Three skateboard dudes.
15, 16, 17 years old.
Tall, lanky white boys.
Curly hair.
Agile Energy.
They like to play rap music loud,
With the car windows down,
Booming bass throughout the
neighborhood.
Matters not that they ride the
equivalent of a modern-day Pinto.
And that the driver is one’s
mother, me.
Front porch for a friend pick up.
There’s a boy with a hatchet.
He’s an 8th grader, they said.
Another little brother is also there, he’s five or so.
An urban front yard.
Two children, one swinging an ax.
Playing a game, jumping from steps to tree stump.
There’s a name for the game.
What is it?Leaning like surfers,
Not into the ocean wave,
But into the curve of the road,
The sidewalk,
The ATM drive through lane
They skate, each with two legs
and four wheels.
One boy says his dad’s a chef.
This boy knows chefs.
He knows the most famous chef in
the city.
Where is your dad a chef? I ask.
I don’t know. He’s a chef
somewhere, the boy says.
It's like the other chefs took him
in,
after his dad ditched him.
Or maybe I'm just idealistic.
Or maybe I'm just idealistic.
Riding to another skate site.
The in-car conversation.
When people start dying.
But aren’t we all dying?
Yeah, but when do we start?
Don’t we start dying the minute
we’re born?
Yeah, but when is the brain at
its peak?
Wouldn’t a brain keep getting
better,
The older you get?
Skater boys philosophize.
With the mother, teacher wanna-be.
At the mall parking lot.
The inner city kind of mall
That doubles as a senior citizen
center.
A tiny elderly lady can’t open
the door.
Can I open the door for you?
She’s petit and wearing pajamas.
Frail.
Wait, what is it?
Albert Einstein?
Heavy white eyebrows and a head
scarf.
Yes, thank you, I think she says.
Her lips don't move.
Her voice is muted.
Is she actually talking to me?
The door is locked.
Where are the wrinkles?
Is she wearing a Halloween mask?
It’s two weeks ‘til
trick-or-treat.
She’s walking with a walker.
She can’t get in.
She sits on a bench.
I'm kind of creeped out.
I think of all the reasons
And elderly woman would wear
An Einstein mask and pajamas
to the mall.
to the mall.
It makes me sad and extremely
curious.
Why?
Tacos.
Ice Cream.
Teenage metabolism.
The ice cream vendor laments
That she gave the boys covers to
their sundaes.
“They will just throw them away,” she says.
They didn’t understand your
question, I offer.
The owner with silver hair and
hardened face is
counting her cash register
pennies, I know.
I want to suggest she default to
no covers.
People will ask for them if they
want.
I used to work at an ice cream shop.
I used to work at an ice cream shop.
Maybe the franchise requires her
to give covers.
I'm pretty sure she doesn't want my advise.
There’s one employee besides the
owner
In the ice cream shop,
A young girl with a single braid.
She’s so slight, voice so small, face so meek.
I resist the urge to give her
advise.
Besides, what would I say?
I like your friends,
I tell my son
When the afternoon is over.
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