2004 Lois Cranston Memorial Prize First Place Award
Eurydice Speaks from the Basement
for my mother
Our eldest asks me why
I wash clothes down here
in the middle of night.
How can I tell her
this is how the dead wait,
always listening.
The washing machine spins,
clothes flung into space,
everything pressed out of them
like the cigarettes pressed between my lips,
and my ear pressing air
for any sound of you.
Down here
I’m afraid of the rumble
from the old freezer
where in summer
our children come
to fetch Popsicles.
I’m afraid of the furnace
with its fire dancing like stars
on these windowless walls.
And the piles of luggage
like ghosts. I swear
I can hear them murmuring.
I fold the laundry,
ascend the steps
to the back door,
its single window overlooking
the unused garden,
moss and black water,
and beyond.
the street where I watch
for your car,
how the headlights will bend
in the trees like dozens
of swinging lanterns.
I imagine you coming for me
like that—
light swinging from your hand,
liquor on your breath,
excuses old as a song
rising in your throat.
Deborah Narin-Wells
Deborah Narin-Wells teaches writing workshops to middle school children and is a former English instructor at Lane Community College (Eugene, OR). She has a Master’s in Comparative Literature from Rutgers University. Her poems are published or forthcoming in Poetry East, The Comstock Review, Poet Lore, Many Mountains Moving, California Quarterly, Hubbub, Fireweed, Blue Unicorn, CALYX Journal, Southern Poetry Review, among others, and in the 2005 Women Artists Datebook (Syracuse Cultural Workers). A chapbook, Leaving Home, is forthcoming from Traprock Books.