Summer mornings, spine unwilling to support me, knuckles
galled but brain bright as ever I dictate my novels from the chaise longue
beside the French windows. (Wintertime I transfer to its twin, beside the
fireplace.)
‘A cat!’ you cry, occasioning a hiatus in my concentration.
Together we watched it stalk and fail to catch its quarry. My next sentence
lacks precision.
‘Scrub that,’ (an ugly phrase I learned from you). I watch
as you apparently obey, unaware you expect me to die before your perfidy
becomes known.
Before this latest book is published. My words. Your name upon the cover.

No comments:
Post a Comment