BPR 44 | 2017
I should be at work, not out, 
 in the middle of the day, 
 where I hear one woman ask 
 the other, What do you think
 is the worst thing that could happen 
 to a person, just after their tender 
 salads are delivered. Dying,
 the other said. They both
 took bites, greens sticking out 
 from forks like matted baby hair. 
 Really, she replied, because I think 
 it’s your kids dying. The server
 refilled their iced teas. Tables emptied 
 back to offices. The hypothetical 
 broke into bits too small to eat, 
 taken away in empty bowls.
 A line of lipstick stained the glass, 
 stubborn chatter, needing more 
 and more water to empty 
 a future we hope never arrives.



