Father, You’re Standing at the Corner of Wabash and Ohio
Sarah Huddleston
Barrington, IL
Barrington High School
Poetry
and you pause and allow the world to pass by, and
for a moment, you hear footsteps resounding like
a swollen cello string, a sharp inhale, exhale,
a conductor’s hesitation. Each block ahead is
another measure to memorize, each exposed
steel frame and tripartite skyscraper a changing
key signature, and careful, watch out
for the five o’clock rush, when arpeggios
of black briefcases rush past like a Mozart
symphony, all rolling bows and quick phrases,
sliding into your skin, so elastic that
for a moment, you can ease your heartbeat
into a metronome that beats with
that one piece, yes, that one that made you
come here and leave Cleveland summers
behind, when all you had that was yours alone
was that car and evenings spent with that old
Russian teacher, practicing piano etudes until
each vein in your hand grew into tunnels
connecting your body to your song, and when
you heard that Shostakovich No. 10 for the first
time, all creeping strings, violent scherzos, mournful
waltzes, at once a requiem and an awakening, you
knew that you belonged where music cushions
every rush of blood, every synaptic impulse, and here,
stopping at this corner years later, those first few
notes dislodge themselves inside your mind, knocking
into Chopin’s Nocturne in E Minor, an actuarial
practice test sitting half-finished on your bare
mattress, Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring, your brother
driving your old chevy back east across I-90,
Haydn’s Sonata in D Major, your mother selling
the living room piano your senior year, Rachmaninoff
piano concertos, your father gripping the staircase
railing, hands trembling, slowly, slowly, paying
his hospital bills with scraped money and that
last summer spent alone, waiting, always
waiting for more music, more life and here
is all that Tchaikovsky & Bach &
Schumann & Gershwin—a clarinet slide,
a single, flat note buzzing down a reed,
your sister banging on the bathroom door,
yelling Let me in! Let me in! Let me in!
a sudden swell of the violins, your father’s
thick, shrapnel sliced leg— then: Ritardando,
your mother’s hand on the steering wheel,
father resting his cane across the dashboard,
sister and brother and brother and brother
pressed together in the backseat
sharing a box of nilla wafers
while the radio pulsed with that
expansive finale.
ELOGIO EDITORIAL
Reader: I don’t know what it is about Chicago that it yearns to be languaged in song, but print this little beauty up, fold it, put it in your suitcase, and when this mess of a pandemic is over, go it to Chicago and read it on the corner of Wabash and Ohio. I’ll be the guy with the same poem in my hand.
Sarah Huddleston is a seventeen-year-old writer from the suburbs of Chicago. She currently attends Barrington High School (class of 2021), where she serves as the Editor-in-Chief of her school newspaper, as well as an editor for the literary and arts magazine. Her work has previously been published in The Heritage Review, Body Without Organs Journal, and the San Pedro River Review, and has been nationally recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards. When she is not dancing, Sarah dances ballet and enjoys experimenting with various vegan confections.
SOBRE O AUTOR