Gary’s Bistro
I’ve heard this one 100 times:
My father Richard, 26 years old,
fists balled, knuckles barnacle-white, 
beelining for a bistro in Carytown, 
Richmond, gentrifying shopping district, 
circa 1972, a decade before I was born.  
The owner, a real piece of shit 
it has been confirmed, left a greasy 
handprint on an employee’s backside
and that employee was my mother. 
Mom said, I’m used to it. I already quit. 
Don’t make a scene. But not my pops! 
Not his wife. He wouldn’t stand for it.
But between him and his chauvinistic 
destiny a small black kid, 9 or 10 years 
of age, clutching his head, bleeding into 
his eyes and through his fingers, 
stumbling as callous white folks 
divert attention to shop windows. 
He was hit with a brick, three older kids 
escaping around the corner, and now 
my father, public school teacher (such 
a noble profession), has a new emergency. 
He guides the cussing boy to 
the sub shop stoop. The kid’s a leaky faucet, 
tears now in the mixture, pooling at 
his sneakers, and guess who, that’s right, 
the villain of this fable, misogynist, 
ass-slapper extraordinaire comes out 
to say get that kid (did he use another 
word?) the fuck outta here. And this 
the moment, the climax when everything 
clicks into place-an alignment of dad’s 
and the dinner party guest’s moral universe: 
Good Man, Protector of Woman’s Virtue, 
White Savior, threatens to press 
the sexual assaulter’s face against 
the griddle if he doesn’t call an ambulance,
bring a towel.  The asshole does as he’s told. 
He doesn’t want his cheek seared
or he considers how his first instinct 
will be received by patrons. It’s not a case 
of his word against my mother’s anymore.  
The wound is cared for and the kid 
taken to the hospital.  
The end.
Dad, forgive my frustration that 
the kid arriving safely in his mother’s 
arms is not the end of the story,
my annoyance with your use of 
a black boy as prop and that I am damned 
to do it again. Excuse my sarcasm, 
my skepticism, my use of “woke” terms 
to question your intentions. You should be 
allowed your self-aggrandizements and 
omissions at 75 years of age. You were 
a helluva man. Still are. Never a shithead
like Gary. Mom always wanted a bumper sticker:  
“Too many dicks, not enough Richards.” 
I’ll shut up and put my angst in 
the poem I may never show you. You’re from 
a different time, as they say, and this city is
the failed capital of the Confederacy. 
 
                        