Waiting for the Annunciation

(after the painting “Waiting” by Nancy Wanka)

Art does not imitate life.
Art anticipates life.
—Jeanette Winterson

No sacrilege here, only art. And not
the kitschy art of the Madonna of the Suburbs,
nestled in a bathtub grotto near the garage—
the limp shirts on the line, her only devotees—
but real art: a young girl in an empty room.
I could see the screaming headline now,
Free-Spirit Agnostic Chosen to be God’s Mother,
and the ensuing media frenzy. The reporters
just concentrate on her face and don’t notice
the immense yellow space at her right. Too
brilliant; as if the sun had forgotten its place
in the sky and wanted to sit down beside her.
What is she thinking with her doubting eyes
averted? The sideways glance too busy sizing-up
the colors of citron and corona, sunflower and pollen
to really notice the face of God just outside
her sphere of reference: the pale gray hood,
the deep blue jacket. These colors of the sky
groom her to be another version of a modern
madonna waiting for someone to call her name. But
no angel wings announce Mystery Happening Right Now.
And as for any boyfriend waiting on the sidelines ...
Forget it. Whether his name is Joe or Mike or
Kevin, she’ll break a heart and total the car.
Smashed fender the least of his worries. But
back to her waiting to say yes or no. At the moment,
she’s alone. Apart from everyone. Even thoughts
of mother/father, daughter/son. Any second now,
the whole world will stop holding its breath.

From The Blue Divide (New Issues Press, 2021) by Linda Nemec Foster. Copyright © 2021 by Linda Nemec Foster. Used with the permission of the author.