
It was always the same
 he’d stand on the corner
 in front of the kiosk
 playing his sax
 one note at a time
 like walking a dog
 the same deliberate gait
 step by measured step.
“Are there enchiladas in heaven?”
 I’d ask him
 drop a dollar in his old felt hat
 that must have belonged to his father
         [they don’t make them like that anymore].
“Are there enchiladas in heaven?”
 I’d ask again
 wait for his answer
 that always came
      “bo ba be bot”
 a line of black stemmed circles
 stepped out of his sax
 as he’d raise his right eyebrow
 in an inverted smile.
The last time I saw him
 I changed the question 
 just for fun.
“Are there tacos in hell?”
 I asked him
 dropped a five into his old felt hat.
 “Are there tacos in hell?”
 I asked again
 waited for the answer.
He looked at me
 as though he’d never seen me
 then replied
      “be ba bo da deda da do.”
 An undulating rope of black circles
 slowly writhed from the sax.
 I waited for his eyebrow to rise;
     it didn’t.
The next time I passed
 he wasn’t there.
“Died a few days back, heart attack.”
 The guy at the kiosk told me.
 “Just fell asleep in his room at the rectory,”
 Father Fitzpatrick said.
 “Looked after the church, you know.”
I didn’t.
I went to St. Francis
 to light a candle and say a prayer.
 I’d miss the old fellow
 his talking sax.
Beside me on the pew
 I saw a paper
 turned it over
 saw the picture
 an enchilada with a halo
 a sax beside it.
 Scrawled beneath the drawing
 one word
                       YES!
 
			

