The rainiest May on record. Insanely
growing foliage motioning to the house that
the jungle wins.
In the upstairs guest room sleeping on the big bed
and not in my boyhood room.
Do I need to sign the guest book as the one
who slept here the last time?
I dreamt that the front door had been sold
at the estate sale, so that one more time
I could slip out at night with no impediments,
and run on the fairways again, to the reunion
where I would be the kid who’d never aged.
There was no consolation from the new owners
who said they want to take out the trees.
I will dispose of the assemblage,
take the paintings off the walls,
write down the old stories
as the designated family scribe.
There was so much rain that the water
was coming in through the fireplace cracks
and seeping onto the bookshelves,
the whole house emptying into boxes.
Tom Gengler is an artist living in Denver, Colorado. His poetry has appeared in Progenitor, Blue Collar Review, Exit 13, The Worcester Review, Streetlight, ONE ART, As it Ought to Be, Straylight, The Loch Raven Review, THEMA and Westview. He grew up in Oklahoma and loves the American West.