LOVE STORY OF A MOUSE
When Caspar fell in love,
his younger brother felt abandoned.
He called Caspar: “Mouse,”
for his subservience to his love,
who was a ravishing Irish beauty.
She was alive in a way that Caspar was not.
He found her to be a night full of stars
that he could trust. He felt buoyant
for the fist time, as if he could butterfly
across Jamaica Bay.
His kid brother called her “Queenie,”
as he watched his brother
become her happy slave.
But Caspar didn’t seem to mind,
since he found his wife
to be a living flower
who brought technicolor
into his black and white life.
He catered to her every whim,
and prepared her daily breakfast:
fresh squeezed orange juice was de rigueur.
He delivered mail for thirty years.
and got lots of cash-filled envelopes
every Christmas.
She didn’t age well, and when she gained weight,
and her face began to look like a gargoyle,
he loved her just as much.
When his wife died, Caspar never stopped crying
until he died, dreaming she had stepdanced her way
through the portals of heaven and reserved
a place for him next to her in one of God’s double beds.