What happened after I read Nothing Gold Can Stay
My mom asked me how you are. She didn’t look up
from the stiff sound of her sponge bleaching the trashcan
she was bent over
in the kitchen. Strands of hair the same shade as mine
were twitching at odd angles because she was scrubbing
so hard. I didn’t tell her
I tripped on my way home, because my knees
evaporated, because I was on them for a half hour.
I didn’t tell her that there are scarlet bruises on the
wet flesh of the back of my throat, right where the nurse shines
her slender little
light when I have a cough, right where I marooned all the things I wanted
to shout at you. I didn’t tell her you were
still hard when I left, and how it made me feel
like a failure, and how my shirt needed to be washed soon
or the crusted pools of snot and salt
would never come
out of my sleeves. She just kept purging the kitchen
and my dad kept inspecting his
stocks and my brother kept conjugating Spanish verbs
and I kept listening to the splashing sounds
of my vomit bouncing off the rim of the toilet.
I told my mom you were good, and I flushed the toilet, and I stared
at the crack in my wall because it reminded me of
a mockingbird feather.