Yet another poem. |
Long black cars Men in tuxedos carrying, mournfully, The body of Ms. Reyna Weathers Born sometime in March 24 years ago exactly. Died: 11:36 pm, December 1st of a gunshot to the head, Self-inflicted. Violent? I know. The best friend is dressed in a long black gown Dressing down her features. Her tears smear her eyeliner, mascara, Dripped all in trails on her cheeks. An older woman, the mother. She faces more nightmares, A look in those creased blue eyes, She hasn't slept since that telephone call, Since that glance upon the open coffin, agreeing upon the identity Of that pale skinned body she had birthed and held and called her baby For all these years. The father has a gray beard, Not a good look for this normally clean-shaven man But who has time to shave When their daughter is dead, Your wife is always crying, And you're caught in the mayhem? Lastly, the fiancé, opposite the father, Also bearing the body of the woman he loved. Anger engulfs him more than sadness, 'She said she loved me, she said she loved me, My lover wouldn't leave me, She loved me more than the world itself But it turns out that wasn't very much.' Each swollen-eyed body, seated at a rosewood bench politely A funeral is commonplace in a church like this More beautiful than spiritually acceptable With mosaic glass windows stained yellow, red, blue, Some still shot out from those punk kids back in '84 This place has got history And for a moment As the mother kisses her baby goodbye And the father lets a tear roll from his eye The serenity is overwhelming. There are people in this room who haven't spoken for years Because of miles and forgotten disagreements, All gathered in this room, united under one thought, Weeping together, loving together, Embracing one another and holding on for dear life, Because that's all we really have, isn't it? |