Poetry |

“Three-Legged Dog”

Three-Legged Dog

 

She’s overweight and quick to cry, my sister,

who licks Jiffy from a tablespoon, who wants to know

why I call her husband an asshole in front of everyone

when he enters the room.

You were always drunk, she says,

and turns to the sink,

Would you like a cup of coffee?

She brags about the cash they make

on real estate deals in the valley,

— anything can be explained.

I should remind her

he sneaked into my house, slipped upstairs to my room

my first day home from rehab, away

from cigarettes, drunks who chant expectations breed

resentments, styrofoam cups of coffee too hot to drink,

donuts cut to bite-size pieces, thinning trails

of powdered sugar, meetings where I’d go

unconscious, mumbling to myself, playing footsie

with the guy who croons the 12 steps without looking at the page.

There’s hardly anything to make of it,

twenty years of amends, rage that doesn’t end.

She says, You’re wrong about his hands

that found me sleeping. She doesn’t know

at aftercare men in the program called me hostile

but alluring. One night, during the Lord’s Prayer,

somewhere between “trespass”and “deliver us not,”

one-balled Peter asked me out.

I’m like a dog with three legs, he whispered,

you have to love me.

Contributor
Jane Ann Fuller

Jane Ann Fullers poems appear in Atticus Review, BODY, Grist, jmww, Main Street Rag, Northern Appalachia Review, One Art, Pine Mountain Sand and Gravel, Rise Up Review, Shenandoah, Still: the Journal, Sugar House Review, The American Journal of Poetry, The MacGuffin, and Waccamaw. Her collection, Half-Life was published in 2021 by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions.

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