The day broke a record for cold, for us wanting To be anywhere but outside, & it was late May, the weekend we called Memorial. My mother Is a veteran, but that is a story for another time, & we were driving into the mother of rivers state, My youngest son, named after two men, one who Turned a trumpet into a prayer, the other who Before a piano became whatever those who know say God sounds like, me, & friends, who like me, imagined Watching their sons trade baskets with strangers Was some kind of holy. Around us was more granite Than Black folks & I carried Primo Levi’s If This Is a Man In my knapsack, hesitant to return to all the astonishing Ways we make each other suffer &, still, somehow, Survive, & astonished most by how we remember. I’ve Forgotten my fair share of things that matter. But Who am I kidding? The weekend was about Basketball. We’d driven three hours to this colder Weather. My youngest boy hoped he’d heat up once A ball touched his hands. Did I say we named the child After the idiosyncrasies of Jazz, all because as children I don’t think my wife & I knew enough ambition To save us from what we’d encounter. These were the days When he and the nine he suited up with desired Little more than to hear the rasp of a ball against whatever Passed for wood in a gym with a hoop. There is something To be said about how basketball makes men of boys and boys Of men. The ref who chattered with us parents wondered Why a cousin the age of the ballers ate chips for breakfast. The other team had a player who made me think, though She be but little she is fierce, as she, the only girl on The court slipped a jewel into that hovering crown We cheered, even those of us whose boys sought to dribble & jump shot their way to the glory of a win. & when Miles Came down as if he knew what would happen. I didn’t hold My breath. A crossover, the ball then swung around his back, The kid before him lost on some raft in a wild river. Maybe He knew the ball would fall true because he turned around To watch us as much as to get back on defense. We laughed & laughed & watched as kids barely large enough to launch all of that need at a target did so, again & again. |
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