--I USED TO
BELIEVE IN GHOSTS UNTIL I REALIZED IT WAS A SLEEPING DISORDER
A History of Soup
It had nothing to
do with forensics. At least I don’t
think. It was all about soup. Soup and the smell of grass clippings, the
garbled sunshine and the slick salesperson who showed up that summer carrying
an armful of forged coupons, begging to live with us.
Those were
airtight afternoons. Straight-jacket
air. My sister hummed ekphrastic inside
a cage of it. Her lips were too chapped,
her dress a frail fence.
But back to the soup. To the Borscht. We shouldn’t have been served it, but there
were just too many beets. Mother worried
about infestation and the salesman still lived with us.
I didn’t see it,
only read the corollary in Sis’s diary.
How one day her soup bowl grew a diving board on the rim. How when she hit the surface, carmine-colored
broth blasted across the walls, across the head of the table.
It was a
shock. Like booming thunder, heard and unseen.
I keep expecting Sis
to re-emerge, poke her head up from the Borscht. I keep expecting those wall stains to fade or
speak, but they never do.
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