Perfect Hostess
Every January, my birthday rolls around
like a miniature moon in the shadow
of the planet Christmas. My mother
ices angel food cake, decorates our table
with two glass rabbits. She pulls china
from cupboards, her thoughtful touch
on everything so that I grow to crave something
of the host in every celebration, left cold
by corporate cheese plates and sterile scrolls
of deli meat. I dodge most invitations—
prefer books, party lights of fireflies
on Friday nights, their friendly blackouts.
One year, I’m asked back home to feed
my grandmother to the ground. The preacher
speaks of spirits as if we’ve gathered
for cocktails, but I can see nothing
of my grandmother in tidy cups of roses.
She once spooned white clouds of lard,
broke the skinned chicken with her square
hands. She would have ignited a funeral pyre
with her spectacles, burned incense of bacon.