Michelle Askin Those memories go to my brother’s eyes: kidney red from drugs. My mother rubbing them with a dishrag, praying to the saint of addiction. Then on our row house lawn he swung clubs with an Asian woman, who one midnight said, you teach me golf. My mother worried: the husband might mind. He would watch from the doorway. His cigar smoke moving like stories: a school bombing in a Saigon village— blood from flesh and orchard...
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