Mischief light fills his eyes and he can’t believe his ears. His father is giving him permission to smash a plate on the concrete driveway.
Mum’s picked up a nice line in Crown Lynn retro plates in a second-hand shop in Timaru and she’s culling hard. Tiny chip on the underside of the rim, felt but unseen, and it’s unsentimentally consigned to the dustbin of history or at least some anonymous landfill.
Dad sees an opportunity for secret boy business, sanctioned vandalism. “Don’t tell Mum. She wouldn’t approve.”
That boy’s blue eyes are charged with adrenalin when that white innocence shatters in a porcelain explosion.
“Do you feel a little bit Greek?” Dad asks and is met with incomprehension.
Andrew M. Bell
The poet wishes to acknowledge Catalyst, the literary magazine in which this poem first appeared.