Friday, May 1, 2026

                     -The Seasons-

––David Britto's family had money.
He was the best artist in 6th grade class specializing in crayon drawings
of Santa Claus and other religious notables.
In the parlor of his family's tenement sat a snazzy space-heater,—
one with a glowing mouth at the bottom displaying its orange fire.
It was bigger than the one we had and sounded like a gust of wind
when it started-up in winter. Ours clanked like an old jalopy.
––The Britto's space-heater seemed otherworldly.
Ours came from the planet it sat in.
A crooked aluminum pipe stuck out of its back, listing upward
and angled into the wall where a little flower-painted tin plate dressed
the wall's rough-cut hole of the intruding pipe.
In winter, a twin-handled kettle of water serving as humidifier, sat on top
for a practical, but unintended purpose.
––In the summer, my mother would alter the space-heater’s identity.
The big pot would be removed to be used for cooking spaghetti or heating the bathwater.
A fancy cloth with ends of fringe dressed its top and knick-knacks were placed there 
to jewel its crown along with a few chosen members of the family, who had their framed portrait photos displayed.
––Cousin Patricia, "Call me Patsy" who left the Convent as Novitiate
breaking the hearts of her mother and father in the face of their God
before the final vows, photographed in pre-convent civvies, made the cut.
––So did my sister at nine years, frozen in a graceful tapping pose
at the “Eugenia School of Dance”— an attitude that would follow her through life,
––And there was a colorized photo of John “Sonny” Cinquini, a second cousin, smiling broadly, young, good looking, air-brushed smooth and posing bravely in his sailor suit.
“Sonny,” assigned to a minesweeper in the South Pacific, tumbled down a flight of metal grate stairs heading to the ship's galley for a quick cup,— who smacked his head on the final flight, drifted deeply into coma for over two years then died when his brain drew its flatline
on the screen by his hospital bed close to home.
––David Britto's family had money.
But the summertime studio portrait photos sitting on top of his family's snazzy space-heater
looked like they didn’t have any stories to tell.
––Quequechan



                   
                    

 

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