More Gravy
Grandma dipped the ladle in the gravy boat
Stirring the brown, sticky thick sauce
Voices rose above the swirling dirge of moat
Ignorant to the silent loss
Empty chair where grandpa sat last Thanksgiving Day
Echoes of a broken heat beat
Pouring out and over turkey, gravy's spray
People dive in and start to eat
Mom and dad deliver puns; kids around fight
Aunts and uncles laughing at this
Grandma passes the potatoes, then stands right
Speaks to the table, "Don't you miss
Grandpa's stories filling your hearts and minds at all?
Well, just hear the one I will tell.
Forty-two years ago, this time in the fall
Someone else came; filled up my pail-
Yes, he had his way with me, and eldest son, know
You were not grandpa's; not by birth.
I was raped, but kept you still; I didn't let go.
Yet he loved you and all your worth
Summed up in one word: family, and yours today
Love and laugh and live for all here."
Shocked to hear what grandma said, the chairs didn't sway
Leaning in, waiting in new fear
Dad gulped down his bite and longed for clarity
Mom brushed back her hair, all wavy
Grandma smiled and looked around for all to see
Asking, "Who would like more Gravy?"