My Grandmother's Choppers
Her teeth came out at night.
Time to scrub my choppers,
she'd say with a sunken
grin. I followed her and saw
her teeth in her hands, gums
the exact pink and waxy sheen
of her bathroom tiles.
When I slept at her house
my eyes opened in the morning
to two rows of teeth
on a night table
an arm's length from me,
teeth submerged
in half a glass of water,
teeth exiled
from my grandmother's warm
smile, her gentle speech.
I wanted to snatch those choppers,
take them home and drop them
into my fish tank. I pictured
how they'd sink past carp,
tetra, midnight molly,
how they'd nestle in neon-blue
gravel near the bobbing skeleton,
the pirate's chest full of fake
rubies and gold coins, the plastic
eel grass too brightly green
to have come from the sea.
His Name Was Gary
Deaths and accidents ignited
ordinary days, as they will
in tough towns anywhere.
A boy she knew in middle school--
was he twelve or thirteen?--
swiped his father's gun
one day around Halloween.
He shot through the roof
of his mouth
in his best friend's attic
where he'd shown up hysterical and shorn
after his father had sat on him,
pinned his arms, shaved off
the long thick hair
all the girls loved to touch.
Clay and Sanity
A teenage girl slips past the living
room where her mother sinks
into ratty soft chair and her father,
legs crossed, holds one slipperless foot
mid-air for gray-faced retriever to lick.
TV light flashes blue in a corner,
scenes of death in Southeast Asia,
no news, no change.
The girl removes herself
to her place in the basement,
passes cobwebs, shelves that heave
with dirty cans--wax beans,
potatoes, pickled beets--
mother buys on sale,
no one eats.
Familiar odors to breathe down here,
damp rags and laundry soap, mops
that never quite dry. The air smells
of time and silence. Clay waiting
in a bucket smells like calmness,
as the girl imagines the earth did
in the beginning and might again
if the dust ever settled.
The girl sits at her potter's wheel,
smoothes a lump of clay with her hands
into a ball the size of a grapefruit.
She hears nothing
but the whirring spin of the wheel.
She thinks of nothing
but four steps she's learned--
center, open, pull up, refine.
She makes a cup.
Center, open, pull up, refine.
She forms a bowl.
Center, open, pull up, refine.
Her fingers shape an elegant vase
she believes may make it
through the fire, make it
all the way to a table
laid for dinner, perhaps to a pair
of hands arranging lilacs or lupine
wet with rain and purple
like yesterday's daybreak,
like tomorrow's.
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