From across the street, we must have seemed
a pretty picture, mother and daughter in lawn chairs,
that summer of waiting,
my mother watching the day, Sunday or Saturday,
all days had merged into blunt phrases of light ending in dark,
the name no longer mattered.
That day, she wore the bright pink dress, full and flowing,
that my brother had bought her,
and a patchwork scarf of vital colors
obscured what remained of her hair;
there was little else we could give her;
her desires had become so difficult
to discern.
The bearded man with wire-rimmed glasses
asked to photograph us.
“I’ll send you prints,” he offered.
This seemed to please my mother
who couldn’t say so,
since the cancer had paralyzed her speech.
She nodded in affirmation
at the large old-fashioned camera,
boxlike, an indifferent hole at its center.
He smiled as he steadied its perch on the tripod.
We watched as we waited in silence.
Years before, when we shared a bedroom,
each morning my mother would smoke her first cigarette
before leaving bed.
Silent, she watched me as I dressed, as I brushed my hair,
squinting her eyes, she followed my every movement,
with her every inhalation.
I hated it.
Later, I realized, she was only smoking,
and I was the only moving object in the room.
By the time her speech
had begun to slur, the cancer had grown, from the lung,
too adamant to ignore.
Suddenly, every day was stripped to the minimum,
living became little rituals with no space
for grace or charm,
laughter, a brief escape from the shuddering boredom.
Now, she wanted this picture.
Each click of the camera extracted
another inch of pain
exposed her slow disintegration,
her dying interrupted.
We never saw that man again,
or his picture of two figures
on a doorstep on a street in a city,
where one was dying,
though the picture would never know that.
by Linda Pizzi
This poem was first published in the Paterson Literary Review