• Poems

    Ryan McCarty “Because The News Was Already Saying No Foul Play Before Anybody Thought To Call Trey Reed’s Mom”

    Ryan McCarty

    Because The News Was Already Saying No Foul Play Before Anybody Thought To Call Trey Reed’s Mom

    I don’t usually like to talk to you,
    but America, I can’t live with it. I’m sick
    like the sweat of the trash
    can left lidded up. I’m sick
    of the rotten things under, making
    the stench. I’m sick of knowing it
    might be some bodies. But good
    god, even worse, I can’t take the boldness –
    the bravado it takes to hang folks out to die
    then it’s all just a shrug and a nothing to see
    here, when you know we can’t not look
    because the bloated eyes
    are staring at us. The lids are half
    dropped like the flags after one
    fascist fetches what he’s been selling
    but nothing comes down for us
    except some bad news knocking at the door.
    Dozens and hundreds and thousands of us
    tap out and say no more
    and the knee stays right there. And we say it wasn’t me
    who took the hostages, and the soldier
    and the senator and the donor say but you keep taking
    more and more breaths so here come more bombs.
    And my neighbor is crying
    because she doesn’t know
    where her son’s been taken or if the faces
    under the masks were smiling, but she suspects
    she knows. And another neighbor can’t figure out
    how to carry enough in her two small arms
    while the landlord’s dragging her niece’s bed
    down the driveway and there are books
    with butterflies on them flying down the block
    and the sanitation department’s asking
    for a forwarding address
    to send her a fine for all this litter along the curb.
    And my daughter is watching.
    She keeps getting pamphlets to submit her work
    for the Celebrating Our Differences youth art show
    but she can’t figure out how to draw
    the empty sound of the classroom
    every time a friend see their father’s ghost
    waiting at the door next to me at parent pick up.
    And that’s the difference
    I can’t take anymore, America, you just gotta be fair.
    You gotta kill everyone and be done – me, the other
    teachers, the veterans waiting for mercy
    on the offramp, the customers with stuffed bags
    who round up for kids healthcare, the old men
    ringing bells for change, school kids waving
    off the flies from a grandmother looking
    for a home that’s long gone, construction workers
    staring down mandatory hour reduction still
    filling in the ground with steaming tar that they know
    will never stay in place, the EMT who still considers
    giving mouth to mouth if there’s any hope
    it will bring just one of us gasping
    back to our bodies and a chance to live
    the good life, anyone who’s trying to live
    the good life, just smoke us all – every last singer
    and sharer and gardener and seat giver upper
    on the bus – every last breathing one of us.
    Burn us up and seed the hole opening in the sky overhead.
    Find out how you like living with yourself,
    while we take a break, waiting as the clouds
    go dark over our memory, getting ready to rain
    down on you, then grow up like a billion weeds
    going to seed and you’ll never clear us away.

     

    Ryan McCarty is a writer, teacher, and community do-what-he-can. His writing has been published recently in The Ann Arbor Observer, Coal City Review, Collateral, Dunes Review, Hamilton Stone Review, Left Voice, MQR Online, One Art, and Writers Resist, but it almost always appears first on the bus between home and work.