Surprising to hear him –

so tiny and quiet

he seems invisible –

at age four suddenly to laugh

from the corner of a living room

crowded with brothers and sisters,

aunts and in-laws after

the funeral and family brunch,

skinny arms and legs akimbo,

holding his stomach,

chuckling to an unseen friend

at the bickering over who gets what

Now and then he lets go a cackling laugh

that cuts the chatter, turning heads

to see who is laughing and what

is so damn funny

at such a terrible time

And he keeps on laughing

at the rest of what they say

until exiled into the backyard

for knowing phony when he hears it,

and laughs on the swing set

legs in the air, head tossed back,

taking the wind