Neighbors
mary
One of just two kids on our street, I am coerced
into unenthusiastic doll-playing. Her room
is pink, the carpet tufted. The walls are lined
with pageant trophies—engraved metal plaques
and waving plastic gold girls. A small tiara.
Any two dolls can kiss, they just have to be dolls,
she says, laying one on another. Their long
nylon hair tangling. On her dresser,
a picture of her mother. She died when I was three,
she tells me, though she’s told me before.
She ignores her stepmom’s calling on our way
out the door. We ride our bikes through
the neighborhood, loose curls falling behind her.
Our tire tracks crisscrossing in the dirt.
dr. thomas
He brings us gifts from his garden: tiger lilies
and a basket of zucchini blossoms, a note
for my mother—Thanks for watching the house
last week. By day he teaches French at the college
in town, the man he lives with is a painter.
They park their cars in the garage—for security.
In the evening light he wears a big straw hat,
sings hymns while he tends to their rows
of flowers, creeping squash tendrils, peonies
holding court against the house’s washed brick.
Mom finds a recipe to fry the blossoms
in a light batter with goat cheese. We drive by
in her red Suburban. He looks up from his work,
taking off a glove, waving with his real hand.
Source: Poetry (September 2021)