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How We Sleep at Gramma's House by Virginia Chase Sutton

It is always twilight when Gramma runs

a tepid bath for my sister and me, four inches

of amber water from the well. Through the window

 

she watches her luminous garden grow dim, past

the row of outhouses gone to honeysuckle, cabbage roses,

crinkly petunias, vines holding late afternoon

 

to the ground. In summer nightgowns, carrying

a cracked ceramic chamber-pot between us, we climb

to the one-bedroom apartment where our parents lived

 

their first married year. Mother drank gin and bourbon

from bottles hidden under the bed and their thick voices

vibrated down the varnished stairs, creased the crimson

 

rug in Gramma’s front room. When we all visit, they

do not sleep together the way they once did. I pull back

tight covers on the bed in the room beneath gabled windows,

 

rumpling sheets Gramma spent the morning ironing,

slide into the bed’s furrow. My sister clambers up

the four-poster where Great-Grandfather Carter died,

 

arguing our early bedtime. I do not mind smoky light

pooling under window-shades. Across the highway

hundreds of birds line branches of an old oak, their

 

voices loud inside this space. My sister is asleep in the front

room. I wait for my parents’ footsteps, foggy silence.

Then a smooth scoop in my bed when my father pulls

 

soft blankets to his shoulders, rolls into me. Then he sleeps.

Birds settle the night. My father’s breath drones. The birds

wake early. At last, dawn, I fantasize their twittering songs.


Virginia Chase Sutton is the author of the books EmbellishmentsOf a Transient Nature, and What Brings You to Del Amo, which won the Samuel French Morse Poetry Prize, as well as the recently released chapbook, Down River. Seven times nominated for a Pushcart Prize, she has won the Untermeyer Poetry Prize at Bread Loaf and the Allen Ginsberg Poetry Prize. Her poems have appeared in the Paris Review, Ploughshares, Comstock Review, and Peacock Journal, among many other literary publications, journals, and anthologies. She lives in Tempe, Arizona. 

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