FISHING IN THE RAIN
When winds of war had not yet howled, a summer before
that infamous December day, we drove off in the rain,
going fishing in dad’s new hydromatic black Desoto.
We had no luck with juicy fat night-crawlers, silver minnows
and even hellgrammites; we kept on baling out the deluge
till we were almost swamped.
The only creature caught was Blacky, who tangled
with the tackle box, snagged in a frenzy with barbed hooks
in daredevil lures and shiny steel red-feathered spinners.
Sequestered in the car dad removed the hooks
like a practiced neurosurgeon even though
he was just a desk-bound CPA.
Blacky whimpered in a blood soaked blanket
as we listened to the pizzicato patter of the rain.
“Sounds like Bojangles tap dancing at his best,”
dad said as he downed two quarts of beer,
chain smoking Lucky Strikes, claiming
only sun and beer could subdue his psoriatic itch.
He sang Jolson’s rendition of “April showers”
and his favorite jingle: “My beer is Rhiengold
the dry beer, it’s not bitter not sweet it’s a dry flavor
treat, why not try, extra dry, Rheingold beer.”
Before passing out he recited:
“Here I sit broken hearted, paid a jet and only farted.”
I dozed off drunk on purple Kool-Aid dreaming
of prismatic colors of dew drops on green and yellow
lily pads. I heard the humming of gnats circling over
the rippling lake, spied on water spiders scooting
over curious sunfish hungry for a dragonfly or two
and was tickled to catch a mess of pickerel,
stringing them through the gills for a Brownie
snapshot to show off to my friends.
Dad had to part with his Desoto, deemed a non-essential driver
with an “A” gas ration sticker. When he became an air-raid warden
I helped him tell the difference between a P-38 and a Messerschmidt
which I knew from reading comic books. When sirens blared and spotlights
searched the sky I’d be stationed at my window, a sniper at the ready
with my Daisy BB gun taking pot-shots at parachuting Krauts, slow moving
wraiths falling from the sky into my backyard, much easier to bag than catching
pickerel in the rain. Milton P. Ehrlich 199 Christie St. N.J. 07605