bartender’s dilemma
at eight o’clock on a saturday night
in the middle of nowhere;
a lonely businessman stumbles into a haunting memory
his father used to come to this same bar
when life felt painful
and nights when his mother was crying in the middle of the night
he remembers coming here as a child, behind his father;
watching insecurity fester beneath lies of narcissism
and his father’s undeniable regret
somewhere in his heart the man always knew he was born to be a mistake
imperfect,
accidental
but he was never made to feel worthy
even when he realized
he never belonged.
the last time he was here was before his father drank away his last heartbreak;
before he climbed into a car at 1:00 a.m. and went home to an angel disguised as satan
and left his son alone.
now the son climbs
into his usual worn-out seat closest to the bartender
and calls for the bartender to bring him something strong
it’s four o’clock and he doesn’t feel like sleeping or loving or living
he drinks himself blind and the bartender caters to him tirelessly;
never mind the clock
he strokes his beard and blinks his eyes,
wrinkled from age and betrayal
at nine he stumbles out of his seat and trips on the floor.
he hits his head
and the world spins for just a minute;
no one calls a taxi for him so he just walks home
in a twenty-degree blizzard
he waits in the wind for satan disguised as an angel
to bring him somewhere—maybe to a place that tastes like home
he doesn’t know
what that tastes like
yet.
and to think,
the bartender never told him when it was too much;
just kept bringing him more
the bartender never tells the man when it’s time to stop swallowing his drowned heartache
until the man has melted too many of his thoughts in something foreign
and gone home to either heaven or hell—he can’t tell which.
and when the bartender stands in the shadows at the funeral
and watches the man’s son take his first sip of the hidden flask in his pocket
he begins to cry.
another life will become
devoted
to cramming emotions away in a crowded drawer
and to think,
if the bartender hadn’t kept unknowingly serving the man his own death
in a tall glass
the man would still be alive
and his son wouldn’t be drinking his future in a silver flask
and the bartender feels as if he is an accessory to a murder crime.
but it’s not
the bartender’s fault,
now is it?