Supper
Her son picks a flower
and it loses most of its petals
by the time it gets to her.
She is scouring the bathroom
with bleach, wearing giant
yellow gloves. She is hungry
her son is hungry her husband
is hungry so they sit at the table
and blink at each other
over quick-boiled pasta
and jar sauce. Outside
the sun humming,
swampy plants erratic
in the ditch. Far off, the
highway. Her husband says
he needs to go to
Truth or Consequences, N.M.
next week and she
and her son can come too,
if they want. She turns
the salt shaker slowly
like a dial, her son busy
with his plate. The phone
rings out urgently
in the kitchen and
they face each other
two desert moons
each waiting for the other
to rise.
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