Poem
Cue Lazarus
✒️
Carl Marcum
Start this with the invocation: a seventy-seven Pinto, an eastbound freeway, two boysa few months from their driver’s license.It happens again because you’ve said it. You sit in the back seat, a ghost of red vinyl, to listento these boys—one of whom was you,the one along for the ride—talk brave about cheerleaders and socket wrenches as they passa stolen cigarette between them.They don’t know you’re there, wouldn’t believe in you should they look backstage, backseat.The boys are driving back from an Octoberorchard where they’d gone to see leaves change. You remember: orange, brown, as though you’d just seen those leaves,because in this proximityto yourself—the boy in the passenger seat—you are thinking the same thing, and each of your in-carnations feels like they’ve thought thisbefore. Your ghost, your present tense thinks that maybe this isn’t right. Now you’re along for the ride.These boys haven’t cuffed up againsttheir own mortality yet, though one of them is sick. The other one, driving and picking at the thinhair falling from his scalp, will diesoon, because what lurks in his dark blood can be cured by medical science. And that cure is what willkill him, as it leaves him weak,unable to fight off infection in his lungs. But that comes later. You are here with them now to findout what you owe to whom—your life,mortgaged to one of these boys and you’ve never been able to rectify that debt. You are thestage direction, a ghost backstage,wanting a spotlight, a soapbox a soliloquy. Dissolve back into your life, like sugarin tea—exit this scene now, stage left. *You are the apparition again in your mother’s house. You follow yourself down the yellow hallwayto the ringing phone in the kitchen.You already know who’s calling, the way you knew then—when you were the self you’re haunting. Your friendis dead. You know this even before his sister tells you—but because your ghost is too close, the boy can feel your grief, but can’t feel his own.And you did know then, didn’t you?You knew that morning, that the earth awakes closest to the sun—four days into every new year.And Lazarus, dead now, four days.Roll away the stone. Believe in something besides the past. Awaken from this dream likea man called out from a cave.It happens this way each time: a bourbon breakdown in January rain—weeping an invocation,cursing corollary. *Can you go to Tom’s grave today and mandate him back to this life? Should you cue him from the winglike a stage direction? Would hedamn you—a sadness, a gravestone on your chest, for calling him into this mortal suffering?If you had been in Houston that dayhe’d have died anyway. You’re a fool to think you can bargain across the river. Haunting the past won’t stopit from happening each time, exactly the same way. Won’t stop your heart from breaking like a glass decanter, brown whisky sliding mercury across the tile.
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