Still Life, Wusthof in Hand
     My husband leans against the counter,
     chopping onions, julienning bell peppers,
     his back to the door. For him, the kitchen
     is the closest thing to religion.
     Like a Cubist painting, there is horror
     in his precision. His hands so calloused
     in this windowless room, the night woven
     into knotted ropes. Somewhere there is a light on
     that shouldn’t be, a baby crying, a waning
     crescent. In his temple, a quiet that steals
     moments away, breaks plates into cerulean shades.
     I have my own recipe for salvation—
     leatherette panties, vise grips, a can of Crisco,
     chiffonade of  jimsonweed, but instead he fingers
     the sauté, pauses, says it needs something else.
     My eyes trace the meniscus of the wine glass.
     I imagine the knife in my hands.
 
Source: Poetry (June 2024)


