DEPARTURE
When the phone rang in the hour before dawn
he knew it could not be good news.
A melancholy thrumming of liturgical music,
“an echo of the invisible world,”
came from a black stretch limo outside his front door.
He stiffened in fright like long johns
frozen rock hard on a backyard clothes line.
A somber voice bade him “Hurry up, pack everything essential.”
Like a man running from a burning house
he grabs what is most important: his father’s Parker pen,
a bottle of ink and packs of paper for writing poems.
He slips a cell phone in his pocket just in case
there is service, gathers envelopes and stamps
hoping he’ll find a mail box.
He digs up his rod and reel, flies and hooks,
assuming there’ll be ponds and brooks,
seizes his Selmer silver trumpet and stock arrangements,
confident he’ll find cats to jam with.
He takes his Bausch and Lomb binoculars
to check out where he’s going and where he’s been.
Wondering if he’ll be gone for a while he includes
a mouth guard, Sensodyne, cranberry juice, saw palmetto
and a jar of ajvar, assuming there’ll be a bodega
to fill up on yellow rice and black beans.
Before flying out the door he remembers to take
a Trader Joe’s ten pound dark chocolate bar
he’d stashed in his wine cellar hoping polyphenol’s
anti-aging properties would prolong his life.
When the guttural voice reminds him to get moving
it reminds him to take his Ricola cough drops,
worried he might catch a sore throat.
He also hauls a case of bottled water,
concerned there might be rusty pipes at his destination.
The voice urges him not to disturb his sleeping wife,
suggesting he leave the Prius hybrid key-less keys
since where he’s going there are no roads.
(Just like Fire Island, he thinks.)
His arms are loaded with favorite CD’s and books
he always meant to read.
He brings along a photo album to remember who he was
and who once meant so much to him.
In case his wife should follow, he packs their double down
sleeping bag.
A man of few words, the driver wore black shades
and pointed to a document for him to sign,
full of legalese with lots of wherefores and therefores
and to the party of the first clause and to whom it may concern
as they waited for the bank to open to have it notarized.
He figured if this was going to be a bon voyage
he asked if they could stop at a liquor store
for a magnum of Moet.
As he gradually surmised the nature of this trip
he requested an extra large pepperoni pizza
for his imprudent brother whose myocardial infarct
did him in, a supply of knitting needles and spools
of wool for his mom who loved to crochet afghans
for the color blind and a carton of Luckies
and a Wall Street Journal, sure to please his dad.
Before being dropped off at the ionosphere station
with rhomboidal shaped thingamabobs,
he had to pass through security.
The servomechanisms required his stuff be stowed
as carry-on luggage, so he squishes it all
in the overhead compartments, smiling serenely
as he takes a seat in the solarium, humming softly
“I’m on my way, and I won’t turn back…”
Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. Leonia, N.J. 07605