Saturdays at Grammy's
We begged Dad to stay home
The memory of mothballs and butterscotch candy
Already choking us
Even a nine and a ten-year-old know
There is a sort of relief
In shared suffering
Walking through the maple stained front door
Transports you to the sixties
And the seventies
And the eighties
Decades intertwining and creating
A unique sense of meticulously designed chaos
Eyes narrow to the knickknacks on the table
That we will play with after customary hellos
An array of ceramic houses
Hannah will take the cottage lined with crimson flowers
And I get the mansion with a stationary water wheel
My sister claims she doesn’t need material things
Emersonian ideals at a young age
Visions of dancing in the lamp lit windows
Planning our futures there
While sitting on cigarette smelling shag
My Dad’s sister, Auntie Debbie, greets us
A wrinkly Barbie with a boob job and thinning hair
The smell of nail salon chemicals
Stirs up the must
I compliment her pastel talons
Its polite to lie
Auntie retreats to her cavern
With a can of diet coke
Its lined with photos of her as prom queen
And filled with stuffed animals from former lovers.
Grammy shuffles in
Makes a noise dad can replicate perfectly
She sounds like a happy ghost
But looks like a sad one
Her hands remind me of wet paper, ready to fall apart
Hannah and I enact our unspoken choreography
Of being too excited for sloppy dog kisses
And run to the organ next to the knickknacks
To be our own maestros
In Grammy’s kitchen
Hannah and I lick the fruit on the wallpaper
The snozberries do not taste like snozberries
But it tastes better than the slimy sandwich
And freezer burned fudgsicles
That expired in 1998
Her yellow gloves, the same color as her teeth,
Squeak as she does our dishes
Singing gospel hymns to drown us out.
“Little girls shouldn’t make so much noise”
Grammy shuffles around in circles
Wanting to live in our ceramic world with us
We put the houses back in place
Pausing our possible futures for her
To put together puzzles
The pieces don’t fit finely anymore
After years of being pushed
And slammed
And forced
Together.