The Sick Boy
The Sick Boy
Jane Eaton Hamilton
from Love Will Burst into a Thousand Shapes, 2014
The spot inside the sick boy’s brain was
invisible, it burrowed there pale as a tuber,
stubborn and engorged. His hair lifted
from his scalp like angel fuzz; his eyes
gleamed and struck us. Dumb and
wanting, we watched him teeter to the lip of the
nest, his skin traced blue with veins. Fledgling,
we thought, and gathered our children closer, under
shivering arms. The sick boy wanted Christmas
cards and he got thousands, maybe millions,
a Guiness record in any case, cards enough
to fill warehouses, from everywhere
in the world. There was his father, his mother,
his sister and brother, and there were all those cards,
and there was his brain cancer, growing like
a nightmare’s garden, spreading like a bleach spot
into September and death. We almost
knew something dangerous that glowed
the way an umbilicus will; we almost
saw reflections of silver in the mirror, but then
we didn’t. We only saw ourselves, lustrous
as poster paints, our terrible good luck.