Minyan


The men lurked about the roadside rest stop
but weren’t looking for drugs, young girls, or help
with a flat. Rather, it was the tenth man,
me — it turned out — they were waiting for.
He mumbled something through his beard. Was I
Jewish, I thought he said. The last question
I expected in a dump like this. I
shook my head and thought — I had heard of this — 
but joined anyway. I’ve never been one
to miss a game of poker, or decline
a dark pint. Who can say no to the tribe — 
of men, I mean. God’s another matter.
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David Grayson is an Oakland-based essayist and poet whose work has appeared in the San Francisco Bay Guardian, Modern Haiku, Cortland Review, Caveat Lector, moocat.net and several other journals.