Perry

by Barry Peters

He back-kicks the metal door
while jiggling its silver handle,
jimmies the high school gym
so we can ball on a winter’s night.

The irony: Perry has no game,
his dribble too high, his jump shot
too flat. What he does have is gab;
when the police arrive, guns drawn,

Perry argues, We entered, sir,
but we didn’t break anything.
At Mass the next morning I consider
Perry’s courage. We aren’t stars,

or even second string, but we do have
each other. I count that blessing,
and sometimes still do, decades later,
dozing in a different pew, a different church

with the bleary sense we’ve hooped
past midnight, dreaming of Perry
in the choir loft stealing a seat
at the organ, kicking into a little soul.

 

 

Barry Peters and his wife, the writer Maureen Sherbondy, live in Durham, North Carolina. Publications include Barrow Street, Grist, Image, New Ohio Review, Rattle, RHINO, and The Southern Review.

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