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Visitors’ Hour Redux

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Lighter in trembling hand
lifted to Marlboro caught
in twitching lips.
Anticipation and flame mirrored
by Haldol-glazed eyes
with nervous glances at Nurse, back-turned,
who spins suddenly to scold.

“Sorry, didn't know the rules.”

But he does, in his hospital gown,
smokes away on his fourth in fifteen minutes.
Head-jerks left and right
as Bellevue ward-peers watch
with nicotine hunger.

I flick the Bic back in my pocket.
Promise to never pass it again.

“See you tomorrow, Dad.”

Tomorrow….

I didn’t ask to lift the sheet
or slide out the ball-bearing bin
that held Dad’s body
in the grey of the M.E.’s basement.

“They only do that in movies,”
says man in yellow scrubs.
Hands me a Polaroid instead.

Swollen and pale but still Dad,
sort of,
even with my eyes half a-squint.

And now, years later,
I wish
I had asked
to lift
the
sheet. 


Giancarlo Malchiodi returned home from fifth grade one day and proclaimed to his mother “I want to be a teacher!” Spending thirty years happily sparking the creativity of many young minds as a high school teacher of English, he is now re-igniting his own. A graduate of the MFA program at Brooklyn College/CUNY where he studied with Allen Ginsberg, Giancarlo’s poetry has been featured in A Gathering of The Tribes, Oberon Poetry Magazine, The Paterson Literary Review, Streetlight, and The Nimrod International Journal. His essays and photographs have likewise been featured in Teachers & Writers, Panorama, and The Emerson Review. When not travelling, reading/writing, absorbing news and pop culture, or scanning the skies for Superman, Giancarlo wanders to rediscover NYC or explores 125+ feet undersea as a DiveMaster.