BREAKFAST AT DYSART’S
Eighteen wheelers never whizz by
the sun-flooded truck stop on Coldbrook Road.
Ravenous drivers, weary of rolling
behemoths up the highways,
climb aboard Dysart’s
as if it was a lifeboat.
Open day and night,
hot showers, motherly love,
plump waitresses, home-style food.
Heaps of blueberry hotcakes
slabs of Canadian bacon
strawberry-rhubarb pie a la mode.
Tattooed and muscle-bound,
scorpions and rattlers
brawny as the Bronze age,
moved to tears by Johnny Cash.
Need to pee,
can’t-stand-the-slow-pokes.
Years of patience worn down in the pen
like a treadless tire.
One driver curled up in his cab
Asleep, gin-drunk, he dreams of fighting back.
He parries father’s fist
with a jack-knife.
He wakes up.
Hits the road.
Crash.