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Best American Poetry 2017 Page 12

& wanted that to be forever—

  boy after boy after boy after boy

  pulling me down into the dirt.

  from Prairie Schooner

  MAGGIE SMITH

  * * *

  Good Bones

  Life is short, though I keep this from my children.

  Life is short, and I’ve shortened mine

  in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways,

  a thousand deliciously ill-advised ways

  I’ll keep from my children. The world is at least

  fifty percent terrible, and that’s a conservative

  estimate, though I keep this from my children.

  For every bird there is a stone thrown at a bird.

  For every loved child, a child broken, bagged,

  sunk in a lake. Life is short and the world

  is at least half terrible, and for every kind

  stranger, there is one who would break you,

  though I keep this from my children. I am trying

  to sell them the world. Any decent realtor,

  walking you through a real shithole, chirps on

  about good bones: This place could be beautiful,

  right? You could make this place beautiful.

  from Waxwing

  R. T. SMITH

  * * *

  Maricón

  i.m. Emile Griffith (1938–2013), Benny “Kid” Peret (1937–1962)

  And a man who has found prowess in boxing, grant him favor and joy. . . .

  —Pindar

  1.

  “Whoever controls the breathing in the ring

  controls the fight,” my father says. Smell of sweat,

  Vaseline and bleach, sting of ammonia. “The art

  of self-defense is crucial.” The gym is damp

  and the speed bag singing his beliefs. Elsewhere,

  a husky boy from the Virgin Islands quietly

  designs hats in a Bronx shop, his chest bare

  as he hefts storeroom cartons. His boss says,

  “Boy’s got a boxer’s body,” and that begins it.

  Emile is bewildered, with no desire for the sweet

  science of footwork and fist, no assassin’s

  eye. When a backyard bully named Jeffrey

  lures me to his ring of jeering rednecks,

  I clear a path with my ball bat, rush home

  to mother, because I’m skinny, afraid. Later,

  seeing me teary on the mat at a Scout outing

  and pawing feebly at Jimmy Kizner, my father

  resolves to plunge me into the discipline.

  “To win, you control the breathing,” he insists.

  Morning roadwork, shadowboxing, mitts.

  On his bike, the old man swears as I sweat,

  “Your target’s never where his goddamn head

  is, but where it’s going next.” Willowy, skittish,

  without finesse, I never overcome my fear.

  Griffith is a better fit—welterweight, bobcat

  quick, graceful as ballet. Coach Gil Clancy

  taunts him: “Don’t you get that matador strut.”

  Deft and canny through the fifties, his gold tooth

  gleaming and bombshell blondes clenching

  his biceps at ringside, the shutterbug’s flash

  catching the velvet dandy in action,

  pearls on his cuffs, satin cravat. Dark mouse

  on my brow, I bus back across town

  from the gym to mother’s tears,

  tonic and gin, a dead cigarette. “My other

  half ought to know better,” she spits.

  He travels, sleuthing out insurance fraud,

  arson while slick-dealing firehouse

  poker. She twists her opal ring, exhales

  blue breath. I don’t want to be prissy,

  hope to show I’ve got moxie, like a pro,

  like that March night when ring pundits

  all agree: Peret opened inspired.

  2.

  Whoever controls the breathing. . . .

  Jab and tuck, shoot the right high, hook

  to the ribs, drive him to the turnbuckle,

  the ropes, the canvas. Griffith has to be

  schooled in fury: “It’s red sport, boy,”

  and rumor has it the insiders suspect

  he’s keeping a secret, the private life

  of linen suits, the pink Lincoln crucial

  to his macho disguise. Still, no one

  will say “pansy.” Control the breathing,

  control a rival’s will and snuff his soul.

  “Wind and feet win it. You have to show

  an iron intent”: in the garage my father

  pops me. “Love taps,” he says. “You’ve

  got to learn to shrug it off. Forget thinking.

  Make me miss, slugger. Everybody

  has a plan, but it’s gone to smoke soon

  as you get hit. Duck now. Control your

  breath, counterpunch, get mad. Murder

  me, creampuff. Make me suffer.” Years

  later, his career over, Emile jokes,

  “I like girls and men pretty much equal.

  You reckon that make me bilingual?”

  He’d known Peret since boyhood, but never

  heard those venomed syllables: maricón.

  I hammered into the heavy bag mummied

  in duct tape, pounded that son of a bitch.

  “Punish the sap. Maul him up. Make

  him miss.” Still, my father’s snarl. . . .

  I skip the rope as it hums, side step,

  hop and cross-over, wrists whipping,

  weaving, sparring my shadow—left, left

  right uppercut. At the weigh-in Peret

  keeps whispering what Griffith can’t

  bear to catch. He guesses the word’s

  out and starts lurching and whirling,

  breathless, shamed. Kid has crossed

  the line. Maricón, maricón, slur worse

  than tu mamá—“You faggot!” Mild Emile

  bides his time. It’s sixty-two, my bouts all

  history, scuffed gloves and lace-up boots

  in a footlocker . . . one local trophy—runner-up.

  3.

  March 24, Saturday night: Gillette’s parrot

  cawks about razors—“Feel sharp, be sharp.”

  The male world seethes: Muriel cigars,

  Edie Adams’s racy ringside purr: “Why

  don’t you pick one up and smoke it

  sometime?” Her sexy sigh and vixen eyes.

  The Garden’s a riot of hazed bloodlust,

  our Philco’s volume high. Mother

  flips Life in the kitchen with her

  sisters, filter tips, a gray kitten. Ruby

  Goldstein scolds: “No head butts, boys,

  no low blows or rabbits. Protect

  yourself, break clean.” The pair already

  glisten, sponged wet for combat,

  breathing easy, both believing, mouth

  guards pouting their lips, as if to kiss

  and make nice. All a question of mettle

  and skill. No one present thinks, “Death.”

  Bell after bell, circling, sizing up, an even

  match for the gaudy belt, the world

  sport-smitten, trance-tense, breathless.

  A clinic: dole-it-out and roll-with-punches,

  clenches, weave, dance, until Emile

  finds his moment: no one later can say

  how the energy shifts. Rationed breath,

  second wind, willpower, a dark gift.

  Revived, Emile goes ballistic in the twelfth.

  Benny is rubber-kneed, reeling, Emile a man

  on fire, windmilling such fury the analysts

  go quiet. Some will later say it was only

  chance; a few, that a word kept him angry

  and whipping in frenzy, making history—

  sixteen blows in eight
seconds. Others

  count it different, but Benny the Kid was

  Cuban: “Them Castro boys would possum,”

  is the common wisdom, while Griffith’s

  one rumored weakness is “can’t finish.”

  4.

  Sugar Ray claimed Emile was frantic to lay

  the rumor in its grave, sew every smirk

  shut. I never skipped or bobbed fast enough,

  but could hit quick for a white boy—gut

  punch, cross, straight shot to the kisser,

  a southpaw. I got whipped over and over.

  Why did nobody throw in the towel?

  Crowd-crazed, Griffith was a tornado,

  a blur, oblivious. “I just kept hitting,”

  he’d tell a ringside guru still sporting

  his blood-spattered tux. “Kid, he didn’t

  gone down. I kept hitting.” Even after,

  the specialists said, “a fighter, a soldier,

  he’ll recover.” My father hit the OFF

  knob, declaring, “That boy won’t fight

  again. Neither of them. Animals.” For ten

  days, Emile paced and prayed. The hacks

  wrote, “Benny is a warrior.” The coma

  ended in a wake and blame—referee,

  Emile, even the corner crew who never

  lofted the rolled towel into the melee

  to ask for mercy. Was it two full years

  afterwards with no prizefights on TV?

  For decades I never heard the story

  behind that word. Years later, leaving

  a dance bar called Hombre, Griffith was

  ambushed by a dozen and barely breathing

  when the siren arrived. A bystander said

  they taunted him with: “Maricón.

  Rise up, boy, show us how it’s done

  back there in the nigger islands.”

  5.

  Emile had a silk voice, shy eyes, a smile

  to lure songbirds from their perches.

  He danced with every step he took.

  Kid’s weeping mother slapped him

  in the hospital lobby, spat the word

  in his eyes—maricón. In his sleep

  he saw Benny perdito, bleeding from

  every mirror and never unleashed again

  that stormy combination. History

  has nearly erased his name like cheroot

  smoke and Edie, Gene Fulmer, Dick Tiger,

  Hurricane and Archer. It surely lurks for

  everyone, a burning word, forbidden, worse

  than split eyelids, bruised kidneys. Is it

  yearning for mercy that drives us to misery?

  In a world of desperate skirmish and work,

  the teardrop bag still hangs in my attic,

  and I will not whip it. Does that win me

  a measure of grace? My old man was

  nearly right: to beat fear I have to feed anger,

  I pray there’s some better purpose for fury

  than knocking another man into the dark.

  from Prairie Schooner

  A. E. STALLINGS

  * * *

  Shattered

  Another smashed glass,

  wrong end of a gauche gesture

  towards a cliff—compass-

  rose of mis-direc-

  tions, scattered to the twelve winds,

  the wine-dark sea wreck.

  Wholeness won’t stay put.

  Why these sweeping conclusions?

  Always you’re barefoot,

  nude-soled in a room

  fanged with recriminations,

  leaning on a broom.

  How can you know what’s

  missing, unless you puzzle

  all the shards? What cuts

  is what’s overlooked,

  the sliver of the unseen,

  faceted, edged, hooked,

  unremarked atom

  of remorse broadcast across

  lame linoleum.

  Archaeologist

  of the just-made mistake, sift

  smithereens of schist

  for the unhidden

  right-in-plain-sight needling

  mote in the midden.

  Fragments, say your feet,

  make the shivered, shimmering

  brokenness complete.

  from Harvard Review

  PAMELA SUTTON

  * * *

  Afraid to Pray

  Dear God I’m afraid if I pray for my daughter’s safety you’ll blithely

  allow her to get raped or abducted or crash on a highway

  on a perfect summer day. Forget I mentioned my daughter. What daughter?

  I remember how Anne Frank believed in the goodness of mankind.

  I wonder how she felt the moment her diary was knocked from her hands

  because that’s how I’m feeling these days: like Job with post-traumatic

  stress disorder. Don’t worry, God, I know you exist; but I’m having some

  serious trust issues. Maybe it began with that nightmare about my

  mother shoving my grandmother into a swift-running river.

  I jumped in to save her, and I saved her all right, but O the branches

  and Kentucky mud stuck in our hair and mouths—the disbelief

  in her eyes—and me having to tell her the truth.

  Dear God if you made us in your likeness because you were

  lonely then uh-oh. I’m so tired of Nazis marching to the rhythm of my

     prayers.

  I prayed that the love of my life would survive his cancer then he died on my

     birthday.

  And for thirty years I prayed my ex-husband would survive his insanity, but

     he

  finally blew his brains out. I know there’s a heaven because

  I walked along a tightrope of Atlantic foam after Joel died and

  a rainbow lassoed the sun. The sky was timorous and thin

  as an eardrum and I knew if I pushed with all of my rage

  that the sky would burst and we would touch hands one last time.

  I’m so tired of praying and getting punched in the gut. I prayed that

  my parents would not sell my sister’s black Morgan horse with the star

  on its forehead, but they sold it all right and now she’s afraid to love her own

     children.

  I prayed that my parents would not sell the hand-built log cabin on the

  Indian reservation, but when they knew they could die without selling it,

     they sold

  it all right and the new owners bulldozed it down along with everything in it

  including a Bible my mother had placed just so. And they chopped down the

     forest

  and threw my canoe in a dumpster. Now all I do is scour real estate ads for

     log cabins

  on the Indian reservation. I’ve found a few places but they’re just not the

     same. Still,

  I’d like to move back to the northwoods and live in a cabin and pray to the

     lake

  and the woods and the wolves. Like God the wolves would not answer my

     prayers,

  but unlike God, by God they would listen for once and look me straight in

     the eye.

  from Prairie Schooner

  CHASE TWICHELL

  * * *

  Sad Song

  It’s ridiculous, at my age,

  to have to pull the car onto the shoulder

  because Bob Dylan and Johnny Cash

  are singing “Girl from the North Country,”

  taking turns remembering not one girl,

  but each of their girls, one and then the other,

  a duet that forces tears from my eyes

  so that I have to pull off the road and weep.

  Ridiculous! My sadn
ess is fifty years old!

  It travels into sorrow and gets lost there.

  Not because it calls up first love, though it does,

  or first loss of love, though both

  are shawls it wears to hide its wound,

  a wound to the girl of which

  all men sing, the girl split open,

  the sluice through which all of childhood pours,

  carrying her out of one country

  into another, in which she grows up

  wearing a necklace of stones,

  one for each girl not her,

  though they all live together here

  in the North Country, where the winds

  hit heavy on the borderline.

  from Salmagundi

  JAMES VALVIS

  * * *

  Something

  The minute the doctor says colon cancer

  you hardly hear anything else.

  He says other things, something

  about something. Tests need to be done,

  but with the symptoms and family something,

  excess weight, something about smoking,

  all of that together means something something

  something something, his voice a dumb hum

  like the sound of surf you know must be pounding,

  but the glass window that has dropped down

  between you allows only a muffled hiss

  like something something. He writes a prescription

  for something, which might be needed, he admits.

  He hands you something, says something, says goodbye,

  and you say something. In the car your wife says

  something something and something about dinner,

  about needing to eat, and the doctor wanting tests

  doesn’t mean anything, nothing, and something

  something something about not borrowing trouble

  or something. You pull into a restaurant

  where you do not eat but sit watching her

  eat something, two plates of something,

  blurry in an afternoon sun thick as ketchup,

  as you drink a glass of something-cola

  and try to recall what the doctor said

  about something he said was important,

  a grave matter of something or something else.

  from The Sun