Allan Nicoletti, RN, BSN
OPEN HOUSE
It’s the Day of the Dead. I send out invitations,
set extra places at the table. Guests arrive. Everyone is
polite, nothing like you’d think, nothing like the movies
so preoccupied with flesh. My grandma Laura has grown
indistinct. Her candy dish is full of dust. There is the smell
of fresh baked bread drifting from her green house,
drifting the length of the endless driveway where
we learned to skate. I ask her about a nightmare
I had there. The room had sunk to the bottom of the sea.
Door hinges turned to sea snakes. A giant crab sat on the floor.
She tells my mother that I am strange and smiles and offers
the empty dish, a taste of dust. I ask about grandpa.
He’s at the mouth of the Klamath. Where would you be?
Nicole arrives with Garland and Little John.
I cannot speak. We sit out back by the pool of grief.
A crew from the morgue crashes the party. The word is out.
The door is open. The full moon sinks with the Seven Sisters trailing,
portending our doom. I point it out over a glass of wine
to all within earshot. The dead find this funny. All manner
of howling ensues. I begin to loosen up, begin to enjoy myself.
This is my kind of party. I don’t ever have to get out of my chair.
I could do this every weekend, open house for the dead.
There is, of course, the danger, like hanging out with the wrong kids
after school. I begin to take chances. Charlie Sevenoaks
challenges me to a game of truth or dare. Dare, I say,
and find myself standing on the roof overlooking the pool.
Oh I can fly, no problem—I’m not afraid of anything.
–from Rattle #28, Winter 2007








August 8th, 2008 at 10:20 am
Great poem – especially liked the turn at:
“This is my kind of party. I don’t ever have to get out of my chair.”
Nicely done.
November 13th, 2009 at 11:31 am
Is this the Allan Nicoletti who worked at Downtown Emergency Service Center in the 90’s? If so, would you consider sending the shelter that amazing poem you wrote?
If this is not the same person, I enjoyed this poem very much.
January 17th, 2010 at 7:22 pm
yes this is the same allan nicoletti who worked at the shelter. Stacy, you were the nurse right? Are you still working there? That’s amazing. I would be happy to send the shelter poems to you and the crew at the DESC. Thanks for the kind words.
al