Articles/Essays – Volume 24, No. 1
Heartbreak Hill
I go to Brenda’s wedding wearing
her ex-husband’s cast-off temple garments.
After the kiss, Chuck starts to pull
the veil back down over Brenda’s face —
(the audience laughs) —
she gives him a look, and he flips it back up.
“I’m not a professional at this,” he cracks.
(We laugh even harder.)
At the reception, which just happens
to be under the brow of the Stake Center,
I sit at the gays’ table
listening to Country Rock on the patio
while my second wife nurses my seventh child.
Brenda smears cake all over Chuck’s face,
a drunk sings “Desperado,”
and my kids won’t dance with each other.
They want my strawberries
injected with Grand Marnier.
Just over the back fence
looms “Heartbreak Hill,” where the elders eternally
weed, where once the bishop’s son caught
a nest of yellow jackets up his pant leg —
I light a cigarette and glance over my plastic
champagne glass at some avocados I planted,
only last year.