Enforcement Poets

__________

Suzanne Kessler (Police Officer): “I have always had a passion for writing and literature. As a small girl I was an avid reader and writer. Writing poetry has filtered in and out of my entire life. I wrote heavily in college and always shared my love of literature with my children (as an interesting aside: my daughter is a poet and my son a police officer). I made my way into law enforcement through a college required internship. I had never aspired to be in law enforcement, but fell into it while in school. I truly love my job, but still can’t resist my urge to write poetry.”

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