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The Key Sestina
for Cris
My city apartment needed four keys, the mailbox a fifth. Two for each of two jobs, and a tenth for my bicycle chain. A fine rattle they made, a heavy weight in my pocket. There was one key whose lock I'd forgotten. I would not throw it out.
My island friend spends the whole day out, leaves her door open, needs only the keys to her car. My new apartment won't lock from the inside; I still sleep well. Here too my ten-speed bike leans against the wall, wait- ing for me, sheltered from rain, but not chained.
It's strange at first, leaving padlock and chain behind, stopping by my friend's when she's out to use her phone. I miss the clanking weight in my pack, the rattling of all those keys. Each of them meant commitment, access to home, store, office, women's center, all locked
against the untrusted. I knew that locks won't stop everybody. The severed chain remains; the bike is gone. In less than two months my house was robbed three times. We were out at work, we'd locked the doors, we had our keys; the burglar had none but he didn't wait
for us. Perhaps it's only custom's weight that makes a barrier of a door that's locked. When my mother drank, I'd hide her car keys, not knowing she had a duplicate chain. Once in a muted rage I put them out in plain sight. Did I want her dead? or to
end my responsibility? These two options nag twenty years later, their weight unsettled. I visit, after years out of New England, her house, whose door is locked always. My mother from her extra chain detaches and gives me a front door key.
Says the keeper's jangling chain, "Just wait, I can split the word in two: danger locked out, comfort kept in" -- or vice versa.
November 1985
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