Maria Surricchio

SICKNESS & HEALTH

You can use my cryptic limbs,

yours mute from surgery:

 

I will hold what you can’t

carry. My desk waits, an empty

 

page, still I find screws

and a drill, spices and syrup.

 

On your good leg

and crutches you’re fluid

 

and smooth, secure a ladder

to a wall, want to fix us

 

comfort food. Twice I search

for the “dish” that’s really

 

a tray (here, take my eyes).

Words you don’t say

 

(they’d keep me from

my desk and pen) I slip

 

into your mouth: Puree

the apples? Smoke

 

the chicken?

I slide And the ribs?

 

between your lips.

You leave to rest and I

 

stay, moving like you

over charcoal, sweet steam.

 

Your fluent grace –

its folds and bends –

 

has found my body,

like a vow.

Maria Surricchio is originally from the UK and now lives near Boulder, Colorado. A life-long lover of poetry, she turned to writing in 2020 after a long marketing career. Her work has been published, and is forthcoming, in the I-70 Review, Lily Poetry Review, Pirene's Fountain, The Comstock Review and others... Full Profile