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The Administrative Assistant

Julia, at her desk and on her telephone,

trapped in amber, an eye-open slumber.

The president shuffles past, talking quietly

with solemn men in muted storm cloud suits

and sunshined shoes. The board room fills

with tombstone grins, the bottom line

growing heavy, coming undone.

Julia, at her desk and staring at an

emerald fingernail reflection.

She's older now, the light dim.

She dreams of boulders,

of butchers, of bushy-haired

children running amuck

as the bottom line

bottoms out.

What do kids watch on Saturday mornings?

The president asks behind a closed door.

Kids today, someone says.

It wasn't this way when I was a kid, someone says.

I remember watching tv on Saturday mornings, someone says.

Julia, at her desk and covered in gasoline,

suspended in violent ideation as a motivational

quote hangs itself above her head.

About, aboard, above, we use to say in school,

the president says behind a closed door.

Request permission to use this poem
Written by
jj-hutton
American
Published
Dec 9, 2021
Lines·Words
25·154
Permission

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