THE GOOD HUMOR MAN
An ordinary Sunday summer afternoon,
kids on the block race for the truck
at the sound of the bells, begging for money
or trashing a piggy-bank; little hands clutch
change, offering it up like alms to the man in white
who listens to pleas for ice pops and Eskimo pies.
A young boy licking a gloppy concoction
mindlessly dashes across the street head-on
into a Chevy Camaro.
Brakes slam like a pterodactyl’s screech.
A walloping thump; startled neighbors’
Sunday papers fall to the floor, frantic
parents run, legs spinning in place.
The boy splayed against a windshield.
A rivulet of blood on black macadam,
and a splatter on the Good Humor Man is
all that remain as a snarling ambulance
rushes away.
Only the wail and shriek of parents is heard.
A hard eyed teen with a shaved head and devilish
goatee, ears, eyes and nose pierced with gold, shows
no remorse to police as he raises an arm tattooed
with “hooligan” in gothic calligraphy, lighting
a cigarette.
Under a night sky of blackened stars, neighbors
leave flowers and food at the door of parents.
Lost in a horizonless sea, irrevocable silence
fills their house.
A grim faced moon shines through a window
on an empty bed.