NAPOWRIMO DAY FIVE
Well, it's Day Five of Napowrimo, and I'm still going strong. Of course, by the time the days turn into double-digits, my ego will need deflation. I get pretty satisfied with myself when I actually accomplish what I said I would.
Today's been a long day of writing and reading other people's writing, so I'm off to enjoy the outdoors for an hour with my dog. I finally got a new camera (r.i.p. old camera) and will be able to supplement my posts with Colorado scenery once again!
Thanks for all your comments, everyone. I love the day after posting, when my email inbox has at least five messages, none of them advertisements from expedia or amazon. Yahoo!
Enjoy the week!
HAM WITH SLICED PEARS
The old man ordering coffee
ahead of me catches my eye,
the jeans-with-jean-jacket combo
beneath a crisp red trucker’s hat.
He asks the barista how
her Easter holiday was. Nice,
she says, I mean, pretty quiet.
And he says he ate ham
the same way he’s eaten it
all his life, every Easter,
roasted in a pan half filled
with sliced pears, except
he says pears like he means
pearls, or diamonds, a ham
baked with sapphires pinned
to its sides in lieu of cloves.
The barista smiles like a good
vegetarian, lets him recount
all seven bites he took
before getting up for seconds;
he doesn’t actually eat the pears
but leaves them on the side
of his plate, it’s the juice
that matters, and the ham
soaks all of that right up.
Fruit pulp makes him think
he’s eating wet dirt and he
doesn’t like that. The barista
is picturing all this: the man
cutting into his ham with fork
and butterknife, his napkined lap,
the priceless pears scraped
into the trash bag after dinner.
The wet dirt of the world
snaking up tree trunks months
before a holiday dinner is prepared.
She hands him his cup,
paper with no lid, the whipped
cream spiraling up from
his hot cocoa—cocoa—
like a painted cathedral spire.
...
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