First they taught us how
to put on our white
gloves. How to scrub each
night to keep them clean.
Never mind that I
was six and that boys
just twelve years older
died every day in
the jungle. Rotted
where they fell. We learned
to diaper babies,
to pin away from
the child’s skin and
toward our own. How
to curtsy and sit,
ankles crossed, our hands
like sleeping birds in
our laps. Each dinner,
the television
detonated with
gunfire from helicopters.
Mother had me set
the dinner table.
I had been trained which
direction the knife
blade should face. I knew
how to use a shrimp
fork. I could iron
anything smooth. I
was a child, but I
knew that white gloves
and party manners were
best, because when I
was silent, clean, and
neat, my mother
would love me.