http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
There's trouble in the world,
        my mother said. Carbon monoxide
        in the garage, gravel trucks below
        the dam, dirty boys loitering
        behind the Burger Palace. 
She was sliding deeper
        into dark. Phone off 
        the hook, gopher holes pocking 
        the yard, clocks stopped 
        at seven, three, eleven. 
Broken branches against the eaves, 
        weeds taking over the paths,
        plaques and tangles in her brain.
That Thursday morning, as she lay inert
        on the couch with only the dog 
        to watch, was the day the household gods
        led the rescue team to the DNR.
        Do not, do not, do not resuscitate.
The driveway curves downhill, 
        the wine sours in the bottle.
        Too late for the emergency room, too late
        for the green-garbed nurse, too late
        for order and explanation. 
        What's to become of us all?
Afternoon light 
        
        climbs the ladder of hills.
        
        The sun is a pitcher 
       spilling a slant of amber 
		  
	    across the sagging patio. 
Eucalyptus trees 
        spread 
     brittle branches toward the sky
          
        and the shadow of a hawk
		  
	    falls over the chaparral.
The world is a photograph
        of places between places.
        Everything will begin                         
        and end without me.      
      
It's 90 degrees,
        but he sits on the couch, reliving
        the snows of Norway. This morning
        he lost his checkbook, the checkbook
        I soon must take away from him.
It's 90 degrees, and the dishwasher 
        is full of clean dishes. Time was he
        took them out when they were still warm.
        Now he thinks of snow and Norway 
        and I put away bowls that are cold.
It's 90 degrees and I can't persuade
        him to take off his sweatshirt.  
        While he sits and dreams 
        of Norway's cool blue, 
        sweat runs down his temples.
The dryer thumps and bumps.
        He washed everything on hot
        and now he think of Norway
        while I shake out my ruined blouse,
        his shrunken sweater.
This evening it's cooler.  I remind him
        to take his pills, move close to him
        in bed. He asks me what day it is, when 
        it was we moved so close to the sea. 
        I am the keeper of our shared history.
for Annabelle
Nothing
        is out of bounds, 
        arms, stomach, breasts, 
        her once beautiful face,
        her torn and bloody lips.
        She will not come home late
        from work, she will not 
        see any of her friends.
        she will not spend 
        mornings in the studio,
        He will be her only 
        friend.
Ruth Bavetta's poems have been published in Rattle, Nimrod, North American Review, Slant, Tar River Poetry, Spillway, Hanging Loose, Poetry East, and many others. She has published four books, and has work included in several anthologies. She writes at a messy desk with a view over the Pacific.
        This is Bavetta's first appearance in Offcourse.