Washout

I

So in a fit of righteous anger

I washed the pots pans

plates bowls knives spoons glasses

even cleaned the kitchen sink and the drawers,

which I haven’t been able to do for a long time.

The leftover food I did not care to save

for the dog. I scraped it clean from the plates

and let it flush down the drain,

clogging it temporarily and flooding the sink

till the dirty water almost overflowed.

I thought happily of all the disorder

I was getting rid of, my anger ebbing

with the flush.

And for a moment, standing there,

I remembered another sweeping

of water, another sluicing, when a more powerful Being

deemed it right to let the water spill over

and flood His people, scraping everything clean

except a few fragments here and there:

morsels of food, bits of houses, leftovers saved

for family members searching for whoever

remains. I imagine He hadn’t been able

to do it for a long time and so,

in a fit of righteous anger, He did.

He must have been satisfied with the deed after,

the world being once more what it wasn’t

for so many years.

Only I did not feel any satisfaction

when the water drained, but a horror

at all that I let seep away, and the little

that I spared. I wonder

if He felt this, too.

II

So in a rush of remorse, I went

to our dog, dreading to see

twin points of blame staring at me.

The dog, on seeing my hands empty,

wagged its tail earnestly

and barked, barked with eagerness,

barked with a question.

My hands yearned then

for what it could have held

and given, food scraps, a few bits

of bone, anything but the clean

void it so ruthlessly pursued,

the hollowness it now shamefully

faces.

                        Then,

his tail wagging slower,

he stopped barking completely, and

faced the silence with me,

a long, slow stillness where all the questions

rebound, a hush so loud I longed

to break it with sound. Then what?

his eyes asked, and I knew,

knew in a flash that there was time yet,

his shiny eyes growing rounder,

myself mirrored in their depths. I’m sure

He knew of this, too.

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