Winter 2011 - Blueprint
Someone smashed last
week through the neighbor’s
glass back door
and stole his electric guitar.
Or the mouse in the trap:
Sweet crumb still sweetening
between its teeth, and the whole
history of its species, in
attics, in grain sacks, in
the golden ideal of the golden field.
The way the sad child returns to his
sad seat
after sharpening his pencil.
Or the newlyweds’ rowboat
at the bottom of an ocean.
And the woman on the front porch
who keeps discarding things from her heart:
The deathbed. The divorce. The friend
in the restaurant
in the booth near the window. The glass.
The glare. The impatience
on her friend’s face as the friendship ended.
Somewhere tonight a thief
is attempting to play
an electric guitar.
The wolves have already worn
a dark path in the grass around his house.
They’ve
not yet
begun to howl.
But they will howl:
These great ambitions, slinking
back one day
through the mess they’ve made
to return
the infernal thing.
Winter 2011 - Blueprint
Because some of them crawled on broken
hands and knees to save me
with their poems.
Because I was only
wretchedness at the edge of an abyss
of fashion magazines, and that
trickle of water down the side of their mountain
into my empty cup, which I refused to drink, they
were offering that to me. Because
I washed my face in their blood. Because
I tossed my hours in their coffins.
Because I was otherwise just dust rising off
a lampshade. My
tatters in rags without them:
A girl blinded by her own hair
riding her bike somewhere—
stupid, dying
for want of what
was written there.
A glittering starvation, forgiven. Willing
to burn their hands for me
to deliver it, burning
while I denied that it was burning.
I was like a child outside a cave of snow
that had collapsed on her fathers.
I laughed, wildly, for a little while.
And then I screamed.
And then I pouted.
Then I grew older, and had to begin
to dig my own pitiful little
hole with a teaspoon to get to them.
Winter 2011 - Blueprint
Their poor mothers’ white gloves on the waters. Their desperate fathers, too.
Their unborn children dressed
in little unlaced shoes
being read to from unwritten books in undecorated rooms.
Shovelful of unfathomable. Crumbling castle of could have been. So many prayers hanging from so many hooks. So many unconscious flowers engulfed in hours
swaying, saying pardon-moi, wearing
fleshy halos, breathy crowns.
And the butcher’s bloody little heaven
in a hole. The nurse unwinding and unwinding bandages upon bandages until
nothing but bandages are left.
A little gasp of laughter after that.
An hourglass washed up by the sea.
The soapy light of a late June afternoon. And the doves in the hedges
like plans for the future.
Those doves, such
gentle, nervous guests, and—so polite.
So let me ask you. Now
that we know what happened
next:
What did they have to hide
and where did they hide it?
Winter 2019 - Double
My best friend since second grade.
Same diner, same schedules, same uniforms, same day.
This friend, I used to boss her around (“You be the sick
one now.
Get on the ground and pretend you’re to vomit.”
I’d draw
on her face
with Magic Marker while I held her by a pigtail
while she begged me to stop. Which I didn’t
until she had a face full stripes and stars and pox
and names of boys she liked and boys she hated and
the rides at the amusement park was afraid to go on.
Rolling Thunder. Tower of Screams.
A diner. Her
single mother told her she needed
to make some money and no one cared how she made it.
My parents told me that if I ever planned
to find out if I was any good at anything
I’d better start trying
to find out now. They
had no idea what a list I had of things I knew I could do
better than anyone else. These things had to do
with stealing clothes—from
anywhere: locker rooms, department stores, friends. And
a few other things for which the word
entrepreneurial had surely been invented, although
I hadn’t heard it yet, and even if I’d known
the word and told them what I could trade
between classes
in the staircase
for cash from the middle hollowed-out book, they
wouldn’t have been impressed.
“Get a job,” they said.
And, yes. Just
as they’d known I would, I learned
everything I’d ever need to know about the thing
I was best at then. And
so did my friend.
She’d pass me with a tray in her hands and a French
fry in her mouth. My
friend, the weak sister in my fairytale, in her uniform. Which
was mine as well. Something
pink and short, which she
turned it into the centerfold
of a Playboy magazine
without needing
to take it off, with no need
for nudity or pornography or four staples down its center, no
glossy paper. She
just walked over, wearing it, to some guy, and spilled coffee
on him, and
he laughed. She got a rag. She
blotted him up all over before she brought him
another cup of coffee and his burnt toast—and
oh my God, her tips. At
the end of every shift. She crammed the wad of soft bills
in her purse along
with the cloudy weight
of all those quarters
and heft the strap of it over her shoulder.
I learned
how cold the walk-in refrigerator, where
the ice cream dreamed in the dark could be. No
hurry. We
could dream in there forever, those
frozen tubs, and me. I learned
how it felt to be
solid, and then to thaw, and then
to be consumed, and then—
how hot it was in the kitchen. I
could linger there, being
splattered with those scalding micro-
droplets of grease blown
off the grill by the breeze
of a short-order cook’s sneeze. Never
once did I say, Ouch. But, as if I had, how
many times an hour
the kitchen staff would say to me, Get
the hell out of here
if you can’t handle the kitchen.
I learned
that if I stared
out of the window
of a diner at night, I
could see straight through myself, and I
was a shadow
waiting to happen.
On the other side of me
there was a salad bar. The lettuce
had already browned around the edges. I
was the one who had to toss
those pale leaves around until
the browned ones were on the bottom. And
it was my job to refill the chilled ceramic thing
that held the shredded cheese. She
wasn’t going to do it.
Or in the window, looking
at myself in it, I could see not only
the salad bar behind me, but
the salad bar inside of me, which
stretched into the distance for a million miles
or years, with
its bowls of coleslaw
and it plastic squeezer-bottles
half-full of orange salad dressing. It
was lined up in the past and in the future, like
years of insomnia—my
ancestors’ insomnia, and the insomnia of my children’s
children’s children, all
of us waiting for generations, not
so much for sleep, but for a shift
in the whole idea
of sleep would, for the day when sleep would be recalled
as quaint, and sad. That
salad bar suggested I might be
the first living creature on Earth
who wouldn’t need it.
I learned that.
And when the manager
brought us together said
that one of us had to go, I nodded as
I’d seen my father
nod his head. I cast
my eyes down to the floor
the way my mother did
when she picked up the phone and someone asked her a question
to which she had no answer. “I sure
wish I could turn the two of you
into one girl and keep
you both,” said. Clerical
work, to me, he suggested. I left
my uniform on a hanger in the bathroom.
Before I left, my friend
ran into my arms, sobbing—or
at least pretending to sob. “I
personally thought you were
wonderful,” she said, “at your job,” in
a way that made me
want to die.
That night
I tried to kill myself
by swallowing an aspirin
without water. But it slid
right past my tongue, down my throat.
I was relieved.
I wanted to live. There would be
brownish oceans
in my future, with brownish waves
washing up
on shores. There was
the purity of wolves devouring
the purity of rabbits. And
birds to scribble
all over the sky. Also
bored children and dense thickets, full
of a thousand members
of an audience
standing up and clapping
for a band.
Concert finally over. Everyone
deaf, dazed, just
wanting to get out of there, go home, wishing
they’d never come.
I’d be one of them. But
I’d wait in my seat until the rest had left. Then
I’d see
the lead singer
(too famous to be named) come
back on stage to find
a guitar pick he had dropped. He’d
scowl and wave at me, friendly
and full of hatred. I smiled
and shook my head, which
seemed to startle him. He said, “It
sucked.” He said, “We suck. But
at least we know it, don’t we?”
My reply: it
was perfect. It
changed both our lives. We’d
go on together, forever, and never
need to speak again. We
knew what we did best, both of us, after that, and
we’d do that, exactly—although
in order for you to believe me
I must never tell you what I said.
Winter 2011 - Blueprint
Be brave today, thing made of flesh as you decay.
Be kind and try
to spend less money. Try
to avoid
conflict with a Pisces
in a parking lot
at night.
He might have a knife.
Or, if you are not the type
to find yourself arguing in a parking lot at night, try
not to complain to the neighbors
about the noise, for
you may need those neighbors
when the water heater explodes. They
may arrive with towels
and buckets in your basement, just
as you may find yourself
on their front porch, bearing
death’s casserole one warm morning in July, after
the unthinkable.
The Pisces.
The parking lot. Their
beautiful teenage boy, who
even as a baby
seemed afraid of nothing, listened
to music too loud
and to no advice.
A whole
sky full of stars
reflected in his eyes
as on the cool blank edge of a knife.
