Home, To Picher, Oklahoma
Home,
to Picher, Oklahoma
Grandma Connell, whose tears
soaked a new beret at Fort Benning,
lived at Central and Cherokee with four cats
in a pistachio-painted A-frame house.
He saw her yesterday at a nursing home in Tulsa,
but the house and the cats, and Grandpa’s
hand-carved cherry table where Tollie
taught him chess and bridge while
three older brothers toiled in the lead mine
that sentenced this town to death, long
before the tornado carried out the execution--
they’re all gone.
The prairie wind scrubs at the ruins
with metallic dust
’til the air looks and smells like Fallujah
right before the Marines went in.
His unit followed them, patrolling day
after day on a street like this, but there
sweat was poured into renewal.
In Picher, even cleaning up is futile.