Nancy
Nancy bought kitchenware obsessively
little rows of silver
she’d polish until she could see right through
x-ray her own liver
She enjoyed the sound the kitchen drawer made
when she rolled it back and forth
she’d stand over the spoons and scatter them
meditate herself into them
she liked to entertain- would hold parties in rented rooms
splayed out on a chaise-longue and blinking
she’d spend all the hours staring at her reflection
in the ball of her wine glass or the rims of her grandmother’s dishes
Nancy thought she was in love and she commodified herself accordingly
a suitable housewife all shiny and smooth
and like the virgin men preyed on her for
became nothing but the stainless steel her own hands held
The shelves and the steak and the vegetable stock; Nancy
became inseparable- her body bent
and spent away at mealtimes-
she gave herself willingly
like a woman. She laughed; salt in water
she could disappear at the stir of a spoon
stuck in a tall glass
like a bottle of oil
a fluid cascade clinging to water Nancy
did not exist but against the cold surface of a
sharp knife and chopping board
a woman that’s a woman at last.