Those silver cans of government meat, set on the table with a red and white checkered tablecloth. An old yellow light hung on a chain illuminating the can of meat. It tasted like flavorless gum. It seemed like a mish-mash of byproducts that no one else wanted. Mom always tried to make a casserole out of it, but no amount of pasta or sauce would fix that roadkill.
Mom hid the cans in the trash. Tried to bury it beneath empty packages of mushrooms and onion skins. I'd dig lightly, and there it was. That silver government can. Shadows for dinner.
A silhouetted pig, cow, or chicken, made a cameo on the can. They reminded me of those horrid souvenirs from Disneyland that hung above the antique *****. As a boy, I'd look up to see one of my brothers or sisters likeness splayed out on the wall in a creepy silhouette of horror. Deathlike, dark, and final.
It was like they caught the animal at the last stand. Death and then eaten. I know that's why I'm here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEeNcBC_mnM Here is a link to my you tube channel where I just put up a new poetry reading. I read from my new books to be published in May and June. Sleep Always Calls and Aluminum Cowboys Poems and Short Stories. They will be available on Amazon.com