Eight Legs
By Mabry Sansbury
There is a spider in my bedroom.
She watches through the window
As my neighbor mows his lawn.
He takes a drag of his
Cigarette
And pauses,
Drinking in the trail of dead grass
Strewn in his wake.
He lives alone,
Though not by choice.
When he was a younger man,
He imagined being held
By someone with soft hands
Who would breathe through the night
And cry when he
Inevitably
Left her behind
For a greener fence.
She would shake herself to pieces for him.
She would run until her lungs gave out.
She would brave her fear of heights and
Fly
Just to watch him grieve
A life that could’ve been.
And when she gets to that house
And its blackened fences,
My hand comes down on the glass,
And the eight-legged thing
On my bedroom window
Dies as she began.
She oozes.
She bends.
She breaks apart.