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Absolution (Free verse) by andrewjthomas
Iâm not at all Catholic. Iâd have to research the Rosary.
To me itâs just another crutch.
But he held to it tighter than my son holds the kite string
on a windy summer day in the park.
He mumbled constantly and I thought I heard counting.
There was a fear in his eyes. He was trying to out-run it.
All I could think was,
âPrayer wonât help you now Grand-pa.â
Maybe you should count your rosary for all the times you got drunk,
or all the times you left them alone with her,
or for raising a daughter that didnât know how to love me.
Before the accident, Grand-pa was a brilliant man,
even considering the amount of pickling his brain received.
Sitting in the cold, fluorescent hospital bed,
he could just barely scratch out MENSA on the paper,
his writing as broken and haggard as the frame of his face.
He used to send letters.
God the man could send some letters, let me tell you.
Only they werenât real, more like jigsaw puzzles.
I remember opening the envelope and watching all the little bits of
newspaper
fall out onto the floor like snowflakes.
Scrawled across the top of each clipping,
âHereâs something youâll find interestingâ¦â
or âAndy, this story is for youâ
or âThereâs a real lesson here Susanâ
Always wanting to impart wisdom or some greater purpose,
I suppose this is where Mom got her drunken couch philosophy.
âThis too shall pass,â thatâs what he always said,
like a goddamn mantra.
Hell, Iâd heard it so many times it even ran through my head once or
twice that night
helping Mom walk him to the bathroom and back.
I wanted to cry, seeing him flounder, nothing like my memories.
And later, when everyone gathered in his church,
when the rest of my family genuflected,
when he sat in his coffin, holding his rosary beads,
when my brother, who had been away at school,
went along with the masses, I just sat there.
Iâm not at all catholic, and I wonât pretend to be.
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