|
|
Waiting Room (Free verse) by jessicazee
I canât wait for the laughing gas.
I ripple pages of last weekâs People, a little
boy in shoes that cost my month in wages
reads Stone Soup, is that still a magazine?
his mom tallies her Glamour sex quiz
with a borrowed pencil, she erases
things a lot, I hear a drill.
Doctor Greenberg, prepping shiny picks,
needles, a fluorescent light bulb
in the lamp keeps flickering, it washes us out.
The boyâs virginal Garanimals are rumpled,
his incomplete molars fleshy holes
sought out by the pink tip of his tongue,
fingering in his pocket a Sacajawea
left under his pillow by the fairy,
the fairy who deals in teeth.
I have had no cavities, a genetic blessing
like the soft curl in the boyâs fine hair.
But today I have an appointment, surgery
to extract useless impacted leftovers
of days when bones needed gnawing.
I want to wiggle my tooth again, eat an apple
and leave a canine in its flesh, whistle through
a hole in my mouth. My name is called.
I await the laughing gas.
Back to poem details
|