if I never visit again,
I will still hold the bottle in two hands
as it is tugged by an orphan calf we called Annie.
My legs will finally be pulled clean through
the holes in the cast iron chairs --
we aren't the kind to buy cushions for porch furniture,
we are the type to leave grandma's salt and pepper shaker collection
in a corner in the garage wall until a grandson comes by,
only then to pretend it is precious and snatch it from his hands
and try to peel off 50 cent and 25 cent stickers
from a garage sale twenty years ago.
you say you will grow a garden. I have only seen it once.
You say this is an apple tree, but the apples have already been eaten.
I cannot place him on the swing that was cut down from the triple tree
outside the breakfast room window,
but I can walk him down the slide
someone gone once used to shoot firewood down into the basement
where someone else once turned on Achy Breaky Heart
and jumped on an unclaimed bed under a net of balloons
even though it was a quarter my house, I just wondered
when will the balloons drop, and will I be there for it?
When the will unfolds in an office somewhere,
the bottle and the swing,
the garage and the balloons and the garden,
all of grandpa and grandma and the cousins
will be lorded above my head one last time
on the way to the neighbor girls.
Maybe she will let me keep a pair of shakers
but only if they are wooden, not the kind that could break.
