a collection of works (in progress)!

Saturday, July 5, 2008

An Excuse

"Your tomatoes are dying,"
my mother calls me on the telephone.
"Aphids," my mother says.

I come home to see her
the plant, I mean,
stems heaving and drooping.
"Didn't you watch her while I was gone?" I ask.
My mother keeps quiet

I finger her fuzzy leaves--
soft as the skin on a baby's ear.

I spend the day swathing soapy liquids
over her undersides.
My mother watches from across the porch.

the brown specks cling and twitch
about her vein-y reaches.

"I knew it was something
when green ones stopped coming,"
my mother says.
I eye the dying tomatoes:
(deflated. Crimson
and puckered).

and then my mother,
standing in the door way,
hip pressed into the sliding door.
We both flick our fingernails
when we are thinking