That June we played basketball
next to brown brick St. Mary’s school.
When I dribbled, the ball nicked the crazed
cracks beaten open by persistence of the weeds
and careened into the narrow street.
You and Geri laughed at me,
you guys performed from the cracks, knew how
to take decay and play it for effect.
Down at the record store, patchouli-scented,
and strewn with posters once discarded
we’d scrounge from their trash, layer our rooms,
your hair like Cher’s, you chatted up the kid,
walked out with six singles under your poncho.
Screw those weeds sprouting up
under the hoop, ruining the hopscotch court;
not caring if they were goldenrod or wild grass,
I just wanted you to play fair and stay the same.
We had to spend time with the adults too,
Grandma Mamie and Anna-Maria the almost-nun,
your mom’s best friend, and our mothers of course.
They told me I was growing like a weed,
for godsake, a clumsy giantess of adolescence,
but I just looked tall next to you, unchanging portrait.
You kept your first communion expression
around them, saving your rage to spatter the street.
Full of good spirited fun they call you
in hindsight, not seeing the wellspring
of anger exacting a good time for all.

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