Last

I did the work your nervous fingers

were afraid to do

 

I pulled the razor gently

over the turns in your face –

 

a landscape I have traced since birth –

I fill a wooden cigar box full of lasts

 

last laugh, last drive with you drumming the dash

last song deejayed in the kitchen with the broken cabinets

 

your skin – once baby soft – now covered

in blonde stubble, smothered in shaving cream

 

I pulled the razor down over the jawbone – widening

as the years stretched you towards manhood

 

last dirty sock strewn in the front hall, last homework assignment not yet done

last voicemail, last text

 

I pulled the razor down your trembling neck

Adam’s apple rising – not sure if it could trust me

 

last sticky bag of Swedish fish tossed just shy of your trash can

the last thing I said

 

I finished with the thin space

above your top lip

 

a space so intimately yours

I wondered even then

 

if this would be the last time

I touch you


Colleen Ovelman is an editor and poet, originally from West Chester, Pennsylvania, now living in Vermont. While much of her work and publications are focused on evidence-based medicine, her creative work has previously appeared in the Best of the Burlington Writer’s Workshop, the Grand Exit podcast, and in Vermont Stage’s Winter Tales. She is currently working on a collection of poems, a history of mending, which explores living with grief in the aftermath of her teenage son’s death.