Credit card shards
scraping in a kitchen drawer
make tiny music
as my father palms a car key
like an amulet.
He’d knife the ignition and escape
if my mother didn’t lie
beneath a station wagon,
ESL worksheets skittering to the curb
with the skeletons of maple leaves
while her amniotic fluid
turns to wine.
The settlement will finance
PT for my brother, a living room set,
and the reconstruction of her cloven mouth
brimming with superlatives
for the son who should have died
and the son who scaffolds him,
braided tapers softening
in grownup breath.
Unlike wax, skin
doesn’t forget its shape—
it turns shiny
to admit more light.
