To My Lifelong Friend Going To Prison
You said you thought the word was pure to describe the moonlight above us on our last night in boarding school, when you and I broke the rules and slept outside under a blanket of young summer. You had just written in my yearbook, “We will always be this way, no secrets, best friends. Nothing will dim the gold of what we had these years together.” And I, hopelessly in love with believing, fell asleep with your words in my heart. And years later your words were those of blessing as you stood in sacred vestments and placed your newly anointed hands upon my head. You called upon Jesus for me, and I felt such grateful faith in you, my friend, now an ordained priest of God, a moral lighthouse to guide us and show us right from wrong. On Sundays I would love and envy your hands, which held the Host and chalice in Catholic candlelight as I knelt in worship and belief. So now I don’t know what to do, old friend and molester of other fathers’ sons. On yesterday’s front page you hid your face with handcuffed hands like a convict, like a coward, and I thought of those boys, the horror their belief in you brought them, their life sentence of limping through years with memories of you. And I felt the chaos of grieving what I had loved about you as four decades of friendship crumbled like ashes. Last night, your first in prison, I dreamed you escaped to my backyard. You were crying my name, sobbing about forgiveness, begging me to remember what we had been. But I stayed in the doorway, my arms locked around my four-year-old son, a brother in innocence to the boys you hurt. And when Liam asked me who you were, I stared out at your pleading eyes, your ugly orange prison suit, and told him, “Some criminal. Stay close while I call the police.”
Alone With Love Songs
It was an old motel overlooking Lake Michigan, the rooms converted to tiny furnished apartments for people like me — single, straight out of Catholic seminary — for $85 a month: just enough space to live for the first time by myself. Some days I’d stand for hours gazing out at the waves, sipping coffee and smoking the cigarettes I needed like air — not the last time in my life I would crave what was killing me. And I’d listen to records. In solitude, I fell in love with love songs. Years before mortgages and picking out patio furniture, I shared my time with Sinatra and Mathis, Linda Ronstadt and Carole King, just music and me, my eyes set on restless Lake Michigan, vast as the future when you’re twenty and in love with the promise of love from James Taylor or Joni Mitchell. When Wisconsin snow would erase the lake from my window, I’d feel a blizzard of flames inside me as I listened hour after hour to haunting ballads blurring the distance between the romantic and the real, and I, love’s lonely apprentice, taking it all in, getting it all wrong.