[If I wrote like a smoking man on a motorcycle]
If I wrote like a smoking man on a motorcycle,
perhaps then you would think I was brilliant. I
staple the facsimile of the couch back together,
protect the innards that glut out, cover the
opening the cat tunnels into, his secret mole hole.
I shampoo every fabric chair in the building, eight
hours, soaked, lathered, sucked clean down in
white lines. I watch the dirt evaporate like a whole
crop on fire, how much dirt could you pull from
one surface, there is so much hidden beneath what
we do and it’s always someone else’s job to take
care of it. At lunch, we drive to the rocky
lakeshore outside the gates of the nuclear plant,
near the place where his father once worked in
the wire factory. It was a secret, at the time, that I
wanted more than this. I found satisfaction in
cleaning and the way it exhausted me. Excising
everything so people could pretend it was not
there. Mardi gras beads. Fuzzy handcuffs.
Intelligence is a secret knowledge that people die
for mistakenly, and then the roof leaks. Dark
stains. Nothing easy.