An Ordinary Day


 

He was a great family man, a mentor, a father,

shot and killed by a fugitive he tried to arrest,

a man wanted for attempting to kill police officers

and for domestic violence.

He was a great family man, 53,

Trying to do his job.

 

Men in blue, grim, walk side by side past

flashing lights of squad cars, arrived too late.

One shakes his head, how easily it could have been him.

 

The yellow tape stretched now, from tree to tree,

marks off part of a world that will never see again

the family man, the mentor, the father.

Do not cross, do not cross, it says, do not cross,

as if we, who stand here, might want to pick a fight.

 

An ATF agent reconstructs how it went down.

The crime scene lady with her trim briefcase

steps resolutely forward, ready to do her job.

Voices, fighting tears, ask in whispers,

have they notified his wife?

 

The tape sways in the breeze.

2 responses to “An Ordinary Day”

  1. caroliviah Avatar
    caroliviah

    Thank you, Bruce. This is a poignant poem, I think the last stanza could even be stretched out a little longer . . . something what I put below . . . I guess I’d just like the ending to last a little longer.

    The tape
    An ATF agent reconstructs how it went down.
    The crime scene lady with her trim briefcase
    steps resolutely forward, ready to do her job.
    The tape sways
    Voices, fighting tears, ask in whispers,
    The tape sways in the breeze.
    have they notified his wife?

    1. brucejberger Avatar
      brucejberger

      thanks, Carolivia!

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