Bread and a Knife: For Don Laird

Last night I wondered how long the orange-yellow tulips


would last, petals stretched like arms bound to ache,


stamens sturdy but exposed. The call came


just  before dawn, voices soft in the dark.


It’s over, Peter said, and we remembered another morning


with light on his father’s face as he held our baby


in perfect contentment. How he adored her.


Peter talked to his brother and drove to what is now


his mother’s house. We were glad his sister spent


the night there. I mused until my eyes stung, then


recalled the blackened bananas on the counter,


the bread pan I’d set out yesterday, wanting to make


something whole and sweet. I’ll bring bread to Alice


who might eat or stare or leave  like the baseball


a friend brought for her husband to hold in his hands.


The ball is solitary now on a wheeled table, like the belt


I left coiled after washing Don’s last worn shirt and blue jeans.


I don’t yet know who will want the knife looped


through that belt, but someone will open


the blades and find uses as good


as those made by a man who left a garage


filled with rakes, saws, saved nails and wire,


a cloud and cluster of all that he fixed


and cherished and will endure.


tulips


Thank you for all the kind and thoughtful comments here, on facebook, and in emails on my post from three days ago. I’m lucky in my family and lucky in my compassionate friends, too.



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Published on March 18, 2013 14:00
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