6.3.16 (#65):BIKES by Myron Lysenko. A poem inspired by Susan Hawthorne, who was inspired by Efi Hatzimanolis.
We both got new bikes
for Christmas. Dad must have won big at the races. We rode them around the back
lawn first and then my brother and I hit the road. My bike was a little too big
for me but my young brother’s bike was just right. My brother really wanted to race me but I knew
I should win so said no. We pedalled back home in a head wind and rode in circles around the yard till he jumped
off his bike under the hill’s hoist and stayed hanging there by his two arms. His
bike came to rest in the rose bush and leaned gleaming in the afternoon sun. He
dared me to do it too so I did. I manoeuvred my bike into line. As I did so he
pumped the hoist’s handle and lifted it high as he could. I steered my bike
under the hills hoist and I yelled out that it was unfair. But I leapt and my
hands clasped the hill’s hoist. I tried hard to hang on but I slipped. I hit
the hard ground on an angle. When I got up I walked with a limp to my bike
which crashed into the wall. The front wheel was buckled and wonky. I carried
my bike to the garage, my brother’s laugh adrift in the breeze. I washed the bike with a red rag and tried to
hide it in the dark corner. But the sunlight came in through the window and
highlighted the broken front wheel.
'memoir' too? good one, Myron. Emblematic.
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