In the theatre of my child heart,
I hold my plastic father.
His team lies dead
among flowerbed forests
in the Battle of the Backyard.
He’s emptied his M-16,
radioed for reinforcements
I know won’t arrive in time.
With a handgun no bigger
than my fingernail, he pops shots
at Stormshadow, Destro,
Nightstalker – but they number
too many and hide
too well. They pin him
and pick him apart –
a feast for their machetes
and my stolen serrated
kitchen knife. Here,
we take the man I love
and also don’t love –
all three and three-
quarter inches of him –
toward a two-pound truck
for his last act. There,
he is hacked, tucked in
under the plastic flap.
Mission complete.
As the envoy leaves,
the wind shifts, the curtain lifts,
and there – his knee joint
snapped sideways, pelvis piece,
his thick, smooth hair
scalped, a radio the size of a seed,
a hand with no thumb
to brace a gun, cupped toward me.