Granny hollers after me:
“When you find dem,
mek dem wash dem hands,
and bring dem come eat.”
“Yes, Granny,” I reply, already
mounting the stairs.
“And, Malachi,” Granny hollers again.
I pause on the stairs.
“Yes, Granny?” A question this time.
No answer.
“Yes, Granny?” I call my question again.
Still no answer.
I make my way back down the stairs
and round the open kitchen door.
“Yes, Granny?” I say for a third time.
When she smiles, I catch a flash of her gold tooth.
“Welcome back, baby.”
She opens her arms wide to invite me into a hug.
Tuesday: Self-Preservation—Lunch Hall
I tease Matt and poke his bicep:
“Why are your arms so big?
Have you been weight lifting?”
“Yeah, I have,” Matt says coyly,
“and I went to boxing boot camp over summer.
I wanna be able to defend myself,
or defend you if I have to.”
I find this sweet and scary.
I deflect with a joke: “Chekhov’s guns!”
“What’s that mean?”
“Don’t you remember