In the rental cottage it comes to me,
how the four lives of myself
and my brothers
crisscross
like tracer bullets,
and how, from a distance maybe,
if you had the right kind of glasses,
there might appear to be a target
we all were aiming at
beyond that black escutcheon of cloud
above Santa Rosa Bay
as we lie on the deck
drinking tequila and beer,
our voices growing vague and weary
as time passes, until one of us
tells a story, more cordial than precise,
about climbing to the top of a magnolia tree
when he was ten, and falling. The rest of us
draw closer around the story
as we watch the great flattened cloud
raise its triangular wing
over the state of Florida. It is night
in Florida
and, in a moment, one of us will recall
the time our father, in a gray suit,
climbed the steps of an airliner
bound for Paris
and never came back. And one, or another,
will tell how our mother, more blond
and beautiful than ever
that spring, said,
You must now be soldiers,
and screamed and screamed. We will each
raise his head
and stare for a moment through the lighted gate
of the living room window
at our wives,
who are putting away the last of the supper dishes,
speaking among themselves
with the easy familiarity of women
whose husbands
are brothers. And one of us will begin so sing
an old song
that our father sang
before he went away, a song
about losing a fair woman
in the foggy, foggy dew,
and as the late chill rises off the bay
we will all remember
what we thought as children
when we heard him sing of the woman
who was not, and never could have been,
our mother
and of how an emptiness,
bigger than an ocean,
opened inside us, and one of us
will say, I think it is going to rain,
and we will get up
and go back inside.