you ease shut the doors
of the double body-bag,
a foreclosure of life.
a thick white sheet
divides the room like an argument
with a point & purpose lost
in this months-long fever-fear.
a rasp reminds you that you're not alone.
before you didn't need to ask: the person
trapped on the other side was wheeled out
to a room with sun, free wind,
green plants small as grandchildren.
now they must wait as you reap.
the body-bag feels like it's grown lighter;
perhaps, you wonder again,
unbound by the weight of the soul.
you struggle to remember their name
but you remember their face:
they waved at you once,
back when you could still do that,
when visitors brought stories & sweets,
before we misplaced our time,
time lost to shrouds of alien plastic,
silicon gloves discarded in pairs,
the horror of disinfectant
that scours & dries
as badly as a broken promise.
outside the nursing home,
you lower the dead
into the rear of the truck, feather-gentle,
minding the folds of the dense bag
as if you're trimming a sail in strong wind.
you once saw purpose in this work:
bearing so many through
a weary & distracted world,
that above all craves immortality,
so that the loving might touch these loved
one last time.
yet after nine months,
your blood is calloused,
you, soul-bearer,
you, clung to the gunwales
of a water-burdened row-boat,
you, haunted by horn-squalls
from the opposite shore:
why? why?