Joe’s Deli

There is a quiet stillness every night


After dishes have been washed in the sink,


Surfaces wiped down, the floor moped, the grill


Scraped clean, and utensils like the spatula


Placed neatly on aluminum foil. The day’s work


Is over and Joe can go home to rest.


 


Joe’s intrinsic sense of order does rests


In his kitchen when he leaves for the night.


Usually he gets so backed up with work


That dirty dishes pile high in the sink,


Food debris covers the metal spatula,


And black grease cakes the surface of the grill.


 


During the lunch and dinner rush, the grill


Is full of cheesesteaks and orders from the rest


Of the menu. Like lightening, Joe’s spatula


Streams chopping, maneuvering the black night


Of the grill’s caked grease. His mood sinks


With incoming orders from those off work


 


Who are grumpy and angry that he can’t work


Faster to feed their hunger. They just grill


Him with demands like water drains in a sink


Channeling their troubles onto he who cannot rest.


Joe works to stay cheerful but by end of night


He’s ready to attack with spatula.


 


Watching Joe maneuver the spatula


One wouldn’t guess that his marriage doesn’t work,


That he sleeps on the sofa at night


His brain a’frying on a buttered grill;


That he dreads being alone for the rest


Of his life, just a drain to the world’s sink.


 


At night leaking pipes under kitchen sink


Spew puddles over the floor. The spatula


Collects dust on its foil with the rest


Of the utensils. When Joe comes to work


In the morning, he heats up his clean grill


And looks across the wrecked stillness of night.


 


Day after day, the sun sinks into night


While Joe stands over grill with spatuala


At work in dysfunction, waiting to rest


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Published on January 29, 2017 11:41
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