Untitled (for now)
We watched as our Frankenstein’s
Climbed the cliffs by your summer home.
It is a sheer drop down to the ice water
Of Lake Ontario. Last February three men
Died while walking out on the shelf, but your
Monster thought it would be fun, and mine
Always tags along. We laughed
As their stiff, clumsy hands dragged
Knuckle-first through the red clay, searching
For a foothold, or a jutting rock, for leverage.
My Frankenstein chanced a glance up, one eye
Lolling around, trying to find traction, the other
Pouring over the cold sweat on my forehead.
They continued down the rocky face, yours
Missing a step three times, and each time we
Drew in sharp breaths of frigid air and held
Them inside, anxiously attempting
To freeze time. When they landed
At the shoreline, our Frankenstein’s undressed
One another, folding their tattered rags, and placing
Them on Moon-lit rocks, where they would be found
The next afternoon. Even from eighty feet up
I sighed at the sight of my Monster’s scars, train tracks
Running around his left shoulder, the incision
Across his lower abdomen where I planted a pancreas,
The charred stain on his skin just under his right ear
Where electricity caused life to return.
Slowly, our Monster’s began to walk, hand in hand,
Into the dark waters of Lake Ontario, never flinching
From the shock of freezing temperatures, pushing
Ice floes away with their free hands. We watched their skin
Contract, pull the stitches loose from their most recent injuries.
When the water was up around their necks, they turned
Once more to us, and silently
Said goodbye.