one brother gone, one brother going

who is this man

and why does he start each day

by rolling out the white carpet

as though he expects a paint-covered god

what are the blue odorless flowers sprouted

along the carpet, following the banister up six

flights of stairs

why are rooms

changing tones like mood rings

she wouldn’t understand

the books spat from shelves, either,

the knickknacks plucked from walls

she could have tried asking

the house, which

in twenty years had never before gone under

the knife, but the anasthesized house

could not have answered

she would have dashed

out the door every day the man

was painting it and crouched, waited for us

on the lawn to coax her back in

to what we’d reassure her was her home

still

the biggest shift to me

is not the bathroom, cornered

and stripped at last

of the paper i’ve hated for years, or my brothers’

suitcases piled in the hallway like oversized

building blocks the biggest shift

is having to imagine her

confusion, instead of petting it away.

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