STEEL MAN
He was a man of steel
my father
Thirty-nine years pouched in the searing belly
of the thirty-six inch plate mill
an acrid finger poking from the shore of Lake Michigan
in an act of brazen defiance
For four decades he endured
the blistering breath of white hot ingots
as they slithered through the mill
performing their reptilian undulations
of semi-liquid menace
with temperatures so intense
it felt like your skin was charring
and your bones were melting like so much wax
Every day his lungs filled with iron ore dust
as dense as the canopy of fog
hanging over the predawn lake
and every week a different shift
scrambled his circadian rhythms
until night and day lost their identities
causing my brother and I to live in dread
of waking him in the middle of the afternoon
when the unforgiving night shift
cheated him of valued rest
For thirty years he carried a scar
on his right leg, a permanent memento
he often joked about as if it were a mere insect bite
before admitting to my brother and I
right after his retirement that an errant crane
had nearly cost him a limb
Now the mill is cold and deserted
an oxidized corpse on the bank of Lake Michigan
and as if their fates were forever bound and dissoluble
they have both succumbed to nature’s forces
the cold, unflinching mill
and that indefatigable man of steel
my father
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