By Seth Peterson
it happened fast. Suddenly, everyone had Rubik’s cubes
& Game Boys.
All day, their eyes & hands were busy, waving sepia Polaroids,
lining up kaleidoscopes.
They felt an easing in their hearts, a silence they couldn’t place.
At night, they noticed these things
could still glow, these new old things, humming in their own way.
Humming
the way a mother hums to her child. A wrecking ball revived these things.
A confederate statue
had its head hacked off at midnight. No one could find it, & for months
it stood there, headless,
haunting all their dreams, until everyone agreed to tear it down.
Beneath the concrete
horse hooves, the elaborate part of the monument, was a hollow-slotted base.
There were murmurs
as the steel crashed into it. They remembered the capsule at its heart.
They remembered
what it was to be a child again. They remembered piñatas & birthdays.
The clap of steel
on concrete sent out a splash of color. A Cabbage Patch Kid.
A Walkman.
A pair of hot pink leg warmers. Each one humming like a memory.
The point is,
these were things they wanted to remember. & it happened
everywhere,
all across the country, all at once. & their hearts were eased.
Some boys, soon after,
claimed to have found the statue’s head. It was covered by wintercreeper
in the woods, they claimed.
It was haphazardly spattered with peat moss. The rumor is,
it’s still there,
absorbing knives of moonlight. They say its mask is ghastly.
It is ghastly.
You think it’s gone, but things can change.
Seth Peterson is an emerging writer, researcher, and physical therapist in Tucson, Arizona. His poems have been published or are forthcoming in Bellevue Literary
Review, Pirene’s Fountain, and elsewhere. He serves as an Associate Editor for
JOSPT Cases and teaches with The Movement Brainery.