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My father was a serial killer
but I loved him, anyway.
You wouldn't know it
from seeing him every day;
his double-life.
Came home from work after 6,
plopped down in his La-Z-boy
with a glass of Crown Royal - two fingers
and exactly three cubes of ice -
in front of the six-thirty news.
Cursed the screen: Nixon, Vietnam,
the high price of gas.
Checked the TV Guide for who the Habs
were playing on Saturday.
I sat at his feet, while mother
cooked dinner in the kitchen, shepherd's pie.
She knew, was in denial,
or maybe hiding his secret.
Next morning, the alarm
set to talk-radio, he'd half-listen
for reports of his victims
from the previous night,
while he tied his perfect Windsor knot
in front of the mirror, a real expert.
His Old Spice was part
of the cover-up.
That smell always ruined
the taste of my Corn Flakes.
Then he'd slip out of the house,
without a word.
I watched mother clean up the mess,
and looked for evidence.
Stains on clothes, or shoes.
A missing table knife.
But he was too clever.
She kept a tidy house, took the garbage out
in large Glad bags. Laundry was washed
and folded into neat little squares.
Like I say, I suspect
she was in on it.
I fear I might carry
the serial killer gene too.
2 comments:
A provocative and disturbing poem. Now I'm thinking that my parents were serial killers, too. (My father also wore that farshtikina Old Spice!) The secret life of our parents ... fascinating and tantalizing ... but impossible to plummet! ... especially because, as you so wonderfully depict, they are so good at making things look normal and boring.
True, and the secrets are part of us, so plummeting those impossible secrets becomes self-speculation, which in turn becomes a challenge for our children. As the Torah says the sins of the parents is visited on generations of children. Sins we cannot fathom.
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