THE DAY I TAKE HER TO THE HOSPITAL
is the day she needs me to help her move
into her seventh apartment of the decade.
What a male partner did or didn’t do to her
at the firm has sent her over the cliff
she’s always driven close to the edge
of, thick wind in her blonde piled tangles,
skinned knees from bumping into things,
paranoia. I’ve grown accustomed to your mace
is what I say when her purse spills open
and deltas everything onto the stained
rug. We make three sweaty trips, stuffing
my car to its gills, poking through the sun
roof. Her glassy eyes and quivering bottom
lip suggest restrained fear but her closets
cry hysterical: hand-me-downs of sister
and neverworn pouffy dresses of mom, old
crinkled plastic bags of golf balls and tees
(two lessons four years ago), thirty-three
pairs of shoes (two of the steep red fuck-me
variety), brown garbage bags full of old
blouses, modems, small unmarked samples
from famous bodies (the Colorado, the Coruh,
the Urumbamba, the Alsek, the Antarctic Sea)
in antique bottles with chipped stoppers,
ultra-slim feminine hygiene products, dog-eared
gifts I gave her. She shows me a huge potato
shaped like a heart she’s been secretly saving
in the fridge. Her collected Shakespeare,
turned to a favorite sonnet regarding love
and its surprising consequence, splays
facedown on the bed. Rabbit ears spring
from the unwatched TV. Sitting on the crusty
kitchen stove, a wicker basket of legal briefs
and arcane judicial rulings on environmental
issues—which, when extrapolated geometrically
will save the planet, she hopes. Her upside down
bicycle rides the bathtub, honeysuckle body
oil coating the handlebars. I walk the bike
to her new apartment while she showers, packs
and angers herself anew over her firm’s posture
re: the harassment charge. When I drive her
to the hospital, we hold hands in the useless way
we used to. Upon first look, we’re not pleased
by the place: no porch, ponds or grounds. No
swans. The attendants loom invisible behind
large bushes and blank brown brick walls.
A single woman stands in the parking lot
smoking, windmilling her arms to the command
of the private fitness expert in her head.
We swerve away for a last ice cream—soft serve,
chocolate dipped. The frozen chocolate cracks
off her cone when she licks it. One tongue
lunge and she’s saved a bit but spoiled her face.
Heat, tears, ice cream, trembling: her makeup
gets a mad clown look, like the self-portrait
she painted in first grade and left in my trunk
after moving today. As we drive slowly back
to the hospital, I clean her mouth’s corners
with an index finger of my spit. We park
and sit in the blasting sun, criticizing
the lack of swans. I walk her baggage in
and hug her goodbye just as the clipboards
come marching down the hall to get her.