Poetry |

“Empty Bus”

Empty Bus

for Rose Gorman & The Tuxedo Project

 

I wake with a start

on a bus in a strange town.

 

Among those not riding along,

writers from a prison where

I haven’t returned in months.

 

Maybe they sit tonight

reading to each other

 

around a table in a block room

they can sometimes share.

I owe them.

 

*

 

I recover Bishop’s poems

from under the seat, also

a book with a map on the cover.

 

Some day, an auto worker

promised a young poet

 

in long-ago Detroit, Some day

the world is ours. Maybe Levine

guessed the dream’s cost —

 

Mandela on Robben Island,

King in Memphis. Who

can afford to hope? My dad

 

never heard the dog sigh

in sleep without the gut-twitch

 

of shells and a chatter of guns.

I haul my own paternal dreams.

 

*

 

What howls now — a scouring

wind. Sometimes a dead hush.

 

The driver calls out streets

and I study the route. My bus

is missing Wilfredo Monje,

 

who taught me Spanish names

for tools while I mixed mortar

 

and he laid block for a school

outside San Pedro Sula.

One morning, without a word

 

he handed me his month-old

God-child, and laughed at my

translated face. By now she’s ten.

 

*

 

Outside the bus, a blear — neon

and a lone girl in a thin coat.

 

In Detroit, Rose has a house

alive with neighbor children

reading, writing, and eating her food.

 

Evenings she gathers friends

to read Toni Morrison.

 

I pull another book

from under the seat —

four masks on the cover —

 

and find among detonations

Reginald Dwayne Betts

invoking a future — Ours.

 

As if on cue,

the behemoth shudders to a stop

 

and I disembark to walk

into a world I love.

 

Contributor
Michael Lauchlan

Michael Lauchlan’s work has appeared in New England Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, The North American Review, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Sugar House Review, Louisville Review, Poet Lore and Poetry Ireland. His most recent collection is Trumbull Ave. (Wayne State University Press, 2015).

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