Celia looked at her reflection In the back of the spoon; Her face was blown outward As if captured on some balloon. It almost made her laugh; The memory of it; How she and her sister Sassy Would do that as kids, Before the dark days, Before her death in a bath. That drowning, that sad death. Sassy’s husband had beaten her Black and blue and green And she’d hide herself away So as not to be seen. But she’d seen her, Seen the bruises Like smudged tattoos, The closed eyes, The swollen lips, The hardly able to talk words Pushing through the mouth To say: he says he loves me still. Celia stared at her reflection, The way her own mouth was distorted, Her lips blown up, her eyes enlarged, Out of proportion. She almost laughed, But something about Sassy’s sad death Made her stifle any guffaw That may have broken free From her distorted reflected jaw. There was the time she’d seen her ******* for bed when she stayed Because Sassy’s husband (the weird freak) Was off on business, some big deal, Needing to be pulled off, And she saw the black and blueness With tinges of green Along her naked flesh, The buttocks welted Where he had belted. Sassy had said nothing, Had not noticed Celia looking, Had not thought it unusual To be unclothed as such Away from other’s peering eyes. Now Sassy was dead; Found in the bath; Drugged out, wrists slit, Having drowned recorded. But he had driven her over the edge; He had bullied and beaten Like some spoilt cruel child An unwanted toy. Celia turned the spoon over And put it down. No more desire to laugh, Just fond memories of Sassy Before her death in the bath.