Be the Dog, by J. Allyn Rosser
I
The administrative assistant stands serenely
with her green cloth coat on, Friday, 5:02.
Her boss taps his Mont Blanc, mentioning
the misdirected invoice for the eighth time.
She knows he has recently been responsible
for losing a prized client. He will work late tonight.
He will come in early on Saturday, maybe also
Sunday afternoon. Her eyes narrow slightly:
She will have her work cut out for her, he says
with ill-disguised pleasure. It is hard to tell
whether her eyes suppress a smile of compassion
or amused contempt. By the time she leaves
the close elevator for the cool, shining, marble walk
to the weekend, it’s compassion.
II
The big brother scorns the little brother
in a voice that cracks.
How does he expect to ever make the team
if he’s going to dribble like a girl?
The little brother doesn’t really care
about basketball. He watches.
Will his big brother have to sit on the bench
again during Saturday’s big game?
Afterward, will they clown around at the pizza place?
Now try it! He dribbles, shoots and misses,
almost glad, almost relieved to hear the curses
cracking in the air above his head.
III
Two women sit in the park. One is nodding softly,
inhaling the rich, shimmery air of April.
The statuesque one is successful in the theatre,
fairly well known. Her clothes drape her precisely
as she counsels her old friend: . . . an outrage!
Promise me you’ll quit, start your own business.
The other one smiles with grateful skepticism
and toys with the dustjacket of a book
balanced on her lap, as if it were the book
she is going to write about her friend
in which she will fondly describe the statuesque
features, the grand, reckless gestures
and the clear voice hardened by too much speaking,
or too much being listened to.
IV
Twenty feet away, a tired-looking man says MAX!
as his labrador, growling, bobbing its head
playfully, chomps on the leash in its mouth,
snarling and wagging, yanking the man roughly on
as if to say, I know what it is to be master
without which knowledge
I would not have agreed, believe me,
to be the dog.
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