At the Kitchen Sinkby Elisabeth Sennitt CloughAt the Kitchen Sink
IM of R.H, 1961-1986
Her hair falls over her eyes as she swills and knocks around small vague bodies of root vegetables. The water's green-grey, always the colour of mussel-shells. Her pink hands coax away the frack of Fen soil until she's ready to peel.
She told me she used to bathe him in there, her firstborn, how he'd hide in the clothes-horse until she grabbed him from her clean laundry, soaped him until he shone. Now her hands find only peelings that mulch the plughole. She lets the water sift through them, carry her thoughts down the drain into the depths from where they came.
Second prize, 2015 |