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The Former Ghost

In the kitchen she sits on a three-legged stool. She died in the living room, her heart burst, and out flew all the skills of her hands. Now she cooks the twilight between the days, the dried fruits of yester-years. I watch her thoughts take shape, how they sway to the music of Glen Miller, another memory she gave this space to. These words are partly hers, the flavors are mixed. I pay a rent as interlocutor. Room corners are still planted by her broad-leaved thumbs. I water the old ferns as if I were the curator of her old friends. Kitchen cups rattle on their hooks, chipped china chimes upon moonlight jingles. In life we never did meet, but at night she polishes my eyes. Spits on a yellow duster and gently wipes until something shines in me, and I know her and she knows me.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2020




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Book: Reflection on the Important Things