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2007 Poetry Honorable Mention
>> Author bio
Amos Fuller doesn’t speak. He sometimes sits with us when there is room, His stark dinner tray occupying his private quarter of the table.
His khakis are always neat and clean, Wrinkle free, yet strangers to an iron; His heavy black boots shiny and worn. He never wears sweats, or sneakers, or T shirt, Just the same long sleeved uniform, winter or summer.
If the salt and pepper are out of reach he does without. Sometimes one of us will place them in front of him. Then mashed potatoes become snow covered mounds, The single, thin slice of meat an ash laden shingle.
Bent in posture yet proud in manner, Amos Fuller doesn’t speak. He wears his thinning Afro like a skull cap; His withered brow reads like the rings of a southern pine.
He bows his head in prayer, and raises it in drink, His vacant eyes prisoners to a different time, a different place. Fork clenched tightly in a rough arthritic fist, The lacking meal is meticulously consumed:
Dry green salad; Mean portion of rice or potatoes; Meat. Two glasses of water. Always the same. Never dessert.
Once there were cucumbers on his tray. Halfway through the meal Amos Fuller burped, expressionless. He wiped his puffy brown lips and continued to eat.
Someone said he murdered his wife and her lover; Their splattered mingled blood stained the Curtains and carpet of the tired motel room. That was 40 years ago, The last time anyone heard Amos Fuller speak.
Dinner was silent and tense tonight, Eyes shifting about like butterflies. I stood to leave, dropping a wrapped candy mint on his spent tray. He raised his blank face to mine, and rapped his scarred knuckles on the table. Amos Fuller doesn’t speak.
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