The Evolution of Enormity, by Savannah Sloane
Posted on October 2, 2019
unfocused black and white checkered floor seen
through poor eyesight: spectacles long lost
you see her, Mother, cut through sunflower stems with rusty scissors
her ocean of hair sways daringly in the manmade breeze of the cheap rotating fan
in the bedroom, you apply bark for wallpaper
life, for you, a Monet painting
peach acrylic paint singes
into your nostrils
abandoned car idles, driver’s door ajar, in a vacant
snowstorm
aroma of gas and metal,
snow covers bloodstains of the ones who presented you
a single cupcake lit by a match (it took three attempted matches before one would take)
scratch pad abrasions make you itch all over
a silent birthday song sung by a room of tongueless nobodies
mouths smack, but no words come out
you blow out your single candle, a gust
that disrupts the hush: room, fades to black
cactus makes skewers
of your blueberry stained fingertips
Mother lays upside
down, adorned in violet lace that hugs, on a velvet armchair
her hair caresses the hardwood floors that you carved
around her numb body
you paint a whale on the seafoam
brick wall and smile a orange-red lipstick teeth-stained smile
that tastes like the crayons you weren’t supposed to eat as a kid
dusty moth flaps wings in slow-motion on your tongue
single cupcake baked with salt instead of sugar
she licks her thorn pricked finger and you can taste it, too
*The Sixty-Four, best poets of 2018, The Black Mountain Press*