The Gory Details
She could always list them:
dipso husband, daughter hearing
voices, an addict son. She’d snap
off pieces of raw carrot and shrug,
munching. “I can’t complain.
They didn’t happen all at once.”
She’d light up. And cough. But no
one nicer on a check-out line. Or
dancing a tea bag in and out of hot
water. Or taking the blame each
time her daughter screamed at the
wall. Or telling her son he was okay,
while she breathed her last smoke
in the day room at Astoria Hospital.
“I’ll spare you the gory details.”
She looked away. Her right lung
removed, a pink crescent scar
around her shoulder blade she didn’t
want to see in any mirror. The oxygen
tube clipped to the cartilage dividing
one nostril from another. An invisible fume
traveling into her left life. That hover in
the recovery room nothing but the future
collecting—impatient, uneasy as the son
and daughter around her bed. “You’ll
have to get some milk before I get home.”
A vaporous prong already descending
into her open mouth beginning to close.