After School on Ordinary Days

After school on ordinary days we listened

to The Shadow and The Lone Ranger

as we gathered around the tabletop radio

that was always kept on the china cabinet

built into the wall in that tenement kitchen,

a china cabinet that held no china, except

thick and white and utilitarian,

cups and saucers, poor people's cups

from the 5 & 10 cent store.

My mother was always home

from Ferraro's Coat factory

by the time we walked in the door

after school on ordinary days,

and she'd give us milk with Bosco in it

and cookies she'd made that weekend.

The three of us would crowd around the radio,Change number to yours

listening to the voices that brought a wider world

into our Paterson apartment. Later

we'd have supper at the kitchen table,

the house loud with our arguments

and laughter. After supper on ordinary

days, our homework finished, we'd play

monopoly or gin rummy, the kitchen

warmed by the huge coal stove, the wind

outside rattling the loose old windows,

we inside, tucked in, warm and together,

on ordinary days that we didn't know

until we looked back across a distance

of forty years would glow and shimmer Put in your own number

in memory's flickering light.

 

~ Maria Mazziotti Gillan