Poetry |

“Lapsed Priest”

Lapsed Priest

 

Today, as a gift,

I gave my mother a book

on angels.

That was a mistake.

We sat there

looking at the wings in the paintings.

I don’t know,

maybe she was reading

not just politely

waiting out the pain

of what she wouldn’t ask

me, knowing I had no answer.

Not sneeringly;

answers just stopped

interesting me. Soon enough

we’d moved on to the chicken Kiev,

then cigarettes over the sink.

I love to watch her smoke.

Glorious and ashamed.

She can look at me and know

this is one place

she has failed.

Still, alone, sixty-three,

a thick and greasy pink,

I remain,

thinking about Herod killing babies

and the like

as I say goodnight

and go out into the sizzling mix

of sleet and rain

where, again, I find

bits of toilet paper

draped across her roses.

I know the kid who did it.

Little shit.

Even his confessions

were performances of piety.

He thinks life is what you get away with.

Who am I to disabuse him?

I go home and fall asleep

in front of the TV,

wake up in air so blue and dry

I can taste the way

I’m bleeding from the nose.

Life has never been so easy.

Contributor
Charlie Clark

Charlie Clark studied poetry at the University of Maryland. His work has appeared in The New England Review, Pleiades, Ploughshares, Smartish Pace, Threepenny Review, West Branch, and other journals. A 2019 NEA fellow and recipient of scholarships to the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, he is the author of The Newest Employee of the Museum of Ruin (Four Way Books, 2020). He lives in Austin, TX.

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