Fay Dillof


Where?

              Not on the east coast where it was too cold for my mother
to leave her apartment, the quietest place on

                                                                        earth––
                                                                                          a body, divided, North

                                                                                                         to South–                                                                                                                       as my mother’s has been

                                                                                    since the stroke––revolving                                                                                                                                             in half-darkness.

   Not in the little vacation I take
       in the elevator of her building, going up,

coming down.
And not even afterward, when I left on a red-eye

                               where it was Bloody Marys and Perry Mason the entire flight home.
Like everyone else, I’ve knocked three times on the door which opens

       to another, and so on, until…  And what the souls of the dead want
                     us to know is

                                         they have failed
                                                                                                 at art, at love,  

too, but Look––
                               some are dressed to the nines in silk, head to toe,

one in a punk t-shirt, torn at the chest, another in great-grandmother’s apron
       and sundress–– what good company you’re in.  Are they

                                                     in a bar? Out the window
now, a crow on his throne announces, announces, then,

fuck it all, flies off.
Leaves fall,

land color-side down.
     And darting along the fence, a squirrel…

                                                  Squirrels, I’m told, don’t recall, in which hollow tree,
under which plod of grass,

            they’ve hidden their cache. What a delight it must be when…                                                                                                                                     When

    he picked me up at the airport and I couldn’t not cry the entire ride home, and
then refused to go home, so he took me out for coffee where, on a bench,

facing a fancy-schmancy hotel and tennis courts, I asked
                                                          Can we just sit here in the sun, please,

      and judge everybody?––          
                                      when he said Yes.


Fay Dillof

Fay Dillof’s poetry has appeared in Best New Poets, Ploughshares, Gettysburg Review, Spillway, New Ohio Review, Field, Rattle, Sugar House Review, and elsewhere. A recipient of scholarships from Bread Loaf and Sewanee, Fay has been awarded the Milton Kessler Memorial Prize in Poetry and the Dogwood Literary Prize. Fay lives with her husband and daughter in Northern California where she works as a psychotherapist.