I have to make him a turkey sandwich, crusts cut off, mayo on the left piece of bread, in two triangle halves every single night before he goes to sleep on the right side of the bed with two pillows, fluffed twice each, slippers tucked neatly underneath the bed skirt. And every night I wonder what would happen if I forgot the pickle on the side, like the one time we ran out of cheese and my car had a flat tire and the supermarket was so far, but boy did he give it to me. I’ve never seen someone count to one-hundred so fast with their finger taps before the table flipped. Never have I seen someone clean up glass so slowly, each piece thrown in the trash individually just like my pieces that have been carved away year after year, loaf after loaf, as my eyes droop backwards and rest on his haircut that I give every six weeks on a Wednesday. Sometimes, I try to kiss his neck when I let the scissors slip, but he always reminds me that this slot is “haircut time” and there’s no necessity in kissing anyway. And I’ve tried to respect his attic closet compartments with the key that had gone missing when he was fifteen, and I’ve tried to wish on misshapen pieces of cereal in my bowl because I’m that desperate for a miracle. Do you know? Do you know how hard it is to lie next to someone who you know doesn’t dream of you, not because he doesn’t want to, but because he can’t. He can’t do so many things and sometimes I’ll lay out a green tie on a workday instead of blue just to watch him blow up because at least that’s a feeling. At least that’s not white walls and another **** turkey sandwich. And I know that’s sinful, and I also know that I fold my hands wrong when I pray, but I’ve tried to shape him for years and all I’ve gotten is a cast with nothing to fill the mold. And I know my suitcase has been packed for weeks, but. . . Dear God, you know I’ll never leave. I save my laundry for Saturdays, don’t tell him why I’m crying myself back to sleep, and check the fridge one last time for the right deli meat.