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(IV)
A swing of the bat, the sound of my voice, Tentative, timid, a catch in my throat, I must take command, I must take the lead, A swing of the bat, a shattering glass. I move through the madness and reach for the bat, Wrench it away from his white-knuckled hands, I toss it behind me and don’t miss a beat, Time for my uncle to learn a new step. He turns like a scorpion ready to strike, But his stinger is dull and his venom is weak, His eyes blaze with anger, his soul burns with bile, Like the world is to blame for all of his misery. “Go get your brother; we’re leaving tonight, There’s more work up north; there’s more hope than here, You’ll do what I tell you; you’ll do what I say, You’ll go pack your things, ’cause we’re leaving right now.” The room is in ruins, his bridges are burned, And Cody and I are still chained to his fate, His life lies in ruins; his life is not mine, He gave me these shackles, but I can break free. And I say to him “No” with a break in my voice, “NO!” sounding much more commanding, “We’re not going anywhere; neither are you, You’ll back off right now, or you’ll feel my hand.” “So do it,” he says with a strange, slanted grin, I dare you to hit me—go on, take me down! What are you waiting for? Knock yourself out, But don’t start a fight you can’t finish.” A line in the sand, a dare there between us, My hand is a weapon; my blood’s in a boil, I strain to move mountains; I strain to swing free, Denying my nature, I raise up my arm. Let me, for once, be the bruising brutality, Let me at last be a fist in the face Of the vicious injustice my brother and I Have endured at the hands of our uncle.
But my fist is still fixed by invisible shackles, The mountain won’t move; my hand won’t swing free, I cannot deliver; I only receive, And he gloats at his victory, laughs at my shame. “You’re weak and you’re worthless, that’s why you need me. You’re helpless and hopeless; your brother’s the same You’ll remember how lucky you are that I’m here. So you’ll take what I dish, and you’ll like it.” Then he shifts with a slouch and slumps in a chair, Something is wrong with him, wrong with me, too, I can’t feel my arm, and I can’t move my shoulder, Feet start to tingle, and skin starts to itch, My hand’s still a fist that I cannot unravel, My face has gone loose, like an avalanche slide, My tongue becomes rubber; my lungs barely breathe, I fall to the ground as my left leg gives way, And there in the chair Uncle Hoyt is the same, Our eyes are now locked in a clear understanding, What falls on my uncle rebounds out to me, Oh, my God—he’s having a stroke!
(V)
“TakeItAway, TakeItAwayFromMeBoy, ThasWhyYerrHere, IKnowThatNow…ThasWhy Y’Came SssoManyYearsAgo, WhyYerMomDid WhutSheDid…NowYerr MySssecondLife, MySssecondShance, SssecondShance TahMakeSssomething A Mysself, TahDoItRight, NoMore YearssA LivinOn TheEdge A MyOwnLoussyLife, NeverNothin More AnClosedDoorss An MishedOpportunitiess… ButYerrChanginThat, you’re ChanginThat RightNowFerMe, Brewshter, you’re Makin’ It all all right, My BrokenSpiritBecomin’ yours, My SsorryBodyBecoming yours, I CanFeel it happening, FeelinBetter, TalkinBetter… SpongeItAll away, boy, ’CauseYouCareAbout me, YouCare and can’t deny it, I KnowIt In MyHeart, you KnowIt In yourss, all these YearssA Putting a roof OverYer head, food in yer stomach, have all GottaCount for ssomething, not perfect, no, NeverPerfect, but a family, RealAndTrue, lookin’ out ForOneAnother like you’re lookin’ out for MeRightNow, and so what if I GetFoul from time to time, who don’t, ButYouCan forgive it right, becausse you understand, YouCare, and I’m grateful for it, Brew… grateful ’cause today you KnowYourPlace on this good earth… your place and YourPurpose, and that’s to ssave me, YourPoorOld Uncle Hoyt, I can feel it all DrainingAway, the numbness, the heaviness… steal it all away, Yeah, That’s It… and I won’t forget it, Brew, and I’ll GiveYou the biggesst shiny marble headsstone and Cody and I will visit WhenWe can, and flowerss on your birthday, and the doors of heaven, they’re flung OpenWide for you ’cause of what you’re doing today, so take it away, take it away from me, Brew, like you’re supposed to…that’s why you’re here.”
(VI)
I try to speak but my tongue is now fat and lazy, and life starts trailing away, my body giving in…. This can’t be my purpose—to die in my uncle’s place, my flesh shutting down, left leg, left arm, half of me gone, and the other half beginning to follow , a catastrophic collapse, because I care just enough to be trapped—and the thought of him walking out of here free and clear is too much for me to bear—I do not want this—I want MY life, not HIS death, and my only hope is to stop caring—to kill in the depth of my own soul the pity and compassion I feel for the man who raised me for half my life—can I do that to you, Uncle Hoyt, now when it’s either you or, me? Can I find it in my heart to NOT find it in my heart? I dig down, down, down, to make the numbness taking root in my body invade that place in me that still cares about you and purge it so that I can leave you—not love, not hate, but leave you dark and indifferent, in an Arctic cold—I don’t care about you, not now not anymore… and now… and, now… I can slowly feel sensation coming back to my face—I don’t care what happens to you, Uncle Hoyt—I can twitch my legs now—and as your fate sinks back into you, you reach out to grab me—but with my one good hand I do what I could not do before—I swing my fist and connect with your jaw , and you fall away—I see your face—how it’s losing muscle tone as the stroke returns to you, sinking in —a mud slide seeking low ground—I have both my arms back—my legs are still not strong enough to carry me, but I scramble for the door on all fours as you wail incomprehensible fury—your fate is your own again—and if I can get far enough away and keep myself from caring just long enough, your fate will stay bound to you—so I drag myself out the door, falling off the porch, dredging through the mud, still unable to stand, but the farther away I get, the easier it is, until I can rise to my feet, until I am at the edge of the range of my gift—until I can’t feel you anymore, Uncle Hoyt, no, I can’t feel you at all. I can walk now—with a limp, but I can walk, and I stride powerfully across the field toward the gate. Your death is yours alone, Uncle Hoyt; it’s what you created, what you’ve earned. And you’ll know soon enough if God truly has mercy enough to forgive you. Because I can’t.