Time is a Brady Street thrift shop. In the window,
a mumu blows with coconut palms above
a faux leopard cape. A red tam rides the headless,
wooden neck of a dress form. How does it happen?
I try to resist, but go in. Then, mildew, mothballs
the reek of Lucky Strikes. Garment racks shaggy
as buffalo. There is no mirror. To exchange
this self. I paw through a dead woman’s
closet, can’t remember my size. Suddenly, in what
seems years, I wish for my mother, the tangled
handwritten lines of her memory. Next, a clerk
approaches, his lips female saying, I know what
you want. Trust me. I know you better than you know
yourself. What I want. I feel it then as it slips on, zipping
exactly over the curves of the wanting. That fit. That
high. Like driving home in a new car. From the curb
I am envied, renamed: India, Persephone, Sydney,
Paris. For a long moment, a fraud I call love
lifts me from the floor…But soon the wanting is
back, blood-hot, bottomless. Listen, I say, I’m
in a hurry. When do you close? Above me,
arms of beaded sweaters and tuxedos stretch
and beckon across veined walls. Finally, I discover
the back room. There, Marlene, her red hair ratted
toward the stars, removes a crushed shape from a garbage
bag of shadows on the floor. Absently, a cigarette
in one hand, she spreads the crumpled fabric over
the hanger’s metal bones, then draws the puffing steamer
down the wrinkled surface, releasing each crease
of memory, each fold of desire, each knot of grief.