Sunday, April 14, 2019

Fabulist

One last post from the UK. A year ago I rode with a driver from the airport to my daughter's home in London. Let's just say I found him to be a chatty fellow.



Fabulist


The driver from Heathrow,
cut from fair Anglo-Saxon cloth,
chatted like Chaucer, weaving tales
as we wound our way thru London.

"The truth about the Russian spies
poisoned here? A frame-up aimed at Putin
by sloppy Ukrainians. Those two would
be dead if the order originated in Moscow."

The scenery blurred at motorway speeds.

Eyebrows raised, bushy with innuendo,
he asked, "You ever wonder about the French
President with his 'dandy' clothes and older wife?
Not a manly man, if you catch my drift."

The car slowed as we exited the off-ramp,
windows closed, doors secured.

"And then there's the biggest threat
of all - Merkel and her ilk. Opening
their arms to millions of immigrants.
A sea-tide of undesirables, if ever I saw one."

His monologue drowned out dissent.

Without warning, the blackened hull
of Grenfell Tower hovered on our right,
palpable sadness burnt into the ruin.

But the driver, on a different frequency,
could not hear the migrant histories wafting
through empty windows, nor sense the struggles
on overloaded rafts, resettlement camps.

Despite its cool interior, the car felt stifling
until I recognized the noisy jay that he was,
squawking against a changing world.

At the end of the journey I hesitated
but could not withhold a gratuity. Despite all,
a working man voicing his opinions.



Marilyn Aschoff Mellor

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