Regrets

Mark Katrinak

The countless cigarettes and regulations,

I smoked in heavy rain—butt-end of jokes,

expensive habits, coughing riddling me;

the autumn leaves disseminating on the walk,

I didn’t turn a final time to take

a look at you, that there was one more gift

exuding from your irises I could

have memorized; no patience, not one ounce

to watch a maple leaf detach, descend

in Technicolor to its end; to not have stared

deeply into the homeless woman’s eyes,

hesitant of an answer there; we did

not make love frequently which made love less,

less than what two were capable of, time

edging closer to what was meaningless;

well-struck, a childhood’s worth of sitting ducks,

a kid not striking back; obsessive with

your beauty’s potpourri, I failed to amend

your roots, if only water of a single tear;

that day I hurried out of house my prayers took

a turn for worse, worse than a nun imagines;

my well of tears ran dry and yet the grief

remained—I’d settled in a droughty place,

roots cracking through the earth and burros down

to straw and bone; for sake of nicotine,

yellowing resting on my fingertips;

beyond these facial lines those sadnesses

left unmentioned, December’s clinging leaves

dismissing their inevitable, wind-blown

expulsion from the oaks and sycamores.