3/20/2026 (c)
Aunt Beulah was so pleased Ronny came
home alive.
For three summers he sat
cross-legged in the front yard,
Pea-green jacket, smoking
home-grown, laughing—
which was strange. No one did happy in our family.
He finally manned up, got some shit
job in Seattle
scrubbing
toilets and patching drywall.
Vietnam
wasted Ronny, was all dad said, and once
Ronny
is a waste.
I never heard if Ronny had killed, or
crept
through underbrush in a scraggly
formation
of camouflaged boys—
onslaught of torrential rain, shrapnel.
I never even asked if he had a
nickname.
like Injun, or Tonasket.
Nam and eventually Ronny became two
more topics
we did not breach at the dinner
table.
Mealtime was silence and hate
shoveled down
with slabs of beef broiled into
charcoal pucks.
On a good day, Dad ranted about
gold diggers,
racially inferiors, that Management
Prick.
It was not our place to join in,
but to take it in.
At night Mom and Dad drank Jim Beam
and fought,
their resentment worming through
the oil duct into my room.
By my teens it became all about
me—my deliberate mediocrity,
the marijuana in my sock drawer, my
slutty influence on my sister.
I was the source of all unhappiness
in that house.
Boarding
school—good money after bad.
They wanted instead to sign me up,
ship me out,
slap a devil’s piano in my hand—
They hoped I’d die.
Because Ronny left it—
because his name, my name
patched above the heart, confirming
me on a short list
of combat survivors, I slept in
Ronny’s coat,
my bedroom a triage where I bandaged
wounds
peppering my frail psyche.
When I reached the point of no
return and little fight left
I undertook a three-month hunger
strike—
a siege as inviolable to me as it
was invisible to them.
And when my sister wanted Ronny’s
coat, she took it
and I let her have it.