Danny Callaghan
By Drew Swinger
“Sad news”: it’s Danny Callaghan,
Dead a year after his brother died
Of the same weak heart their father had.
Gone are all the Callaghan men.
His mother will share with anyone
Who asks her what his doctor said:
The varices in his stomach bled
From all the drinking he had done
In the one year—just one year’s time.
She doesn’t need to add because
He loved his brother so. The laws
Of understanding drive it home.
Nor do I doubt that it was true.
We were schoolmates, little else.
I had no finger on his pulse.
But as a little boy can do
Who sees another whose laugh can make
Ten others laugh, whose counterpoise
At ease betrays a gift for plays
At shooting guard or quarterback,
I looked on him as an idol, to
The point that I could almost pine
Merely to be a member in
The retinue of his retinue.
And there were nights I lay awake
Restless, empty, when I would write
Over and over his name on the slate
Behind my eyelids with airy chalk.
(I don’t know why at forty-two
I find this strange. At eight or ten
The habit had been ingrained as in
The certain way one ties a shoe.)
Which is why years later, when
Returning to the neighborhood
On break from college, I had stood
Watching, from a distance, Dan
And his big brother, the same height then,
Out in the schoolyard, just the two
Of them alone and midway through
A game of baseball, playing one-
On-one if you ignore the wall
That echoed them like a tympanum
Behind the plate for the pitcher’s team.
And now and again a ball would sail
Over some bike racks for a home run
And one would hang his head in grief
As if to wish for his relief
As the other hollered on and on
Then shake it off to hasten his chance
To pay him back the compliment.
Back and forth Dan and his brother went
With such seeming permanence,
With such sweep of indifference
To anything that didn’t bear
On swings or pitches or the score,
Or smacked of outside influence
On that otherwise dull summer day,
It was as if the two orbited
As each the other’s satellite
And I was Kepler to their joy—
If only joy would never end,
All brothers play as they had played,
And none of them be bound to trade
A box for a box and mound for mound.
Source: Poetry (June 2020)