Each Sunday

if she wore her dresses

the same length as mine

people would gossip viciously

about her morals

if i slept         head barely touching

the string of freshwater fake pearls

mouth slightly open         eyebrows knitted

almost into a frown

people would accuse me of running around

too much

suddenly her eyes springing away

from her sleep intensely

scope the pulpit and fall

on me

i wonder did she dream

while baking cold-water cornbread

of being a great reporter churning

all the facts together and creating

the truth

did she think        while patching the torn pants

and mending the socks of her men         of standing

arms outstretched before a great world

body offering her solution for peace

what did she feel wringing the neck

of Sunday’s chicken breaking the beans

of her stifled life

she sits each sunday black

dress falling below her knees which have drifted

apart defining a void

in the temple of her life in the church of her god

strong and staunch and hopeful

that we never change

places