![]() Swordfish
My fingertips marveled at the silvery shimmer, already less silver, less shimmery than when it lived. I never again should cause flesh this beautiful to be less beautiful, I thought. At supper —swordfish—my brother offered up his neighbor for conversation. He'd shotgunned every TV in his house, even the puny black-and-white on the kitchen counter. Buckshot shattered black granite and splintered yards of Golden Oak. It wasn't election time or football season. Maybe his kids had watched Debbie do Dallas. In the unexpected hush as we considered slaughtered appliances, my brother's drinking buddy told my girlfriend she was a pretty lady, a real pretty lady. She looked like a dream. One day she'd make a real man really happy. I barked three hard flat laughs. The lit friend winced as each blast turned his cheeks a richer red. My girlfriend closed her eyes and opened them, her azure eyelids shimmering with jade. From Volume 189, Number 6, March 2007 Copyright © The Poetry Foundation |