Light Perception: A Sestina

By Christos Theophanous, MD
 
She already knows. She hears it in the pounding quiet
that blankets the sterile room as he slides his light
left and right, peering deep into the dark
hole of her eyes until it catches the reddish glow
in the face of the battered lens
clutched between his fingers.
 
He inches the instrument forward, his fingers
guiding a careful view of her quiet
eye, peering past her yellowed lens
to find the hollowed nerve centered in his light,
like a dull streetlamp casting its pale glow
though a deep night’s dark.
 
Pulling the lens away, the eye again becomes dark.
He pauses a moment, rolling it between his fingers,
casting a circular shadow in the slit lamp’s glow
as he ponders a moment, afraid to break the quiet.
He nudges the scope aside, extinguishes its light,
and pockets his lens.
 
She feels the cold touch of the lens
pull away from her eyelid as she settles back into the dark.
Faint colors linger from the quenched light.
She already knows his verdict. She just waits, fingering
a stitched edge of her chair in the thick quiet
watching the few remaining embers glow.
 
In a moment, they lose their final glow
leaving her with the tinkling sound of the lens
rattling on the linoleum floor, cutting the quiet.
He rummages across the room in the dark,
feeling along the wall until his fingers
find the switch and fill the room with light.
 
He shifts his stool beside her and places a light
hand on her shoulder. A faint smile glows
on her face as she places wrinkled fingers
on his. She’s known this pattern, his lamp and lens,
for as long as they’ve fought this insidious dark.
But this time, he saves his words to preserve the quiet.
 
There is comfort in the quiet and no more he can do to bring back the light.
She rises to her feet in the now familiar dark and heads towards the doorway’s dim glow.
His fingers guide her from the room, away from the doused lamp and the ineffectual lens.
 

Share