Clair de Lune in the Dead of Winter
I.
Every Sunday when the sun started to bud
its head through the canopy of dead—speckled dogwoods, coffee-tongued
and morning medicated, she’d peel
back the dust covered fallboard
on her time-stained Bechstein,
like she was lifting the lid
off Pandora’s jar.
II.
Her fleshy skeletal instruments—
just bound bone in flickered white eggshell bounded off, across the rosewood soundboard. The glass-latticed sunroom where I watched, and she rarely ever spoke—quivered with a gusto as she warmed up
her nimble fingers. In her criticisms—
she was Monsieur Croche.
She would grab my hands and place them on the bare-polished mahogany and say: Close your eyes.
Feel the music, first.
Then you can play.
Behind paneled gold-floral,
with eyes shut wide.
She became Claude Debussy
in his third movement of Suite Bergamasque. Each note shivered my skull—as tiny-felt covered hammers
inside the belly,
struck steel strings.
III.
A player piano sits in its place now—
alone.
The capriccios and concertos
that once throbbed
throughout this house
are all lost with their host,
to the hollow harmonics
of frozen clocks,
still tolling.