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A Widow and Her Pekingese

Summer evenings
after the news at 6 p.m.
the Widow Murphy comes out
 
of her tiny bungalow and sits
on her front porch swing
with her ancient Pekingese
 
yapping mournfully in her lap.
She waves to certain people,
just a few, while ignoring most
 
although she knows every neighbor
after her long reign on the porch
as the queen of our block.
 
We live next door but she never
waves to us or says hello to me
not even back when I was 10
 
and offered to mow her lawn free
for nothing, as I used to put it.
She simply looked away and let
 
the Pekingese yap her answer.
My father told me then not to worry
about the Widow Murphy’s ways.
 
Her husband died in Korea, he said.
They never found her son in Viet Nam
and she had a daughter doing life
 
for murdering a man the jury must
have known had beaten her for years.
The man was her husband and a cop.
 
Later in my teens my mother said
the Widow Murphy had every right
to be a private person and live out
 
the remnant of her life as she saw fit.
But when I was 10 cutting our grass,
I thought she was a ventriloquist
 
and the Pekingese her dummy
yapping for all the world to hear:
Life isn’t fair, isn’t fair, isn’t fair.
 
Donal Mahoney

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