we are succulents our cool jade arms open over clean tables our fine bone china minds pull the strings of our tongues together we plait our thoughts with the television back through the aerials and transmission towers prodding through the literal fog the mechanics of which distance does not startle us or the ears pretend to hear the telephone the page also wearies us we have taken the meaning out of things by laying them face to face in our dictionary of emotions we are so entirely alone that we are unaware of it and we enjoy the religion of solitude because religions are at base meaningless and we can turn from them to a new hobby to clean ashtrays or emptier whiskey glasses we the women of our building Margaret Gladys Cecily Ida Eileen and I have the cleanest washing on our block we are proud and air our sheets although it's a long time since any serious stain or passionate figment seeped through that censorious cloth we have plants one of us has a budgie and I have three fish the details are unimportant God does not come here often we would be suspicious if he did without an identity card we collect each others' mail remind each other of garbage days and are frightened of the louts from the skating rink but in the night I leave my curtains open and air my pendant tremulous breasts