Evening Maintenance
A devotional practice interrupted by something fluorescent

I learned early that walls remember.
*
They keep the warmth of arguments,
the outline of hands pressed flat against plaster,
the breath of whatever stood too close to the bed.
*
When I moved into this house,
I never asked what it had already swallowed.
*
Each evening, I light a small flame
and let it pull the room inward.
Smoke wrote a script across the ceiling,
thin and deliberate,
in a language I almost understand.
*
Some intelligences prefer corners.
They rest in the hinge of a door,
in the hollow behind the outlets,
in the place where shadow refuses to soften.
*
If I speak, something reboots.
*
If I kneel, the floor answers with a sound
that is not quite wood-like.
*
I need to remember to buy paper towels.
*
That sentence lands on the altar like a receipt.
*
The flame stays steady.
The smoke continues its slow arithmetic.
The walls accept the inventory of my life
without commentary.
*
Salt lines the thresholds.
It marks where I once believed in control.
*
A presence waits until I close my eyes.
It counts the seconds between my breaths.
It leans its weight against the beams
as if testing their patience.
*
Houses are patient.
*
Ownership feels temporary here.
We move through a structure’s memory
and pretend the arrangement is a mutual affair.
*
But tonight I kneel again in the center of the room.
The boards dip, almost imperceptibly.
*
The flame shortens.
The smoke thins.
Something settles in and gets comfortable.
*
I remain where I stand.
About the Creator
Shannon Hilson
Pro copywriter chasing wonder, weirdness, and the stories that won’t leave me alone. Fiction, poetry, and reflections live here.
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