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John Schneider

 

SO AS NOT TO DO MORE HARM

 

Evenings, he downs one then the other

brandy Manhattan, swallowing the cherry

 

from her emptied cocktail glass. The spectral

ice cubes remind him how cold summer has become.

 

They clink together, then part, as he swirls

grief with his index finger and licks it clean.

 

As if he could spin straw into gold. As if

magic could bring her back. He used to open

 

both sides of the bedsheet. Tired of the flatness

beside him, he now chooses to sleep on the couch

 

on her pillow, parting the midnight curtains

to let in some shards of moon and streetlight.

 

Mornings, he shaves with her safety-razor, a reminder

of touch.  Sets out another plate before the empty chair.

 

When he was with her cold body at the scene, he peeled

her shredded cycling gloves from each stiff finger, one by

 

one, so as not to do more harm, steepling her hands

across her stilled chest. The mangled bike still remains

 

in his trunk. Her plastic beaded bracelet still hangs

from the rearview. But tonight, as he returns to

 

the scene alone again, all that black macadam

emptying in her honor, he stretches the gloves

 

over his own hardened hands and clenches

the wheel like a rosary. Time stops. Returned

 

to the house that has lost its home, he removes

her crumpled clothes from the hamper,

sniffing each piece, reluctantly washing

 

her from them, drying, smoothing their

wrinkles, holding each up to the faint

 

lights exhaling through the unopened window.

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