The Absence of Sky

William Doreski

 

As you attempt to question the sky

it coughs itself empty, leaving

a socket large enough to plug in

 

the one universal connection.

But what about people cringing

with intractable cancer pain

 

or the loss of a beloved pet?

What about warmongers claiming

the lives, land, and possessions

 

of those who aren’t even enemies?

In our placid beige neighborhood

stick houses sell for millions

 

to ensure that the poor go unhoused.

Medical care is weighed on a scale

balanced by solid gold ingots.

 

You know how ugly the zombies

of public sadism become when

someone challenges their rule.

 

You peer into the absence of sky

and wonder how such a hollow

can maintain its baggy shape.

 

A woman pushes a stroller crammed

with toddlers, blankets, and canned goods.

She would never look up at the sky

 

at the same angle you assume

when shellfire roars five thousand miles

merely to fall at your feet.