Poetry: Selections from Ron Riekki

We’re in a hotel and there’s thirteen of us planning to sleep in one room, which is not allowed, but you have to be caught,
 
so the plan is to not get caught,
except we’re loud
and loudness is not a good way to be slick,
and we’re loud because we’re all boxers,
except me,
except I kind of was,
except I was horrible,
but the rest of the guys in the room are,
good,
great,
a mix,
nuts,
which is helpful,
all from a mining town,
a U.P. mining town,
which is helpful,
and with dads who were boxers in their own way,
not boxing in rings
for money
and fame
or micro-fame,
like us,
but rather
dads who boxed with their jobs
or fist-fought with their pack of hack-inducing cigarettes
or punched walls because their lives didn’t end up the way they wanted them to end up,
so it was more like the alcoholic unemployed boxers of the world
as fathers,
and,
by the way,
we had enough testosterone
in that crappy hotel room
to fill
seven thousand kegs
in seven thousand dorm rooms,
except we were high schoolers,
mostly,
a couple of guys who could be in college,
but they weren’t in college,
instead
they were training
and punching bags until their knuckles bled
and our coach,
was the evil coach
in the karate movies,
just like that,
the evil coach
who told us to kill them in the ring
and we asked what he meant by that
and he said to punch them in the throat
or the balls
or the kidneys
if the ref wasn’t looking
and to get in one extra jab
after the bell rings,
and I was benching 350 at the time
because I had all the anger
of the world
in my cerebellum,
and my cousin
who was probably the baddest ass of them all
was taking psychology,
the only one of us
actually taking a college class,
one solitary college class,
and he was taking it,
he said,
because he wanted to learn how to ‘destroy his opponent’s mind’in the ring
and he’d ask his psychology professor
at the community college,
hand raised,
in front of the class,
asking,
How do you get into someone’s head so that they realize you’re going to crush them if they even try?
and the teacher would say,
“What?”
and there was a knock on the door,
the hotel room door,
because that’s what hotel room doors do,
and we all got quiet,
yell-whispering, “Shut the fuck up!”
but when thirteen teenagers whisper,
“Shut the fuck up!”
it’s pretty loud,
and a voice in the hall
shouted for us to open up
and we all froze
and we could hear the key in the lock
and one of us whispered loud as hell,
“Turn off the lights,”
so we dove for the lights,
turning them all off,
and someone grabbed the window curtain
and tried to pull it closed,
but only got halfway
when the door opened
and we all just leaped
into sleeping positions,
pretending we were all asleep,
all thirteen of us,
huddled in the bed
with our clothes on
and some sleeping on the floor,
except we weren’t sleeping,
but pretending,
and one idiot
even
got in the bathtub,
pretending he was sleeping
in the tub
and the manager just stood
in the center of the room
with all these idiot child-boxers
lying all over the place
and he said, “OK, that’s enough.
You all need to vacate this room
or I call the police”
and then all of us,
like we’d scripted it,
sprang up
with our athlete bodies,
our protein intake addictions,
our iron ore soot heads,
and just ran
in every direction,
out the front door,
through a window,
through the sliding door to the balcony
where we jumped
from the second floor
into grass,
rolling,
like ninjas on fire,
like gymnasts with chlamydia,
like funeral parlor attendees with trampoline training,
and the night’s shadows welcomed us
and I remember us
laughing
like blind witches
and I remember how none of us had bought the room
so whoever did
was left behind
with the manager
standing over him
looking down
and realizing
he was staring
at some kid
who’d done so much steroids
that his arteries were about to explode
and then they did,
every artery
detonating
like the dynamite
at the mines
so that the hotel manager
was covered
head to foot
by all of the absent fathers
throughout history.



We’re at a Burger King and my cousin’s drunk
 
and a girl comes in
with big breasts
and my cousin sees this
and says out loud, “Wow”
and then realizes how loud
he has said this,
but he couldn’t help it,
but they were ‘wow’ breasts
and the girl hears this
and my cousin has his back to her now,
embarrassed,
eating his fries,
head down,
and the girl starts walking towards us
and she sees me see her
and she puts her finger up to her mouth
to make the shhh sign
and I’m wondering if she is about to punch
my cousin in the head
and if that’s what she’s about to do,
I have an incredible view
of what’s about to happen
and
to be honest
my cousin could use a good slap to the skull,
so I’m all on board
with this stranger
whose breasts
as they get closer
I realize
are more than ‘wow’ breasts;
they are breasts
that deserve
their own
“Star-Spangled Banner,”
whatever ‘spangled’
means
and this girl
straight
from the clubs
like us
and exhausted
from the night
like us
comes up behind my cousin,
directly behind him
like a villain
in a horror movie
and she takes both of those spangling breasts
in each of her hands,
lifts them up
and plops them down
on top of my cousin’s head
and he looks at me
with eyes like a child
just baptized
in a Christian school
made out of
Turkish delight
and my cousin’s shocked smile is heavenly
and cherubic
and blessed,
my cousin’s face reveals
sheer appreciation
and wonder
and awe
of the numinous
and the girl looks at me and smiles
and takes her breasts and
puts them back in her purse and
turns away
and goes up to the counter
to order
and my cousin is speechless
and the world
is beautiful
and the streetlamps
are obscenely pregnant with light
and the windows
shimmer
with all of our bodies
in the reflection
as if we
are cinematic
and
sometimes
for split seconds
we are.



In boot camp, the drill instructor told us that if we fucked up, we had better
 
stick to whatever stupidity we’d just done,
saying that if he said “left face”
and one of us boneheads did a right face,
that we’d better stick with that idiotic left face
we’d just done, even if the whole rest of the unit
was now facing in the exact opposite direction
and if any of us
realized what we’d done wrong
and suddenly just turned around,
pretending like nothing had happened,
well,
then,
he said,
he’d grab us by the throat and yank out our larynxes and throw the bloody guts of it into an envelope and mail it to our goddamn grandmothers,
so we realized
we had to just eat our mistakes
or
better yet
just not make any,
which was my plan,
so I’d always listen
like my life depended on it,
because it did,
because those sadistic bastards
would come up with punishments
that would make you want to
cut off your testicles
so that you could stuff them in
your ears
so you wouldn’t have to listen
to your own agonizing groans
and
anyway
long poem short
we were in a field
because that’s what you do in boot camp,
they take you to fields
and swimming pools
like in your youth,
except they ruin those memories
by turning the swimming pool
into a place where you almost drown
on a daily basis
and the field
is where you march
until your feet
ask you politely
to please be sawed off
and replaced
with metal
because the callouses now
are so large that they
have broadcasting careers
in Ethiopia,
and we were marching
and marching
and marching
in February,
which is worse than March,
much colder,
tons of clouds
that all looked like
they had different forms of cancer,
one cloud that I’m sure had a lymphoma
or several
and there was no time to enjoy the slow death of the clouds
because the drill instructor drilled for us
“To the left flank, march!”
which means you march to the left flank,
which isn’t too hard
if you’re not absolutely dumb as a stop sign in Hell,
except one kid,
of course,
did a “to the right flank, march!” in his head
and his body
and he turned and
just started marching
in the exact opposite direction
from the other
79 of us,
just this one moron
who I could sense
was getting further and further
away
and the drill instructor
just kept us
marching
and we had a whole football field
to march across
but the other kid
who was alone now
and committed
to his error and
just kept marching,
but he was running out of room,
coming up to a fence,
and so,
military bearing
and all,
he committed to it
and just kept marching into the fence
over and over
pushing his body into the fence
and bouncing off it
and I didn’t see this,
but was told
later by someone
in another company
who saw it all
and the drill instructor
yelled,
“Company halt!”
and we halted
and apparently
we were a company,
but a company of teens
who didn’t know how to march
or think
or shave
or anything
but we halted
and the kid—
his name was Maliwicki and
I’ll remember that name
forever
because the drill instructor
ran all the way
over to him
and started screaming,
“Maliwicki,
are you going to march into
that goddamn fence all day!
Or are you going
to bless us
with the presence
of your fucked-up teeth!”
and
I have to be honest
but
a couple weeks later,
I caught Maliwicki
in the head (the bathroom to all you civilians out there)
and Maliwicki was looking
in the mirror
at his teeth
and you could tell
he was thinking,
“Are they really that fucked up looking?”
and they weren’t
but it didn’t matter, because now
it was in his head,
and for the rest of his life
whenever he would see fence,
he would think of marching
and whenever he thought of marching
he would think of fence,
the two married to each other
for a billion years
and his fucked-up teeth
would remember fence
and that fence would remember his teeth and
I remember how they put Maliwicki
on Officer’s Sidewalk
where he had to stand
all night long,
no sleep,
holding a fake wooden gun
up above his head,
which is impossible to do
for more than five minutes,
but he had to do it all night
with the drill instructor watching him
from a window
until the drill instructor left
and Maliwicki couldn’t turn around
to see if he was still there
and at night
the racoons watched him
standing there
with that stupid fake gun causing his arms
to shake like an epileptic
and
this world
is the stupidest thing
ever invented.



Sometimes the boss likes it when you’re considering suicide
 
It’s called power
and some people just love it,
eat that shit up,
especially the more you’re pondering it,
where they get to realize,
“Wow, I’m collapsing his will to live,
how special am I?”
and then
there are bosses
who are just normal
and neutral
and
Jesus Christ,
do I love the ones who are neutral
and just leave you alone,
but the ones who are like giant ogres of death with fangs and knives
own the world
and get promoted
and eat babies
during their off-hours
and do it
with a passion
unequalled
by mankind.



I used to be afraid of ghosts, but then I got old
 
and now ghosts see me
and they realize I’m almost ghost myself
so they leave me alone,
which means
my room
at night
is empty,
when it used to be jam-packed
with a dozen
or more
of those floating bastards
when I was a child,
just ghost after ghost after ghost after ghost after ghost
hovering over my bed
and I could feel their presence,
the sheets wrapped tight around my feet
so that a toe
sure as hell
didn’t stick out,
because if it did,
I was sure
it would be torn off
and eaten
like an M&M,
but now
I sleep
and I don’t even care
if my hand is hanging
off the bed,
because the ghosts will look
at my hand
and think, “Who the hell wants an old-ass hand”
and they just let it dangle there
looking down at their own hands
that used to clutch blankets
back when they were alive
and young
and gorgeously
terrified.






Ron Riekki has been awarded a 2014 Michigan Notable Book, 2015 The Best Small Fictions, 2016 Shenandoah Fiction Prize, 2016 IPPY Award, 2020 Rhysling Anthology inclusion, 2019 Red Rock Film Fest Award, 2020 Dracula Film Festival Vladutz Trophy, 2019 Très Court International Film Festival Audience Award and Grand Prix, and 2022 Pushcart Prize. Right now, Riekki's listening to Trent Reznor's "Technically, Missing" from the Gone Girl score.

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