When My Husband Needs to Practice a Physical Exam

image from public domain

image from public domain

All I can think is how last night
I dreamed we had three babies,  

all of them healthy and pearl-boned
and delicate, beautiful silk-skulled,  

and in my dream, I dropped one
on the kitchen tile while cooking, 

forgot another in the bath when
the phone rang—my boss, urgent. 

In my dream, one disappeared from her stroller
while I shopped for eggs on aisle nine. 

I awoke numb, stared at nothing for an hour,
coffee cup chilling in my palm. I burned 

from imagined grief—that grief that is really pain
that is really fear that is really REM sleep that is really  

keeping me from wanting ever to be a mother.
Now my husband, in stethoscope and white coat, 

stands beside our bed. On a scale of 1 to 10,
how would you describe your pain?
 

He adjusts my collar, rests the bell on my chest,
says Breathe in, breathe out. 

I do and laugh at the strangeness of breath,
the unthinking of it. 

Last week, after night class, a long drive,
I dreamed he died a gruesome death 

and remembered the details all through my run
the next morning and my drive and my teaching. 

Now he takes my foot in his hands, runs a coin
along my sole, says Do you feel when I do this?  

It is surprisingly intimate. He is still learning
how bodies fit together, all the intricate 

sinews like ribbons, all the muscles and organs.
I watch as he takes my pulse, taps my knee.

Ciera Horton McElroy

Ciera Horton McElroy's work has appeared in or is forthcoming from AGNI, Bridge Eight, the Crab Orchard Review, Little Fiction, Lumina, and Flash Fiction Magazine, among others. Her work has also received an honorable mention from Glimmer Train and Smokelong Quarterly. Ciera is represented by Folio Literary Management. 

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