This piece illustrate a mother's innate knowledge about her daughter's drug dependence. |
Walking through the red front door Friday of Thanksgiving break, it’s you, my daughter, but pencil arms hang at your side, long brown hair stretches down your face. 5’5’’— a pale sack of bones in a pink fitted sweater. I wrap my arms around your rail body; your empty squeeze tells me I am right. My hug released, I back you against the white closet wall, ask you to climb on the scale: 98 flashes across its electric screen. You respond the cafeteria food tastes like garbage. Minutes from now you’ll excuse yourself, sneak up the carpet stairs. You’ll lock your bedroom door and practice what college taught. Your appetite complete, you’ll join me in the kitchen, hazel eyes Glassy as this kitchen window, a sly smile across your unfamiliar face- I know you don’t have a cold. I look into your empty eyes, staring at the peak of addiction; Lies reflect your blank expression. A standing corpse, I never thought my daughter would be the first to die- but your values cold, your love for me, dead. I picture your face used, your smooth legs, delicate curves sold for grams of pleasure- what a mother does not want to know. |