a stranger sat in dad's chair at the head of the table, a young soldier wrapped in bandages that leaked body fluid, a possessed spectral that stared at the stuffing and gravy on the Thanksgiving plate like a foreign object he'd lost familiarity with, me wondering, if dad might be home for Christmas
he was about the same age as mother, though most veterans I'd seen seemed older, as if they'd lost the map to heaven and needed someone to come along and help them find it
white gauze wound around his head, so that only holes for his mouth and faraway eyes showed, the feeding utensils as obscure to him as the blue sky outside
and when the day began to run out, the serviceman's mind engaged in a different war more bazaar than eating, he said nothing when mother picked up a spoon and fed him the way I would my dolls