By Faith Van De Putte
The chest is ajar after the lesson.
Now, alone with the body,
she reaches down and picks up the liver,
as solid as a loaf of rye bread.
Gently, with familiarity
as if folding her child’s clothes
she nestles it above the colon on the right.
The heart is placed between the lungs.
She smooths down the small intestines,
settles the lid of ribs,
draws closed the cover of skin,
tucks the formaldehyde soaked sheet around,
and zips up the blue body bag.
The gloves come off,
hands are washed in the stainless sink
and on the way out she exchanges
the lab coat for a red scarf.
Faith Van De Putte grew up on Lopez and after leaving for a good many years moved back to the island. She currently writes, has a massage therapy practice, is starting a garden and spends quality time with the tides and the trees.
All work by Faith Van De Putte