Place Mats
Lucy has written her life story
on hospital place mats.
Twelve years, two thousand dollars a week
in soft rooms. She
tried to get them typed, but the doctor
took everything. He said
she would only upset herself. At least
that’s what she told me that day
in the park. It was that kind of sky
you get in late September – the livid blue
that only comes when every drop
of moisture freezes on apples
and the yellow blooms
of squash or pumpkin – as children yelled
over by the monkey bars. I need to believe
that somewhere
someone writes it all down,
not just the atrocities -- soccer fields covered
in fresh turned soil, photographs hanging
on subway kiosks -- but placemats
scribbled with crayon, yellowing
in a hospital file cabinet, as the sun sets
over trees, and the light fades on Lucy
and me and the children arguing
by the sandbox.