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In This Place,
Poverty Falls

By Michael Lee Johnson

In this place night falls with Linda. Wrinkled life, wrinkled wishes race across her face. Torment bristles with each morning; nailed to a cross within her house, Linda lives. Everything is a cycle, a charity or gifts. Poverty is an odor, it is a smell her nose itches with. In the yard, poverty grass, near the old car, poverty grass. Poverty tastes like copper metal on her tongue. On her this journey with no applause, no gas, Nicor shut that off. No money honey, laziness shut that off. Her house is full of bills & debris. With no relief a few dollars shrink in her hand harmlessly. Rest, wait in welfare lines, manipulate the coin machines and the local pharmacy drug store. Electric heaters keep the old house warm and the multiple pets alive. The microwave heats the plastic salad bowl filled with water for sponge baths. The left over water mixes with hydrogen peroxide that brushes her teeth. Her body pale and spirits bail out with pills. Groceries are checks Nourished by food stamps. Walls come closer in at night. The wind outside roars with stolen property inside. Dreary days, step into depression's chamber; a slice of her mourning pronounces her dead.