Another packing up dream
and we’re getting good at this.
The embroidered table runner

goes beneath the bundled
purple china cow. As we add linens
to cushion around it, I can hear my

step-dad saying, “this will ride in church”
but then it’s only you and me. I am aware
you are 90 now and this packing up

seems ominous, though you are
wearing a shirtwaist dress and the smile
of a woman 25. I beg you not to hurry

but you look through me to a past
I can’t recall and box up your silver teapot,
empty prescription bottles, photo albums

and all the paintings of our severe
relations with their beckoning frowns
and following eyes.

Selected byNolcha Fox
Image credit:CHUTTERSNAP

Sara Clancy is a Philadelphia transplant to the Southwest.  Her chapbook Ghost Logic won the 2017 Turtle Island Quarterly Editors Choice Award. Among other places, her poems have appeared in Off the Coast, The Linnet's Wings, Crab Creek Review, The Madison Review, Misfit Magazine, Avatar Review and Verse Wisconsin. She lives in the desert with her husband, their dog, two ordinary cats and a psychotic cross-eyed one.