Second Time This Year

The man working on my mother’s house
is an ex-con like me.
He doesn’t say, but removes his shirt,
the heat pressing 90, &
although I don’t have them, I recognize
his tattoos a specific blue-black stain
from melted plastic chess pieces
shot through skin with a homemade gun. 

The first guy was older, an employee
of the man my mother hired.
“Is it that obvious?” he said
when I asked, & I grieved for him
in my error of forgetting
not everyone stands atop the past
to point & shout. 

I’m keeping quiet with this one.
He’s his own boss—hard worker
his marked skin skinnying as he sweats.
Not afraid of him, I’ve seen human faces
behind the orange jumpsuit &
khaki prison garb,
watched how easily a straight face
twists into the rictus of a clown. 

I think it’s camaraderie I’m seeking,
ready to yell, I’m one of you!
as to a poet reading from her latest book.
I won’t. Best we smoke
our Marlboros in silence
as though we are still prisoners &
must dispose of our tobacco
before a guard walks by this sunlit cell.

 
Ace Boggess

Ace Boggess is author of six books of poetry, most recently Escape Envy. His writing has appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review, Notre Dame Review, Harvard Review, Mid-American Review, and other journals. An ex-con, he lives in Charleston, West Virginia, where he writes and tries to stay out of trouble. His seventh collection, Tell Us How to Live, is forthcoming in 2024 from Fernwood Press.

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