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Tuesday, October 14, 2025

MASS SHOOTING #7



by Ron Riekki


“All random, wasted, and dispersed”

—Theodore Roethke

“Against Disaster”





The clerk inside tells me she can’t make any comments.

I ask why forty people would be gathered outside at 1:30 a.m.

The clerk tells me she can’t make any comments.  I ask

 

how we lessen gun violence in black communities.

 

The clerk says she can’t make any comments.  I ask

if the loitering signs outside are new.  No, she says,

her only comment.  Outside, the simple sound of traffic.

 

Tires on asphalt.  Tires on concrete.  Tires on cement.

 

The clerks never want to make any comments.  Outside,

a girl with purple hair exits the Speedway.  I ask how

we lessen the violence.  She uses her car door as a sort

 

of shield.  “Let’s start talking about it,” she says.

 

She makes comments: “Mental health is a real thing.”

“Everyone is going through something.”  “Yes, it is

hard.”  “Put yourself in their shoes.”  “I have a child

 

to raise.”  She has a 7-year-old daughter.  She works

 

4 jobs.  She’s also a professional wrestler.  A fan of

Stone Cold Steve Austin and Triple H.  Later, I watch

her win a match online, wearing all purple swimwear,

 

blowing victory kisses to the crowd.  She talks of how

 

kids now need “baseball, basketball,” that sports save

lives, give positive outlets.  Next door’s a bp.  A clerk

inside makes comment after comment.  The shooting

 

didn’t happen where he worked, so he’s an open book.

 

And he seconds everything about sports, telling me

“the kids have nothing to do.”  Wearing a XXL black

t-shirt, “Dee,” his nickname, says “recreation” is key.

 

He says there’s no “swimming pools,” “no budget,”

 

that “the new generation is left with nothing.”  Later,

I find out the shooting was a 32-year-old and a 38-

year-old exchanging gunfire.  Two sisters, also in

 

their 30s, were shot.  The assumption is that these

 

shootings are being done by kids.  I find this out

later, though, can’t ask them what to do if it, really,

is adults shooting at adults.  I ask if it’s dangerous

 

being a clerk.  He says no, that people mostly come

 

in and play the lottery, do scratch-offs.  A woman

comes inside and does just that.  36 different options

for scratch-off tickets, names like STRIKE IT RICH,

 

LIONS$2,000,000 LUCKYJUNGLE CASHWORD.

 

Driving home, the billboards keep flashing GRAND

BLANC STRONG with a white lit candle to remember

the 5 killed and 8 injured at the September 28 shooting.

 

I drive to the church, where the shooting happened.

 

There’s a black-and-white sign there saying GRAND

BLANC BETTER TOGETHER.  To my surprise,

the church seems to be untouched, the front doors

 

fixed.  Online, it says the church is “permanently

 

closed.”  The church is lit up with lights.  I park.

I can’t believe how quiet it is.  I sit there, staring

at the nothing.  Between Grand Blanc and Saginaw,

 

both of the mass shootings, is Frankenmuth.  I go

 

there.  To decompress.  I’ve never been.  The town,

I find, is sort of Disney Euro.  Simulacra.  Hyper-

reality.  I get food at a restaurant with chalet-style

 

architecture.  Staff are dressed in lederhosen and

 

alpine hats, Oktoberfest dresses.  The entire time

I eat, a young boy sits at the front to greet guests.

Later, I realize the boy is actually a statue.  Near

 

the bathroom they’re selling strange small signs

 

saying: HUNTING: IF A MAN IS ALONE IN

THE WOODS, WITH NO WOMEN TO HEAR

HIM...IS HE STILL WRONG?  A toilet flushes.



Ron Riekki co-edited Undocumented: Great Lakes Poets Laureate on Social Justice.