Pie Crust

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I dream of teaching my own daughter

To flour the pin

And flatten the crust from center to edge,

As you taught us.


Julie's perennial birthday pies

Were always perfect:

Cream and raspberry in ribbons,

Delicate crust cut cleanly.


But I think of your countertop,

Never close to clear

of knick-knacks, pens, and papers

Your lazy daughters left.


Pots and plates and peanut-buttered knives

Dropped in at any moment

Next to pans left for another to clean

Always cluttered your sink.


Even the cat thwarted your efforts,

Trailing pellets from the pantry

Through crumbs from our stolen sweets,

Wastefully certain of his next meal.


You found Julie in that fortress countless times,

Fingers deep in sugar or pecans.

You caught your other daughters less often,

But we were thieves and you knew.


Your kitchen has not been sacred ground

Since the first of us first walked,

And never again will be,

Until the last at last takes flight.


I dream of teaching my own daughter

To scrub counters

And sweep floors

And my pie crust, if I trust you,

 Might someday be perfect.

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