Wai Gong’s Funeral
Wai Gong was always dead.
He was no different
In the coffin
Than in the hospital bed
“He brought you to the beach,” Mommy said
But I didn’t remember
I knew him for sickness
For white sheets, for the sterile room
Where he used to lie
And I at the foot of his bed
Averting my gaze
Watching cartoons on the TV on the wall
(That merciful TV)
Before going back to the states
I knew him for money
For the stories, the legends
Of cats’ eyes, of towering ships, of vaults of gold
Money summoned from the world itself
Like a magic trick
“For your college,” Mommy said
I should have felt more
But the church was gloomy
And my throat was dry and I needed to pee
And I was in a strange land of strange people
Who looked like me
But weren’t like me at all
I stood on the stage
And felt fear, such fear
My heart kicking like a rabbit
I was the victim.
Pitilessly, the piano began
And stiffly, I sang
“I will always be there … you’ll have me there”
Panic!
I forgot to drop an octave
We had practiced, practiced so many times
But I forgot, I forgot
My hands were shaking
My voice wasn’t mine
“Other memories may fade,
But the ones that we made
Are eternal as a star …”
My thin voice lifted higher, higher
Strained like cracking glass
And finally shattered.
The song ended.
The crowd was impassive
Why didn’t they clap?
I lurched offstage
Past the gleaming sarcophagus
And melted into the mass
Humiliated, resentful, worn
But Mommy cried, and smiled
Smiled for the first time that day
Lillian Tsao is a junior studying Creative Writing with a minor in Computer Science. She is an aspiring journalist interested in music and film. To see more of her work, please visit thetsaoreport.wordpress.com.