By Matthew Barrett
I want to graffiti the walls where my grandmother lives, white and sterile walls (egg-shell colored walls, as the nurses say), replace her sanitation lists with photographs, magazine spreads, and paper clippings; take the mattress from her prison cell and remove each spring, make them bend, make them budge, make them act like springs for the very first time; force a bed through her door, the California King; ax the molding if it’s in our way, ax the Restrictions sheet that says No wine; smuggle beer, smuggle rum, replace her plastic trays with a stereo set and bring her old friends in, Dorothy and Marianne; cut the bracelets from her wrist that make the elevator scream, cut the bracelets from her roommate’s wrist, who sits by the phone waiting for her father to call. Clothe them in jewelry—heirlooms, as my mother says—priceless, priceless, everything is priceless; bring what’s priceless and let her choose, let her stand before the mirror with lipstick on and set the oven to broil; let her cook, let her chop the chicken to pieces; turn the water on and let it steam; let the chicken burn, the kitchen burn, cover the alarms and sirens. I’d like to take the warden’s car—the red Corvette with a cigarette smell—and ask which way she wants to go; see how loud the engine roars as her cell blocks disappear.
Matthew Barrett‘s writing has appeared in Word Riot, Wigleaf, and Timber Journal and is forthcoming in the Apeiron Review.
Image provided by Oliver Dodd via Flickr’s Creative Commons licence.
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