The port rests on my high right chest, a pink crater, a cleanly folded linen shroud kissed with tears wheeled from operating room to recovery by melting folds of scrub blues with iodoform scents.
The fragrance of me is creased into a tucked blanket, monitors on my legs and arm caressing rhythmic, sounds dissolving into the hum left in a plastic wind- wafting hints of my odorless crenulated alchemical cure.
My wife holds the origami of my old self in a blue zip lock hospital bag that opens with a singe of nitrate, the final aroma of good cooked food settling on a rack then vanishing into a memory portal.
I smell no future, just the staleness of hope and fear as I uncrease myself into my clothes and stand unfolded at the exit, in the threshold of a shadowless sunlight whose sleeves I sniff for the blossoming plum tree.
The port is a medical port that is installed for the administration of chemotherapy.