Last Orders

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The first thing we had to clear was the one

he prized the most: the cluttered pinewood bar

he’d salvaged from a neighbour moving on

at the end of the nineteen seventies.

 

Embalmed in a gloopy coat of varnish

that set to a brittle sheen, it lacked retro chic,

scuffed down to the wood along its edges,

its surface crazed with memories.

 

In the days when family came to stay

it placed him centre stage, measuring out

precisely his perfect Irish coffees

or each medicinal dose of whiskey.

 

And yet, for all its high-stool bonhomie,

we dumped it, an eyesore for the viewers –

then missed a convenient shelf, sorting mail

that even now in his posthumous life

 

makes him offers he can’t refuse.

At the back were shelves that clanked

to the music of jumbled glasses

and the unopened bottles of quare stuff

 

brought back from their hols by others –

when his own preference was Jameson’s,

Paddy’s, the rank poitín he cracked open

in a conspiratorial hush.

 

🌷(4)

◄ Selmer

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