Smart People
By Dwaine Rieves
Posted on
It would be, I told
my mother, better though clueless
is, as smart people say, the only
truth in cancer.
Within the world
opposite us, smart people were leaving
Baghdad, war plans prepared.
A port appeared
beneath her clavicle, fluid in tubes
though eyes turned to a top general
fingering before smart people a vial meant
to worry nations.
Neupogen didn’t
help, red cells only hurt, and though
a tyrant could have done us in with
what smart people called mass
destruction, I kept telling her
it would be better.
Numbers went
up, bombs down and Gemzar, a drug all but
named for a missile, went in, doctors
making it monthly, a hit.
Iraqis buckled
under and though no battering spared
a minaret relief, I kept telling
her it would be better.
Maybe a well-meaning lie
deserves years of silence, the pin
then pulled on intentions, a miracle
spared, someone missing.
I trained
with a doctor who gave saline
injections to demanding patients.
They left
happy, the salty sting repurposing
a pain other doctors couldn’t fix.
Relief. No questions asked.
I value belief, so
I doubt my mother ever believed me
or smart people who said this war soon
would be over.
A decade and more
beyond, and the doctor in me needs
a shot, a morning when he quits awakening
in Baghdad, smart people saying
it’s only a visit.
– Dwaine Rieves