Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 3

To Gretchen, My Love, My Brown Chevy Chevette

When first we met, you were brand new with beige seats and a hatchback to fit all my stuff. The 8-track cassette deck I placed on your console, too expensive from the dealership, made us jump. You were my sports econo car slim enough to fit in small spaces, affordable, devoted, perfect for the daily commute to college. Who knew we would move to Syracuse?

I transferred in my second year and you graduated to a real roadster. The hills were long and steep, the snow and ice unmanageable but we weathered through. You liked the chains I put on your tires, they made you look tough, and when your starter was stubborn my friend Billy pushed us up the highest hill, racing down forcing air into your chambers, yanking the clutch as you came roaring back to life while I screamed with delight. Billy said you were a good car. We believed him.

Later, you and I moved to different states, got two speeding tickets, but no points, maybe that wasn’t a thing back then, and after I finished school we drove cross-country to Colorado, back-and-forth to Maryland back-and-forth to DC, wherever the wind would carry us. We were a pair of no-frills adventurers. We even made believe you were a stick shift, not a just lowly automatic, making vroom vroom sounds.

When we drove back to NYC after picking up my guy in Syracuse, someone broke into you and stole everything except the 8-track and left a thank you note. All my belongings gone but at least they left you. Your untimely demise came two years later. An unexpected joyride left you at the bottom of the Hudson, sunk, gasless, probably not good enough for parts. Broke my heart. The 8-track buried with you along with all my good tools.

Published in Three Tables; Laura Boss Class Chapbook/Anthology, 2019.

Them Kids

They had names like Joey, Josephina, Angela,

Tina, Tony, and Gino, names ending in vowels.

Mine ended in a vowel too, the wrong kind,

not an A, O, Y but an I. My best friend,

Karen didn’t have a vowel at the end of her name.

We sat together behind St. Rocco’s in deep, dark

shadows along the basketball court and watched

boys shoot baskets in moonlight

 

girls not allowed, unless the boys weren’t there.

Friends, enemies, lovers, smoked cigarettes, joints,

passed around dark brown liquor, winced as fire

slinked down our throats. Josephine would steal

homemade wine to share, hidden under her shirt.

Tony got beaten for being out, Angie’s drunken

father came looking for his kid, booming

her name as he barreled down the street.

We’d scatter into bushes, crawl behind cars

and when they were gone, the coast clear

we howled at the moon, begging forgiveness

from god for all the sins we were about to commit.

Tuna on Toast

When I open a can of tuna, the sound and smell

triggers the cats to dash into the kitchen

thinking it is for them. Well, that’s not good.

The can, now upside down in a white bowl, the familiar

click of the spoon on dish makes them cry louder.

I add non-mayo, mayo into the bowl, smash it,

drop a tablespoon onto rye toast, it looks unappetizing.

I am bored with the taste, eat it anyway,

sometimes without bread, worry about mercury content

convince myself that the food is health.

It does not resemble tuna steaks purchased

at the fish counter, this impoverished

processed cousin is the penultimate emergency lunch

mom would set out along with egg salad,

lettuce, tomato, bread and coffee.  Lunch served.

At New York diners I order tuna on rye toast.

The waiter yells, tuna whiskey down,

My Aunt Jean mixes chopped celery and onions,

shocked by combinations of flavors

It’s what your uncle likes, she says proudly.

My family teach me how to make proper

tuna ala panino al tonno on ciabatta

tossed with parsley, olive oil, garlic, capers,

lemon, salt and pepper that tickles my appetite

topped  with sliced boiled eggs and green olives.

Zesty, savory, sensazionale flavors blend on the tongue

but like mi famiglia, I revert to the Italiano-Americano

tuna with mayo on toast. Twice I buy an expensive

tonno sott’olio, delizioso except tuna

is supposed to be easy and cheap.

The cats continue to yell. I have to give them a snack

to eat in peace. I promise to treat myself

to real tonno, experiment one more time. 

Aggiungi sapore alla vita

Witness to a Passing

The bells ring throughout the campus, the nuns

In sync and all at once gather, lament

Her passing, in step from their homes solemn

Unhurried movements, slowed, measured, patient

These women know this march’s final journey

On a sun-lit morning, come to attend

Assist as medics carry the body

Women in nun’s garb and not, pray to send

Her soul onto a holy, well-known place

The ambulance lights swirl without sound

Each of their movements filled with beauty and grace

And with prayer chant, sing, intone and surround

          Send with love, one stop from this existence

           Into heaven filled with joy and silence.

© Patricia-Carragon-: Looking for Bargains

The Beginning of a Love Story

That first time there is a tangled

comprehensible look between them.

Her cheeks, not rosy, the color of faded

dead leaves, the rush of blood

escaping her complexion

as she meets him, her other half

he, in blue jeans and faded t-shirt.

Not what she expected.

He wants to be smooth

instead stumbles on words

uncool and real as he meets her, his soul mate

surprisingly euphoric.

She invites him to a party, he accepts.

Not what he expected.

He, in his button-down shirt,

untucked, wanders

asks for directions from a stranger and

walks off promptly in the wrong direction.

She repeatedly checks the ringer

to see if it works and stations herself

near the door to see if he has arrived.

He, realizing his mistake

rights himself and wonders

if a camel can travel thirty miles a day

and carry three hundred pounds without

taking a break does he have the stamina

to find her house without stopping?

He is thinking of her, his heart beats faster

She gets that peculiar itchiness on her upper lip

when she gets nervous

grabs a beer out of the fridge

and presses the cool glass against her mouth.

 

The doorbell rings, her roommate answers

they see each other greet and stutter.

A strange desire has taken the place

Already worried they will lose this

they cocoon in her space.

just the two of them, the sound of people

lessens and music heightens

 as they stand together

 in the crowded living room.

And as long as these moments last

on a grand cosmological scale

it is merely a blip in time

an indescribable blip

that could carry them a lifetime.

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