He’s very good at wooing:
gifts–chocolate cherries,
red roses, delicate lingerie,
I love you.
He wears his mask well,
keeps calm, a handsome spider,
weaving a silken web.
She laughs, tells her friends
just how very special she’s
sure he is.
He wears this mask for months,
finds them the perfect apartment,
swimming pool, gym, marble,
granite, luxury appliances.
She’s sure he loves her:
the gifts, the perfect apartment,
fancy restaurants, luxury weekends.
She’s late, heavy traffic, an
emergency at work. He
screams, wants to know
why; no explanation matters.
He hits her for the first time, her
torso, knocks her down.
Tomorrow 24 red roses
arrive at work. He begs
forgiveness. She’s sure
he’s sorry; it won’t happen
again.
Two months later, she’s
late again. Real reasons he
does not want to hear. He
screams, he hits, he knocks
her down.
She dreads red roses.

Note: This is part of my writing a poem per day for National Poetry Month. Regarding this poem, 34% of female homicides are women who have been killed by intimate male partners. Often when women kill a man attacking them, they are convicted of murder even when trying to defend themselves.