Maybe

Upon our last breath

the doors of a courtroom open;

we’re here to account for our death

and the many things we’ve broken.

 

Perhaps we’re appointed a lawyer

who’s seen every step we’ve taken.

A bald, overweight man,

who, for eternity, feels forsaken.

 

“Order in the court! Please rise,”

says a bailiff.

The others unbend,

rigid shoulders, stiff.

 

Maybe there’s a vending machine

down the hall that only sells Moxie.

‘I’m supposed to be dead,’

you think, the dark finally caught me.

 

You sneak through the huge courtroom doors

and race for the soda machine

only to learn you have no wallet,

for here, there’s no currency.

 

You straggle back in

for a chat with your lawyer-

He tells you the worst thing you’ve done

is rob your parents of a responsible son.

 

“The sleepless nights,” he begins to say,

“were hell on earth to them,” and he turns away.

You remember that you didn’t care;

your conscience held no sway.

 

Now your before the cloak in black

slouched behind a bench.

He’s smoking a Cuban

filling the room with its stench.

 

“Stand up, son, this is your accounting,”

his voice, deep and hypnotic.

“I see mostly wasted time here

and a laziness that’s chronic.”

 

Your stomach twirls and jumps.

“Your mother died early, because of you,”

shouts the ethereal figure.

“now it’s time for you.”

 

Like a snowfall in your mind,

all you can see is cocaine.

All that it took,

and it drove your mother insane.

 

“I’m guilty, your honor, of waisting my life,

but in my defense, I had no idea why I was born.”

It was a lie, but I had nowhere else to turn.

To tell the truth would mean being thrown to hell and to burn.

 

He looked at me and I looked at him;

the cloak was too loose and he was too thin.

“The verdict has arrived,” he bellowed,

though I saw no jury.

 

“You are sentenced to life,”

I melted into the floor.

“No, you idiot, you can leave through the door,”

 

Maybe, just maybe, those were the doors I walked into this world through.

 

 

This entry was posted in New Stories by Ben Dooling. Bookmark the permalink.

About Ben Dooling

I began this blog shortly after being diagnosed with terminal rectal cancer. It has since begotten a short book of poems, most of the poems came from here. Cancer has taught me more than it has taken. It has shown me my gifts, and what an examined life is.

One thought on “Maybe

  1. Ben what is an “examined ” life?? Oh and i am so glad that you have found out who you are….and where your talents lie…..so how have you wasted your life?? If we are living each moment as best we can, it is never a waste. We never know where it all leads………

Comments are closed.