—IT’S CRAZY WHEN THE THING YOU LOVE THE MOST IS
THE DETRIMENT
Whiteout
The snow I saved for you has settled its
grievances with the jar its being kept in. Captive,
you might say, if you were here.
But
that’s not enough, you would also say.
Each day there’s more snow. Flurries. Blizzards.
A whiteout. Snow and snow and snow.
Each day the voyeur sun strains against the
panes with its full-body press, eyes owl-wide, yet not one crystal or clump has
melted.
Your sister’s stopped coming by, which is fair,
which is good since my tongue was always turning into a toboggan, stalagmites
cracking in my throat.
The last thing she said was, “It’s beautiful
outside. Have you even seen? Jesus, please.”
Sitting in the kitchen, staring at the jar, muddy
slush in my brain, nothing ever thaws. The cold is brutal and raw and honest, an
endless freeze.
On those few occasions I do doze, a sheet of
slick ice shows up at the center of every dream turning nightmare, my car skirting
skating skidding, our boy flying into the night’s frozen white with no arms to
catch him, nothing to brace his flight.
And so, this jar? I don’t know why. Maybe it’s
something I could.
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