Greg Rappleye
Summer 2024 | Poetry
Checker Cab
“To be sure, marriage was no more attractive an option in America
than it had been in Ireland. On both sides of the ocean, many couples
were miserable.”
“Irish America” by Lawrence J. McCaffrey, The Wilson Quarterly,
Vol. 9, No. 2 (Spring, 1985)
It was a deranged midnight brawl
over rent squandered at the harness track,
or perhaps over a mystery woman, who lived
in a second floor walk-up on Rundle Street.
But above all our American nights, this was legend—
screams, wingéd ash trays, shattered bottles,
a wall splattered with blood that would copper-brown
as a martyr’s relic, holy and untouched,
into a new millennium, the Philco and its duct-taped
bunny ears, chucked out the door to smithereens,
the berserk words tumbling through spittle
flecked lips and Looney Tunes lipstick,
the syllables of which we knew
were mortal sins the nuns would drag us off
to confess, were we to chant them in sing-song voices
on the whirl-around at St. Mary’s School,
until Mam was locked in the bathroom
slashing air with a straight-edge,
primed to cut Da’s throat, and Da outside the door
battering it to splinters with a smash hammer
and my sister, age 8, came whispering
to our rooms. She’d crept down the stairs,
descending through a haze of Lucky Strikes
and spilt booze and called for a cab to rescue us.
We tip-toed to the front steps, the youngest weeping
and even there, the battle-bangs of that fight: the screams,
the assault on that door, echoed across the porch
and through the fizzy, still-sparking tubes of the Philco,
as a vast Checker cab—headlights, top sign and taillights
glowing—nosed along the curb as if it were
the Cork ferry snuggling to berth, with acres of room
for weepy kids in underpants and half-pajamas.
The cab driver, who took the Host at our church,
sputtered at first, saying No and no to my sister,
but hearing Mam’s screams, the crash of glass
and curses, the porch lights snapping up
and down our street, sighed a centuries-old Celtic sigh
then drove without words the six blocks
to our aunt’s American foursquare and left us,
knocking up her front door, all for what coins
my sister scrounged, sifting lint from the sugarless sugar jar.
And surely they raged on, or so claim the neighborhood sagas,
with pikes and axes and epic broadswords,
with daggers and cause-lost flags,
wearing the shirt-mail they’d woven from thick skeins
of alcohol and desire, laced through metallic scales
rasped and scatter-loose from immense silver carp,
and it did not occur to them when they woke—hungover,
blooded, bruised and still coupled for life,
that we were not there. That we were gone.
Greg Rappleye’s poems have previously appeared in POETRY, The Southern Review, The North American Review, Arts & Letters, Shenandoah, Virginia Quarterly Review, Water-Stone Review, and many other journals. His second collection, A Path Between Houses (University of Wisconsin Press, 2000) won the Brittingham Prize. His third book, Figured Dark (University of Arkansas Press, 2007), was co-winner of the Arkansas Prize in Poetry and was published in the Miller Williams Poetry Series. His fourth collection is Tropical Landscape with Ten Hummingbirds, (Dos Madres Press, 2018), which won the Arts & Letter Prize in Poetry. He teaches in the English Department at Hope College, Holland, Michigan.