April Poetry: Take the Challenge and Get Your Poem Published


Saucy and Bubba by Darcy Pattison
ReadSample-Purple


SLEEPING WITH FOXES

by Darcy Pattison c. 2003 All Rights Reserved


My favorite source of idle talk is from the soccer moms,


weekends, every Saturday.


This is how I go about gathering tidbits:


I set up my collapsible chair near the sideline and sit.


Then, I look through my collection of ears,


choose a robust pair, put them on and lean in close,


as if every word is pure gold and my existence consisted of only


rumor, innuendo, weird stories.


Then I take out my tongue and hold it in my lap.


I do this so that what I hear will be pure,


completely chaste,


uncontaminated by the chatterings of my voice.


One mother tells about her miniature Doberman,


how he jumped onto her bed


in a frenzy, like a mad yellow-jacket.


He didn’t stop until she got up.


She followed him to the living room,


unaware that bizarre things were taking place.


She flipped on the light and looked around


at the fireplace, the couch, the rug.


She had to rub her eyes: the neighbor’s cat


had come through the doggie door and sat on her favorite chair.


In between the cheers for the forward’s great header


and the keeper’s save, another soccer mom says,


That’s nothing, listen to this.


My ears glow red with joy.


I should mention, she says, that I like to watch


TV’s Strangest Home Videos.


I find it hard to ignore the temptation,


the true America.


The program shows extraordinary stories,


like the one about a boy who tells his parents


he sleeps with foxes. They don’t believe it.


The boy is sincerity itself: He insists that he sleeps


with a red fox every night.


After a spell, the parents decide to set up video cameras.


Then, they watch the boring tape until,


just at midnight, at the stroke of midnight,


they see a sly red fox come in the doggie door,


eat the dog food, trot down the hallway,


and jump onto the boy’s bed.


It curls itself around the boy’s head.


The horror-struck parents watch the pair sleep.


When the boy stirs lightly a few hours later, the fox leaves


the way it had come.


Afterward, when the keeper has saved his last goal,


the teams line up to slap hands.


I replace my tongue.


I take off my sullied ears and stow my collection


with my collapsible chair. Then I gather up


my soccer son, his soccer ball, his soccer gear,


and speed through the city,


barely making it through every yellow light.


My radio blares––


country or jazz or rock-and-roll, I don’t know––


And I listen to none of it because


all I hear is my voice rehearsing


the tale of a boy who sleeps with a sly red fox.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 01, 2014 03:31
No comments have been added yet.