The Same City
For James L. Hayes
The rain falling on a night   
     in mid-December,
 I pull to my father’s engine   
     wondering how long I’ll remember   
 this. His car is dead. He connects   
     jumper cables to his battery,   
 then to mine without looking in   
     at me and the child. Water beads   
 on the windshields, the road sign,   
     his thin blue coat. I’d get out now,   
 prove I can stand with him   
     in the cold, but he told me to stay   
 with the infant. I wrap her   
     in the blanket, staring   
 for what seems like a long time   
     into her open, toothless mouth,   
 and wish she was mine. I feed her   
     an orange softened first in my mouth,   
 chewed gently until the juice runs   
     down my fingers as I squeeze it   
 into hers. What could any of this matter   
     to another man passing on his way   
 to his family, his radio deafening   
     the sound of water and breathing   
 along all the roads bound to his?   
     But to rescue a soul is as close   
 as anyone comes to God.   
     Think of Noah lifting a small black bird   
 from its nest. Think of Joseph,   
     raising a son that wasn’t his.   
 Let me begin again.   
     I want to be holy. In rain   
 I pull to my father’s car   
     with my girlfriend’s infant.   
 She was eight weeks pregnant when we met.   
     But we’d make love. We’d make   
 love below stars and shingles   
     while her baby kicked between us.   
 Perhaps a man whose young child   
     bears his face, whose wife waits   
 as he drives home through rain   
     & darkness, perhaps that man   
 would call me a fool. So what.
     There is one thing I will remember   
 all my life. It is as small   
     & holy as the mouth   
 of an infant. It is speechless.   
     When his car would not stir,   
 my father climbed in beside us,   
     took the orange from my hand,   
 took the baby in his arms.   
     In 1974, this man met my mother   
 for the first time as I cried or slept   
     in the same city that holds us   
 tonight. If you ever tell my story,   
     say that’s the year I was born.
Copyright Credit: “The Same City” from Hip Logic. Copyright © by Terrance Hayes. Reprinted with permission of Penguin Books, a division of The Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Source: Hip Logic (2002)


