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Free-form verse intended to capture the raw mentality of a child's views on her father |
On Sunday mornings my father and I would skip the morning mass and show off our finest church clothes on the walk to the Paulina Street Meat Market. After all, mom was stone dead and we didnt go to church anymore anyways. Jesus is for suckers Pops always said. All dolled up in his grey suit, he bought the usual- fare, a pound of smoked Hungarian sausage links and three enormous rib eyes, all wrapped carefully in stiff white paper. My father would drag me down Sherman Boulevard with all the speed and determination of the roaring "El" passing above us, screeching by on twisted steel tracks, to Wrigley Field where we sat in the old wooden bleachers just behind the worn third base line, nibbling Hungarian sausages. Lying through his perfect white teeth, he told me again, of how he caught Hank Aaron's last home run ball twenty years ago in this very spot. On Sunday mornings we would walk home, past St. Aloysius Catholic Church at the very precise moment that mass would end, and sneak into the stream of church-goers as they filed out. This week's hell fire and damnation wiped away with a few Hail Mary's and a nickel or two sent to save the pagan babies. Pops, shaking the pastor's hand, congratulated him on a moving sermon. Under his breath, he'd mumble, Fuck this Jesus shit but we still went, every Sunday, suckers, and pretended to need salvation. |