Likes a Strong Woman
Grandma slathered
makeup on her dun-colored
face. Santa left behind plastic
busts we practiced on: eye
liner and velvet
chalky blue for giant Barbie’s half
closed horsehair
lashes. Off
limits: Grandad’s walnut
lengths to saw like Red Riding Hood’s woodsman, grain
smooth as Grandma’s penciled eyebrows plucked
away for good.
Mom champions her spackled
on cream blush because Your father
likes it. I learned to keep a hymnal
on my head, smile only as wide as my top
teeth show, and nod while my heart
constricts like the claw
all our women dig
into a child’s arm. Don’t get
smart. Sit
up straight and graze lacquered
fingernails across the depression in any
man’s upper back. Freckles and chapped
lips be damned. I fanned
out glamazons strutting through Vogue on the pumpkin
pile wall to wall. I married
the one who pushed Dad’s
wheelchair, haloed leg levitating before
his wreckage, mustache
intact, to the funeral’s scratchy
turquoise and balsawood
altar the shade of Grandma’s pooled
foundation in the crevice
of her cheek, her
girdle’s hooks and eyes correct
as Miss Burgett’s fourth grade
tables set for groups of four: Lloyd
Cross’s silver tooth chastens my cigar
box of Crayolas though mine has all the shades of blue. Mom
dies in the crash, and so does Aunt
Pam, and Uncle Marvin proposes her sister
Karen wear her clothes. She weeps into an avocado
handset, declines his offered drink. My friends guffaw
at my joke about the man
in the grocery who struck
up conversation. The punch line is
I sleep with him to make him leave
me alone. Nobody likes
a strong woman.