imagine: the dogs are barking again. the years have not yet caught up with me and my hands are still supple, uncallused. my mother holds them in her working palms, cups my fists with nearly 20 years of withdrawals etched on the knuckles. my father dwells on the couch like an animal; his nose bleeds in his sleep. the afternoon sun wanes; soon, he will rise, nocturnal in all his glory, the nail of his pinky finger long and battered, scratching the air for his next fix.
these hands don't gush from love--i was an angry child. when the sun shone i screamed and i flew through the tall grass; indiana was still a prairie back then. i cut the worms up. i watched them writhe. they wriggled, brainless, back into the earth, the remaining tail end helpless in my sweating palm.
when i was 4 they put houses where the fields were. i was never the same after that.