Onlooker
Onlooker Increasingly, of late, despite his swelling pegboard of tailored tools and know- how, he finds a tilted or twisted or shattered thing for which he brings to the workbench only a warm body to stand by and look on, the way he did before scootering off when his dad “taught” him to change oil in the blue suburban, or when, last July, his wife broke down and called the plumber and he sat by and warmed the bench, in the line-up as guy who turns off water then crunches little peanuts of small talk about the Braves, and sometimes he can’t even find the tool for the shut-off valve to keep the whole place from going under, like last-week’s lunch with a student stirred to pour out the backed-up mess of her parents’ divorce, or how he watches the inherited fissures of his daughter's mind widen, widen, wide open as last week when he came home to a news story about the next-door town on the other end of th...