You had two pet rabbits, one named Mickey the other Maurice, who lived on lettuce bits and behind thin metal bars. A caged environment set up on the study's wood floors, with books and a red couch to keep company
and your mom, because she would finish her graphs and stats on the mahogany desk living in the corner of the room and she liked the rabbits purr and delicate noses and would hold them and pet them
when she put down her pen and moleskin and accounts because, although caged and bought at Pet World in the strip mall across from Adult World on the other side of Interstate 67, these rodents gave her comfort,
reminding her of Maine and Jonathan who abstained from going and killing for sport with his brothers when they went, in pickups with buckshot and murdered deer and rabbits,
because she still missed Jon and bought these fluffy white creatures for 47.99, a good deal, and they came with a little rock house that they could sleep and burrow under
like Jon and herself, snuggled in Maine, away from Palo Alto. So every time I come over, to have *** and eat dinner and listen to what you learned to play on piano,
I stop by the study to see Maurice and Mickey and feel the presence of Jonathan and the sticky suburban sadness of your mother, while keeping a secret promise close to my heart, that I'll never become an accountant.