She bought it because her baseball player didn’t want her to,
because her playwright and her President and her Attorney
General disapproved. You’re a star, they said—the one
thing they agreed on. Stars don’t wash their own clothes.

Too timid to defy them, she rented a little room
and left her machine there, safe in its cardboard box.
Disguised in a black wig and flowered muumuu,
she sat and stared at the machine, imagining the famous

bras, nylons and panties, tight sweaters and skirts
sighing as they rocked, settling down into the warm,