“Mechanic” by Lynne Burnett

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Mechanic” by Lynne Burnett.


Mechanic

By Lynne Burnett

Not your standard guy—put a shift kit

in the automatic transmission of his

Boyd Red 1990 Ford Mustang LX 5.0

coupe, changed the seats from black

vinyl to cloth: made it turn-on-a-dime

crazy ‘round a corner, full-out perfect

snort of heaven off a light and down

highway 99. No one could catch me,

he grins, unless I wanted them to.

Nothing mechanical in the way he bends

over the lifted hood of my car or lays back

on a creeper and slides beneath the

undercarriage, one foot sneaking out.

Maintenance is key, he says, and starts

the engine, pulling a rag from his pocket

to wipe down the dipstick and check

the level and colour of fluid.

His hands are stained and scarred,

look like they would labour all their life

to love a woman the way they love

the complicated innards of a car:

with brains in his fingers, and ears

that can translate rattle and whine,

deep knock knock knock under a hood,

reversing the strange or troublesome

into something familiar, worth repair.


Copyright © Lynne Burnett

Previously published in Joyride (The Writers’ Cache, 2020)

Lynne Burnett lives on Vancouver Island. Her poems have appeared in many magazines and anthologies in the US and Canada. A Best of the Net and Pushcart nominee, she won the 2016 Lauren K. Alleyne Difficult Fruit PP, the 2019 Jack Grapes PP, Kelsay Books’ 2023 Women’s Poetry Contest, and was a finalist for Arc’s 2018 Poem of the Year and the 2022 Montreal International PP. Finishing Line Press published her chapbook “Irresistible” in 2018.


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