Water Story

By Cortney Davis

I love the living sound of my plant when I water it,
the hiss and suck of agua
pulled through the soil by gravity,
the sweat that appears on the clay pot,
the unwrinkling of the leaves.
I had a patient once, pregnant mother
morning sick and evening sick, who arrived
hauling her children, carrying her bucket.
We slipped a needle in her vein,
dripped saline into her body's dry core
and, right before me, the woman
plumped up. My ivy overflows-
a thread of water and fertilizer returns to earth
through the sink mouth. I am happy
that all life is circular. Seven months later,
the woman's chubby boy popped out, head first.
Blood and water flooded the catch basin, spilled over.
I carry this story on my white shoes.

"Water Story" previously appeared in Prairie Schooner. The author owns the rights to the poem. Cortney Davis, NP, a poet and nurse practitioner in Connecticut, is co-editing Intensive Care: More Poetry and Prose by Nurses, to be published by the University of Iowa Press in May next year. "Water Story" will appear in the anthology.

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