"Deviation on Returns" by Daniel Khalastchi
Deviation on Returns
You purchased a
Spider. A 19
81 red Fiat
Spider that you
bought—brought
home, waxed hot
in the unlofted
soft-rot garage—the same
beige afternoon I
first lost time to the
second past lapse of
my recently bruised crude wisdom
tooth surgery. In
that car you
hid your immigrant
image, unsettled
a check paved deep
in your savings
to add a new crisis
and run off
the gun. Maybe in-
surance ensured my
mouth would be
served, sutured and
gauzed right-white
and pretty—or maybe
you hemorrhaged a weak
year’s pay without asking
your wife to park
the dark wheels heel-pitched
in our driveway, a damage still
damned as you flit toward
retirement. The tires
I tired of deep in that
brief post tooth-loss
sleep tried to hold us well
in the middle of
class. Get away
I said when you
brought to me ice, brought
to me Arabic sliced-rice
prayer. You slept on
the BarcaLounger next
to me on the couch, the
garage, your
car, your 1981 red
Fiat Spider. It was
Passover. When I
opened my mouth
two workless days
later, all of my
friends lived
in gated
communities. I forget
their names—the streets
and the golf clubs, the
power train engine specs
I never could
clutch. Twenty-five
years have shook and
took with them your
colon, your knees, your
need to be
colonized for having left home. Belief
you have said
is the grieving thief pulling damp
leaves from the gutter. Guts
I never had any. You gave up
the car. It lives
with my sister. The
night throws its
sand. We are handled
in airports. The band
in your speakers
speaks coarse of the country
that saved you, divesting
investments still leaving me
thinking you’d
have more to say.
Commissioned by the Iowa City UNESCO City of Literature’s MusicIC Festival and performed with the Solera Quartet 2019.
From American Parables by Daniel Khalastchi. Reprinted by permission of the University of Wisconsin Press. © 2021 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System. All rights reserved.
Daniel Khalastchi is an Iraqi Jewish American. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and a former fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, he is the author of three books of poetry—Manoleria (Tupelo Press), Tradition (McSweeney’s), and American Parables (University of Wisconsin Press, winner of the Brittingham Prize in Poetry). His work has appeared in numerous publications, including The Believer Logger, Colorado Review, Denver Quarterly, The Iowa Review, Poetry Northwest, and Best American Experimental Writing. Daniel has taught advanced writing, literature, and publishing courses at Augustana College, Marquette University, and the University of Iowa, most recently as a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. He currently lives in Iowa City where he directs the University of Iowa’s Magid Center for Undergraduate Writing. He is the cofounder and managing editor of Rescue Press.