When my hands were the size of apricots my tongue always jumping through hoops as I read words that were dusty a book covered in pretty plastic from the local library that smelled like a grandfather if I had a grandfather I read Corduroy, the story of a stuffed bear in the Laundromat the sun sweltering outside melting the story with me like a swirly ice cream cone on the side step of an apartment or the slushy ingested combined with the acid you were so prone to tasting in your throat reflux, like a memory that just won’t go away leaving the residue of remnants you wish your brain would just spit up this ordinariness of abandonment feelings washed away like the mud stains on your uniform shirt tumbling in the washer the soap bubbles punching the glass window in unison with all the rest; a cleansing of spirits a lot of people go to church but for those that can’t afford it, the laundry is heaven with a vending machine I felt for the stuffed animal rejected for missing a button because I knew children with trembling knuckles turned into adults that got lost in the escalators of the world’s mall wandering ghosts with perpetual uncertainty whether they should buy the coffee set or the patent leather shoes that will balm over the calluses of their feet in the loudness of the fans redistributing hot hair I was in limbo, the rigid seat sticking to the back of my thighs like caramel sweat almost hard to ignore if it wasn’t for the luster of all the women inside, their shoulders broad like those I only thought of in lumberjacks burly burlap sacks over their shoulders swapping stories of childbirth as frequently as they ordered a pound of red liver chunks from the grocery store next door like animatronics that learned to harvest a genuine laugh their nail polish never fading despite the gruesome biting teeth of Clorox bleach staining the skin on their hands they were warriors, lost and unsure of in a world that didn’t look them square in the eye much like those camo toy soldiers you won if you gave the machine a quarter unwrapping it from its’ plastic cage, growling for the neglect of their maker who decided not to give them pupils at all senile wrestlers sometimes forgotten by children in the middle of the walkway so that they could be stepped upon, accidentally these women with their chocolate complexion and romantic gold hoops, accidental unrecognized by their country, banished by their family isolated in a land that shows mercy to those that only help themselves no refugee whose blood could compare to oil these women who weren’t missing any buttons would congregate inside this Laundromat hoping to remove the stains wishing that their clothes would stop smelling of unpaid labor that they could stop calling home a box inside a closet of more stacked boxes they can hear those around them, elbowing the walls like multiple hearts in a rib cage the world glimpsing in for a second, just another spin rinse cycle repeat until all color fades I too find myself stuck inside that Laundromat, I realize except I know that I can leave, I know I can walk out with my book in tow open the door and become another spectator if I wished which is more than that poor toy soldier can say