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10-Toddle

Toddle

You can tell me but I’ll never know

how you felt the moment your son

stood on his own and toddled away

from and then back to you

on the S shaped walk near porch

jalousies and a spruce’s shade

that spilled into the walk he walked

up and down.  Happy, a little sad?

His mouth had sucked your nipple

his first days, then that sunny day

outside the house you rented he

stepped away.  Baby’s first steps.

Your only son, his hair dark like yours

and his two older sisters’.  A time

when, your marriage crumbling,

Jason Tyler followed you past pool

tables and turned a narrow corner.

In a stall in the Ladies you straddled

his lap, faster, harder.  Only he

heard you moan, whimper, climaxing.

Jason, blond like your husband, like

your husband, rode a Harley.  Unlike

you, he came from money, his family

Tyler Electric.  Last time you two spoke

was the A&P.  You put a yellow,

black Chock full o’Nuts tin in your cart,

looked up and there he was, tall in

a long dark coat, long hair straggly,

eyes red, a Sunday morning hangover.

You said, “I’m in nursing school.”  And

he, “That’s great.”  By the time your son

was in the first grade you were single,

a nurse, on your shift the morning

Jason spilled from his Harley on Henley        

Road.  He lay on the macadam lot of

Stargher’s, with its tinted glass, that sold

smoked meats.  A bystander

held his hand, praying as he left her.

Your son Frank recently married.

He’s not ready for children, you said.

I wonder if anyone is ever ready.

Pete Mladinic

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