Hawaiian Shirts In The Electric Chair by Scott Laudati - HTML preview

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they called me at

work and

told me about

a rainy new jersey

morning,

about the bed

full of vomit

the dead kid

and a mailbox

full of cards

saying

“happy 20th birthday”

 

some people

wanted to know

why.

they asked god.

they asked the quiet

boys in the back

what they knew.

but

there’s only

one

way a kid dies

when there’s

no car

crash

 

we heard it

was a persian

connection

whose cousins

or father

ran the oxy ring.

they jumped in the car

so mad

and red eyed

their heads

would have to be

removed from

the body

to stop the

hate from swinging.

but the persian

connect

didn’t fight back

 

he just cried

and the hate stopped.

something

so black

it exists

in the corners

of all eyes, we can all see

it, and when we recognize

it in others

it becomes impossible

to pretend your tribe

is not

my tribe.

so there

they were,

letting humanity get

in the way of revenge

again

 

we called him

“little”

(he shared his father’s name)

and before

 the oxy’s

and the

new jersey highway

nights

he planted

a seed in the backyard,

a little maple.

i don’t know

why I always remembered that.

when people grow up

you only know them for

all the times

they’ve fucked you

or fucked her.

but when

you get them young

it’s

the times

they’ve reminded you

there’s still beauty left

in the world

that get you

 

the funeral was

an old testament

betrayal.

three blonde angels

cried at the casket

and proved

what we all know but never

say,

there is no god.

they buried

him in a t-shirt

and jeans

because he

was a kid

and he was cool

and honoring him

in an honest way

kept everyone honest,

nobody could lie

and say

he’d gone to a better place.

i cried

for the first time

as a man

and it felt like

one more tattoo

had been hammered

in to

the surface

of my heart.

 

back at my aunt’s

she held me for

too long,

she said

“i lost my

little boy. he looked

up to you”.

all i could say was

“he was

a cool kid”.

i looked at my aunt

who

had lost

her little boy.

his father,

a bulldog of a man

that life had finally beaten.

my three

blonde cousins

might have thought

about the day

he was born,

or the men they would

marry

that would never

share the

alter with their

brother.

and i thought

about all the friends

i’ve had that

died

or went to jail

and the reason was always

the same: Heroin.

and once

again

i hadn’t seen the signs

that were now so obvious,

and i never reached out

though everyone needs it.

outside,

the seed “little” had planted

was now a tree,

but nobody mentioned it

 

i went home

and

my girlfriend

said throw them out. take

a break.

hasn’t enough happened?

i told her i did.

but i didn’t.

i ate them

all of them

and i drank,

i knew i might die

but

i probably wouldn’t,

and at least I

would feel

better for

a while.

i should’ve told

“little” about what

the suburbs and boredom

could do.

but he was a smart kid,

we shared the same blood.

i should’ve told him

about the fear

and what

it

can do