My mother has run away again, I find the note on the kitchen counter
next to an overflowing ashtray of butts covered in lipstick
My sister reads in and laughs, “The divorce thing again,”
she tosses it in the trash and says, “It’s pizza night.”
When my father gets home he knows she’s gone by the sound of a blaring radio
and unrestrained laughter in the kitchen
I have flour in my hair, my sister is wiping tomato sauce off her face
with the front of her shirt
He stands in the doorway without speaking, tilting sideways
his tired body leaning into the frame
Our eyes meet, and I think how handsome he still is
with so many losses inside
“It’ll be alright,” I say, but something in his face breaks
already parts of him falling away
We hold him in the doorway
his head resting between our shoulders
Just low enough so I can read my sister’s lips
when she mouths the word ***** and shakes her head
I imagine our mother in some air-conditioned hotel room
down by the river
ordering room service and cigarettes
Sprawled across the bed, sipping scotch
and watching her favorite show
a half-smile at the edge of her mouth
knowing she’ll get her way
Oct 27, 2014
Oct 27, 2014 at 12:29 PM UTC
My mother has run away again, I find the note on the kitchen counter
next to an overflowing ashtray of butts covered in lipstick
My sister reads in and laughs, “The divorce thing again,”
she tosses it in the trash and says, “It’s pizza night.”
When my father gets home he knows she’s gone by the sound of a blaring radio
and unrestrained laughter in the kitchen
I have flour in my hair, my sister is wiping tomato sauce off her face
with the front of her shirt
He stands in the doorway without speaking, tilting sideways
his tired body leaning into the frame
Our eyes meet, and I think how handsome he still is
with so many losses inside
“It’ll be alright,” I say, but something in his face breaks
already parts of him falling away
We hold him in the doorway
his head resting between our shoulders
Just low enough so I can read my sister’s lips
when she mouths the word ***** and shakes her head
I imagine our mother in some air-conditioned hotel room
down by the river
ordering room service and cigarettes
Sprawled across the bed, sipping scotch
and watching her favorite show
a half-smile at the edge of her mouth
knowing she’ll get her way
