The Pepper King Returns
He listens to the tock of two clocks—
neither are synched. The Pepper King
does not know how to walk on ice:
his boots slide with every fourth step or so.
He is used to fine sand and root sledge,
full of rock salt and shell piece. The soles
of his feet are as thick as stale ends of bread.
They will laugh at him, but when he returns
home he will prepare such a fine soup, his son
will wake from his rabbit dreams and ask for
an umbrella. It sometimes rains indoors
and his child knows this. The child will learn
the songs of ice and snow. The Pepper King
finds it natural to name his knives. One for slicing
the delicate skin of tomato, a jagged one
for dark meats, still another to debone a fine
and flakey fish. When the Pepper King serves
his son winter soup full of potatoes and cumin,
the boy will eat and eat and clink his spoon
until you hear something like bells. The snow
yeasts itself in banks and slopes against
the boards of his house. The Pepper King never
knew the rising of his breath in the pineapple fields—
such a sweet and silent thanksgiving.