Red Dust
I miss not having Jim around.
He taught me how to throw a curve,
and how to hurl myself
into a hook slide.
Inevitably, he began to take half hour baths
and grease his hair. His eyes
dreamy as if he was seeing
a bicycle
on Christmas morning.
Finally he spilled, like his old self,
confessed
to his first kiss.
Any advice? I asked.
“Avoid the nose.”
. . . . . . . .What do you mean?
From then on,
we’d wave at each other.
I’d be coming back
from a baseball game,
Jim would shimmy out the door,
a carnation exploding from his lapel,
and a black bow on.
I’d be in jeans
wearing red dust
from hook slides
into second
base.
by Bob Bradshaw
Editor’s Note: The spare lines and simple narrative belie the complex sense of loss and nostalgia that closes this poem. Dust both sticks and blows away.
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