This Is How Hitler Happened
The goldfish you brought home
to our apartment from a night out
at the fair with your mother's parents
swam like mad in its thin plastic bag,
filled with unnaturally blue water,
the color of mouthwash or Windex.
There ought to have been some rules
written into the divorce decree to cover
situations like this, but there you were,
smiling and sticky and fascinated at six
and three, so we dumped our new pet
into the only workable receptacle I had-
a Lenox crystal bowl that had somehow
made it into my pile during the dividing.
Seriously, I didn't expect the creature
to last. It came from a festival game.
In blue water. We set it in the kitchen
next to the stove with the broken burner.
We didn't give it a name, and to my
knowledge, we never fed it. We certainly
never went out of our way to purchase
real fish food that we could shake
like seasoning into its leaded home.
When the water evaporated about half-
way down the bowl, I'd run it under the tap,
unleashing a cloud of filth that would
eventually settle- a cruel existence
that lasted a stunning nine months.
I know I could have ended the waiting,
poured the whole mess into the toilet
or through the disposal during one
of the long stretches you spent at
your mother's house, but I was afraid
to face it, to face you, to explain, and
I think I needed something to hate.
At night, alone in the kitchen, I would
stare into the bowl and ask, "Why
don't you die?" It's weird that I used
to think that story was funny.
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