The Paddock Review

• •

A Poem by Ed McManis

Trash Truck, 7:38 A.M.

 

We hear different

things. She hears that

powerful engine, screech 

 

of the lifting arm, squeal

of the brakes, and I suspect

she ponders that quarterback 

 

she dated in high school

as she rises, not too quickly, 

to gaze out the window. 

 

I forgot to turn

our bin arrows out,

placed said bin too close

 

to the trees, an impediment

for those giant forked arms.

The trash man must step down

 

into the street, break his rhythm.

He grabs the green bin, swings

it like an overweight 

 

partner that can’t dance,

—our weekly household load—

into that gaping mouth 

 

that grinds and chews

and flips the mess into its

metal belly. I can hear him

 

swearing as he rolls the empty 

bin away from the maple trees.

He shakes his head, throws

 

a disparaging look toward

the house until he sees her 

peek out the window. 

 

She loosens her barrettes, 

lets her hair flow

past the sill, 

 

down the new siding,

like a curled invitation,

a ladder of perfumed love,

 

and I hear his smudged

sigh swallowed by his county

engine, feel the vibrations

 

shake our locked windows.

 

…..

This poem is from the chapbook Trash Truck 7:38 A.M. (And Other Love Poems) by Ed McManis (Finishing Line Press), and can be found at https://www.finishinglinepress.com/product/trash-truck-738-a-m-and-other-love-poems-by-ed-mcmanis/


Ed McManis is a writer, editor, & erstwhile Head of School. His work has appeared in more than 60 publications, including The Blue Road Reader, California Quarterly, Narrative, Lascaux Review, etc. He, along with his wife, Linda, have published esteemed author Joanne Greenberg’s (I Never Promised You a Rose Garden) novels, Jubilee Year and On the Run.
Little known trivia fact: he holds the outdoor free-throw record at Camp Santa Maria: 67 in a row.