she has a way of making small things feel significant:
the way she taped her moving boxes together, double stripped: she doesn't know if the first one will hold; her white lighter superstition; the way her skin was quick to bruise, even when you were gentle; her broken teeth, the lost fillings you ran your tongue over like your tires on her pockmarked street the first and last times (and all the times in between) that you drove to that bad side of town, where shoes swung from power lines and women wept over the sticky red bodies of sons and husbands and fathers but only spoke in hushed, shamed spanish about their own blood loss.
in the end, there's nothing too significant about it: she has trust issues that extend to duct tape and lighters; she bruises like a peach; she has bad teeth because she was too poor to fix them; her love dried up like the brazos in the texas summer.