I've been watching the ants. It's August and I sleep in the afternoons. I'm single. I haven't showered in two days. The smoke from the incense drifts. I **** it down like a good myth. And the ants are there, on my desk, scurrying back to their homes with a few bread crumbs in tow. I talk to myself after lunch. "Let me show you to your bed." And I bury my head in the comforter and the ants are feasting and outside there's a pandemic going on and I read about a man with a one-point-five million-dollar hospital bill and I heard they've been sending direct deposits to the dead and something crawls along my leg and how did nag champa become the default incense and I'm single and my heart is curdled and my mom calls to ask if I've found anyone to make it whole but I tell her I better grab a few winks--it is the late afternoon-- but before I go, how about an update? My dad fought cancer last winter and we didn't really talk about it and I kept thinking of the word leisure and everything got empty and a little bit terrible and a leisure suit is nothing, nothing to be proud of, and they gave my dad a numbered chip and they let him ring a bell and he said a few words and I wanted to be there, really there, you know? But I knew it'd just be a moment until the sun got stranded on its way to set, and I'd see my shadow and burrow into this bed with a nag champa halo and a few mumbled words to commemorate day 153 of quarantine.