Natasha King

ten sudden rainstorms make me think of my mother

one:

                        drops spun at me from the sky,
my mother splashing me in the tub, her fingertips on my scalp, her arms wet to the elbow
I'm covered in suds, I puff out my small belly to make an island in the lukewarm sea
                        dancing under the
whirl of water, under the heavens, here, I am:
                                                                         me

            

two:

            the wind rises, rain flung
                        down, as if in anger,
                        her voice her words it's her it's her it's me it's me my deeds my sins my
            dirty laundry left scattered on the floor my dinner left unfinished my voice
                        too disobedient too dissident too disappointing me you're disappointing me

 

three:

                                                                                    dust dampened to mud
                                                                                                 under my soles
it's me in my room in the corner afraid because look what I've done and I'm waiting for her to
come in with a wooden spoon and a mouth set like steel and harsh words like pounding hail
and it was only
            years later she told me            
            half laughing
            half guilty                   that it was hard for her           to keep a straight face

 

four:

             the mustiness of the air, jade-green and jade-grey and jade-brown,
she could sit on her haunches for hours and cut stems and spade up earth in little piles planting
her plants and              me narrow like twigs playing nearby and making little piles
of flowers and mulch and
look there's an earwig if you're bad then one will crawl in your ear and
             lay eggs there so be
                                                  good

 

five:

the crackle of ozone,
                                     my chest lifted,
                                                             my chin tipped up,
it's my mother building up fury like a thunderhead on the purple horizon,
            her simmering rage, her silence,
it's me growing old enough to call bullshit, to say I can wreck you too, old enough that I learned
            to set my face like hers, like stone, and make my words cold and hard,
my inheritance,
            my weapon in a world of fire

six:

            the soapy-sweet taste of the rain
                                    sliding down my face.
it's my mother measuring and cutting and making and holding and her hands just fine bones
          wrapped in vellum,
there she is at the sewing machine, the wheel of the car, the whiteboard teaching me algebra, and            
here I am 
learning less than she wanted, but more than she knew,
standing on a stool to measure and cut and recite and be a lot but never enough and she said a lot 
but never you are enough but I know that I am enough and she was enough


 

seven:
                                    the air pressure mouths at my skin, sucking a
                                                             warning, my joints tingle, storm's coming,
eventually I was old enough that I started asking to be tucked in again, will you come tuck me in
                                    and she didn't forget and
                                    there I'd be under the covers and she would slide her palms along the
bedsheet's edge so smooth and sharp and there:
                        me, a variable in an equation,             perfectly fit to the bed's algebra
and her hands on my hair said what her mouth never did which is that I was enough
 


eight:

            wet vegetation heavy on the wind,                  its
                                                                         earthy scent
                                                                         burrowing into my hair,
it's my mother in tears, o terror of terrors, and me afraid and small and too old and too young to know what
my mother's tears sound like, the rustle of them
            scoring marks down her winged cheekbones, you are the whole world I thought in terror
but did not say                                                 you are the whole world
and the whole world cannot weep or          we will drown

 

nine:

            the sky close and breathing heavily,
            clouds  pressing on my shoulders,
                                                            my mother heavy in my arms and suddenly both of us
children
            I can smell her hair I can feel the weight of her tiny bones:                          
                                                                                                 me

 

ten:

light without a source                         but I have a source
streaming onto every pore,                it's my mother who came from her mother who came from
silvering earth, silvering sky,              her mother who came from hers
refracting around my skin,                  o mother I am a mirror
                        unhurried, bestowing its grace.
            o mother you are enough. I am enough. we were enough.


Natasha King's poetry has appeared in GlintmoonLily Poetry ReviewOyster River Pages, and Okay Donkey. She lives in North Carolina, where she spends most of her spare time writing, prowling, and thinking about the ocean. She can be found on Twitter as @pelagic_natasha.

Gustavo Barahona-López & Jerry Flores

Altar For the Not Yet Dead Things 


I decorate the altar with visions, 
Marigolds, and pan dulce. The black
And white photos of deceased 
Ancestors create the backdrop 
For these offerings. Their faces 
Still and emotionless gaze 
Upon the single shot of whisky 
I pour into a shot glass. The trago 
Grandfather had every night 
Before bed. As the shot 
Glass overflows, I wonder why
We don't make altars 
For the things not yet dead. 
No tributes to the migrating 
Hummingbirds. No odes to mother's 
Calloused hands. No homage 
To all of the children torn 
From their mother’s arms, 
Placed in cages with soiled 
Diapers, forced to drink toilet
Water. I trace my name 
On orange petals like a prayer 
For lost kin then place 
The petals in the compost. 
All my muses are dead, though 
Ghosts are the best storytellers.
No bones restrict their animated 
Gestures. Corporal bodies no longer
Hinder their observation. Free 
They float through the ether.
No more torn ligaments or pangs 
Of hunger. Just the low hums 
Of their comings at the 
Intersection of children’s laughter
And their pleas for help.


Gustavo Barahona-López is a poet and educator from the San Francisco Bay Area. In his writing, Barahona-López draws from his experience growing up in a Mexican immigrant household. His work can be found or is forthcoming in Apogee Journal,Glass’ Poets ResistPALABRITASPuerto del SolThe Acentos ReviewHomology LitHayden’s Ferry Review, among other publications. When Barahona-López is not teaching you can find him re-discovering the world with his son.

Jerry Flores is an Indigenous LA Mexican. He resides north of the wall and keeps the old gods.

Clara Burghelea

Language


Romanian begins in the womb
with a row of interruptions. 
The young mother loves chemistry,
lab fumes feeding her words. 
A grandmother puts a ban
on potions and pear-shaped flasks,
confines the young mother 
to silence spells. Babies are gold,
God says yes to caring vessels only.
Womb tightens. Days drizzle softly
the size of wet dogs, the thinning 
presence of Slavic and Latin streaks
feathering the flesh. A harness on
the glyphs. Pieces of her move
forward, a breast bone blooming
in the mouth, air smeared with
colostrum. Under sheets of dreams,
mother and child whisper together,
one body thrumming with gusto,
pretty grudges draping the world.


Clara Burghelea is a Romanian-born poet with an MFA in Poetry from Adelphi University. Recipient of the Robert Muroff Poetry Award, her poems and translations appeared in AmbitHeadStuffWaxwingThe Cortland Review and elsewhere. Her collection The Flavor of The Other is scheduled for publication in 2020 with Dos Madres Press. She is the current Poetry Editor of The Blue Nib.

Elaine Cannell

venison


mostly I want to ask whose
as in whose headlights and how 
 
do I button myself back up
as in why do they call it
 
passing the buck as in your
freckles leave me wholly all
 
in orange and oiled so I want
to be what feeds you, want 
 
to be what to teach your son, 
want to be what bolts, what is 
 
wrapped in tarps and cured mostly
I want to ask if you’ve smelled asphalt 
 
and how it compares to grass and how
it compares to salted skin
 
and square teeth and wide
brown eyes and how soft I was


Elaine Cannell is a poet and PhD student studying feminist literature and performance art at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her work has previously appeared in Cleaver Magazine and After Hours, & is forthcoming in Pretty Owl Poetry.

Millie Tullis

Pioneers


My first sister was named for the ancestor
who hit a Paiute in the back of the head
 
with a log. My second sister named
for the ancestor who nursed her dead
 
sister’s baby on the trail. The baby who
fathered the eleventh prophet.
 
I was named for the woman 
who met Butch Cassidy 
 
and didn’t tell the sheriff for three days. 
No one named for my grandfather’s grandmother,
 
a pioneer girl who married her stepfather
at sixteen. Who delivered twelve children.


Millie Tullis is an MFA poetry candidate at George Mason University. Most recently, her poems have been published in Pembroke Magazine and Ninth Letter. She reads for Phoebe as assistant poetry editor. She can be reached on twitter @millie_tullis.

Joanna C. Valente

the joe pesci of altruism


it's raining outside
like bullshit
 
a closed fist
at an airport, a terminal
full of hatred
 
for all the people who aren't
you. patience is a virtue,
 
kid, but who
has any
these days?
 
instead, gives a kid a $100 
 
for recognizing him
and then
 
leaving him
alone
 
like a home 
              meant
for no one.

Note: This poem was inspired by this tweet by Rod Blackhurst.


Joanna C. Valente is a human who lives in Brooklyn, New York. Joanna is the author of Sirs & Madams (Aldrich Press, 2014), The Gods Are Dead (Deadly Chaps Press, 2015) Marys of the Sea (The Operating System, 2017), Xenos (Agape Editions, 2016), Sexting Ghosts (Unknown Press, 2018), No(body) (Madhouse Press, 2019), and #Survivor (The Operating System, 2020). They are the editor of A Shadow Map: Writing By Survivors of Sexual Assault (CCM, 2017), and received a MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College. Joanna is also the founder of Yes, Poetry, as well as the senior managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine.

Madison Zehmer

Mythweaver


You—mythweaver—stepped on my anklebones,
rendered them useless and dead. You 
 
Tell me the fractures are flowering. You
Show me blood under your nailbuds, 
 
Show me little fracture lines on 
The keratin. You say: I only feel 
 
What and when I want to. I know, 
Because I’ve seen your madness in all of 
 
Its machinery—electric guests that
Move into your mind, clear everything 
 
Out, plan your funeral procession
Before you even know your name. 
 
I want to tell you to stop hiding your 
Hopes under radiators and
 
Ovens. But I—chorus—am silent as 
I pluck out my eyelashes, exhale them 
 
Into dust like the bone bits that 
Rattle as I walk to madhouses and
 
Missouri, your Missouri of 
Regurgitated blueberry pancakes
 
And Occam’s Razor and knees skinned
By gravel altars, your Missouri of 
 
Silhouettes and gods and me.


Madison Zehmer is a wannabe historian and emerging poet from North Carolina. She has forthcoming and published work in Santa Ana River ReviewWards Lit MagLa Piccioletta Barca, and Origami Poems Project. She can be reached on Twitter @madisonzehmer and on Instagram @mirywrites. 

Johnny Cook

In Spring I Think of Salad


In Spring I think of salad
In Winter I crave carbohydrates.
 
In times of peace I think of velvet
In a white room I collapse into dust mites.
 
In the city I make out cloud shapes at night
In the country I turn into a housecat. 
 
In school there is a teacher
In school there is a conglomerate.
 
In the ice cream store they are making ice cream
with liquid nitrogen, sugar, milk, and pistachio.
 
In Spring I think of scallops
In Winter I need bitterness.
 
In hell Satan drops a stone into a hole.
In heaven God considers darkness.
In a white room I collapse into dust mites.


Johnny Cook is the poetry co-editor of BARNHOUSE. He lives in Cleveland, OH and teaches composition at Cleveland State University.

Jacob Schepers

[Ugly ground              you hold so much]


Ugly ground                you hold so much
in you               so much ugly ground              What occupants
you welcome                or at least
permit              Ugly ground     what host you are
you play-actor             too eager to be
a librettist        sans verbal      sans groundlessness    since
you      ugly ground     exacerbate the ecstasy            celebrate
the holdings you hold             the stakes you stake    the claims
you lay claim to          Ugly ground    you are active
in your passivity         an activity unto itself              and of itself
Ugly ground    this is what swell moss feels radiating
from you         This is what swell moss
attaches itself to           Ugly ground    whatever sense
of fallenness     whatever pejorative stockpiles you sift
for the sake of your own         what ownedness and onanism
you fault less is yours             You want to spill your seed
ugly ground     on yourself      your ugly ground        your brilliance
so be it            keep spilling and spilling and sensing
swell moss there to sop it up


Jacob Schepers is the author of A Bundle of Careful Compromises (Outriders Poetry Project 2014). His writing has appeared in VerseTupelo QuarterlyThe FanzineEntropy, Burning House Press, Deluge, and the anthology My Next Heart: New Buffalo Poetry (BlazeVOX 2017). He tweets @JacobSchepers and finds an online home at jacobschepers.com.

Pietje Kobus

Maideleh


My Yiddish maiden
twirls in a dress
It has pockets she says
 
When you were climbing trees
your mom sent you away
They’ll fix you she assured
 
In nights you like to neglect
they exposed you to photographs,
cold baths and electric shocks
 
Are Evangelicals in San Fran?
You asked, assembling the unconverted
There may be a place for us
 
Your voice turns soft
Am I too much?
Did your mother think so?
 
O maideleh, you wake me with song,
make me giggle with startling
stories and sudden silliness
 
You tiptoe through our house
I follow, as your charge                                                                                   
Closing cupboards in your trail


Pietje Kobus is an MFA student of the Mississippi University for Women in Columbus. She writes creative non-fiction and poetry, mostly about the long-lasting damage of harmful messages received during childhood. When she is not writing you can find her in Santa Fe, NM playing with her dogs or taking pictures along a trail.

Gabriel Ricard

From the Coast of Stupefy City


No one can jog ever so slightly ahead
of the trains
that don’t run on time,
so much as they just head out
for cigarettes,
and wind up disappearing into the panoramic void 
of having to carry out a million
useless errands along the way.
 
It would be nice to do that,
whenever someone is honestly
expecting you to show up at their sports casual wedding
in the bowels of Central Park.
 
You could tell them you’re on your way,
and then just pop out,
at some point before you get to Penn Station,
stopping just shy of the disasters
that usually follow any effort
to be more than a passenger on a train
that doesn’t even have a personality. 
 
These trains don’t even have the will 
to be greater than what you have come to expect.
 
You could run just ahead of all of that,
and since you’re already
doing more than physics and commonsense
would ever dream to allow,
you may as well go a little further.
 
Might as well just leave the trains
and raging subway station posters
about immigrants,
or the next big thing that’s going to take
Madison Square Garden by storm.
 
When you’re being unreasonable,
and these days,
everything is,
you may as well ask for more
than you’re probably worth.
 
So, you may as well go further.
You may as well learn to jump
the way Superman did,
before someone realized
that was ridiculous and kind of boring.
 
You’re not Superman.
You just want to be somewhere
that is different to the point
of being impossible to completely understand
the first or eighth time around.
 
Jump over everything. Hell,
jump through things,
if you have to.
 
Why should bricks and airplanes
and war heroes stop you now?
 
Eventually,
you’ll get tired of the volcanoes
and trees that seem to pop out 
of the sky,
rather than the other way around.
 
You’ll be dead-and-breakfast tired.
 
So you’ll just eventually stop,
and that’s where you’re going to be.
 
The best part will be the fact
that you won’t have to owe the church
a goddamn thing.
 
Not like they’d even believe you.
Or remember your name.


Gabriel Ricard writes, edits, and occasionally acts. He is a monthly columnist with both Drunk Monkeysand Cultured Vultures, in addition to being the co-host of the podcast Cinema Hounds. His books Love and Quarters and Bondage Night are available through Moran Press, as well as A Ludicrous Split (Alien Buddha Press) and Clouds of Hungry Dogs (Kleft Jaw Press). He lives in Bay Shore NY with his wife and a quartet of fiendish ferrets.

Alan Trinca

Winter (kind of) In New York


Woke up on time.
Got up too late.
Wind whistles through the slightest slit in the window
While the sun simultaneously sifts past the curtains.
 
Garbage and dead leaves dance on 
sidewalks in cyclones 
Before they gracefully return to rest.
 
In the hustle to make the next train,
I hadn't realized the drop of sweat 
Trickle down my forehead.
It's 50°
In January. 
 
We're all gonna die.


Alan Trinca is a NYC-based actor/singer/dancer/musician from Buffalo, NY.

Jeanna Paden

Cop Cars at Lamar and Central 


the blue lights sprinkle the wall 
from the window and across the street 
 
we crash land onto my bed. 
it meets us in the air
 
I pull the fluff of the comforter down 
to see your stubbled cheek on the pillow
 
we don’t talk
but there’s always that newborn smile in your sleepy eyes
you let me cradle myself in the bend of your knees
 
on the nights when I don’t have you 
I hear a gunshot 
and wonder if you’re home yet
 
the blue spin of the lights 
come and go  
I don’t know if I’m okay 
 
the pizza delivery guy waits at the gate
while someone down the street 
is on the splitting end of a bullet
 
there’s a buzzing behind the south wall of my bedroom 
I don’t know if it’s the air conditioner or the city 
churning underneath me.


Jeanna Paden is a freelance health and wellness writer and copywriter. Her work has been published by Foothill: A Journal of PoetryHer Culture, Pulp Poets Press, and others. Connect with her at PadenFreelancing.com or on Twitter @HalfwayToItBlog. 

Steve Merino

December 6th, 2019

after Daylight by Taylor Swift


As the cat weaves through my legs yelling for more food, I brew coffee
in silence & leave a mug for my partner on the counter where 
 
the steam lifts off the surface for a time until cooling to room temperature
while I put on my coat & exit our apartment to chase the last moments
 
of the dying moon & I arrive at the rink, my second job, unlock the doors, 
disarm the alarm, fill the zamboni with water, & when it’s full I begin 
 
resurfacing the ice: driving the machine in slow circles, raising & lowering 
the blade to shave off the top layer, putting down water to create new ice 
 
in preparation for the league games set to run all day & while driving the zam 
I’m reminded of the motions a body goes through; how anxious I can be 
 
at the thought of staying still & yet, like the zam, I keep moving in circles
as if my body is a fraying thread & maybe I refuse to settle down 
 
& maybe that’s alright but I wonder about time & to be honest sometimes
I don’t wanna think of anything but the schedule of a day & currently 
 
it’s December & I know open possibilities are often roads that lead somewhere 
unknown like the promise of college leading to a good job & stable income 
 
& a home in the suburbs, but it seems we’re stuck living paycheck to paycheck, 
working multiple jobs to get out of debt & I’ve been so caught in the routine
 
I’m forgetting what it sounds like to hear her voice drift to the living room 
while she sings to herself in the shower & instead I focus on this persistent beep
 
coming from somewhere below our unit at sporadic times like some devil 
sent here to drive me mad waiting for the noise to go & also waiting for it
 
to return. Is it possible to be too tired to slow down? Is it possible to love
repetitive cycles? Look, if I’m not being clear know I’m talking about blood 
 
& the way it moves through a body in an attempt to hold everything at once,
talking about missing us dancing around our apartment to Taylor Swift 
 
as the cats exchange glances & snow slowly erases the streets of St. Paul 
forcing us to stay home & watch Christmas movies & drink beer while
 
playing cribbage in the glow of our lamps & casually I look for her hands 
like I did when we were fifteen in an attempt to find some pattern
 
of how they fit in mine like maybe the groves can act as constellations 
I’m afraid of  most things like commitment & constant failure, but mostly
 
of nights & becoming the type of person who lets life move around him
without ever really appreciating a spontaneous hike through the wild 
 
of a city or a clock with a dead battery or a broken mug that allows us
to laugh & that laugh reverberating around our walls, holding us close.


Steve Merino is a meat raffle host, a zamboni driver, and a poet living in Saint Paul, MN. He received his MFA from Hamline University in 2019. Steve's previous work can be found in Oyster River Pages and Shark Reef. Find him liking posts on twitter: @steve_merino

Kevin A. Risner

Church Youth Group Lock-Ins Are Supposed to Be about Getting Closer / To God


A few memories of one in particular: the time
when one of the leaders gives a devotional and I stare
 
at this portrait of Caucasian Jesus. Eyes
peer back, alive, roam the narthex.
 
Later on that night, a group of us plans
to hunt for whichever beings haunt this 50-year-old
 
building. A story from someone else haunts
me: one evening, her mother entered the church
 
alone, heard organ music emanating from the sanctuary.
All doors were locked. She tiptoed to one
 
of the side doors. Peeked through a window. Noticed
the reading light atop the organ. To see the sheet
 
music in front of a vacant bench was all it took.
My memory spins the music tinkling
 
like a haunted carousel. She burst out,
flew away, left the ghost to its own devices. But the hauntings
 
for us: Jesus’ eyes
following me and a door slamming shut of its own accord
 
on the third floor of the church wing. No one
in the hallway to slam it without being seen. No drafts
 
to force the door shut. My mind, my memory plays
its little tricks on me sometimes. Each detail about these spirits
 
in this stone-façade church: the portraiture,
the organ, the doors and all the other orifices, the truth
 
remains in every single detail, every
believable moment when I unravel threadbare pasts.


Kevin A. Risner is author of My Ear is a Sieve (Bottlecap Press, 2017) and Lucid (The Poetry Annals, 2018). His poems have been published in Rabid OakRandom Sample ReviewRiggwelterRise Up ReviewRising Phoenix Review, and other journals that don't begin with R. He teaches writing at the Cleveland Institute of Art.

Maria Popovic

Somewhere Somewhere


In Belgrade
Stands the eroded skeleton
of a building, struck by a bomb
(Of justice, they say)
As a reminder that
Nothing
Ever happened there.
 
When you look at the south-east corner 
Of a map, you’ll find a hole in it.
But when I think about 
The city I was born in,
Every alley and turn and trap
Of crumbling streets
Winds down into my pits.
 
There’s a name written under 
A windowsill, in white chalk.
But history is peeling stucco
And names mean nothing
Without a language,
Language means nothing without 
a story, and if there ever was
 
Glory in act, it is now 
Buried in no one’s memory.
That name in chalk
Is also in my blood,
I carry it around
In foreign land
And choke on it.
 
Up, the flood of foaming
Words comes
Loathing the legacy
It carries. Uproot me
From my bed
Of memories.
Carry me over
 
The blue, blue Danube,
Like an old song goes.
If I am to find home,
I’ll have to wash myself
First in fresh waters,
Crush myself in 
Thin flesh, and be
 
Dust on rusty roofs,
Sedimenting on dark
Windows, unable to
Withstand the gust;
Knocking on glass
Of empty houses,
Belonging like
 
Sand into eyes.


Maria Popovic was born in Belgrade and raised in Italy, where she obtained a MSc in theoretical physics. She is currently based in Dublin in pursuit of a PhD at Trinity College. Despite her scientific background, Maria has found solace and fulfilment in poetry. You can find her on Twitter @mariaminuszero.

Christina Maria Kosch

mescaline daydream, main st., usa


I levitate out of my own body
on sea green candy clouds
 
please tell the streetlights to quiet down,
they coagulate into glowing puddles like marbled candle wax
and tell the cars too,
they race past creating firework reflections on my dewy plexiglass 
and the people! the babies! 
the syrupy sounds of slowed
down screams,
the blood red screeches
of tiny humans,
a thousand chattering mouths,
unsuccessful articulation
 
I watch my body toss and roll, 
cocoon eyes, crystalline chrysalis,
the soft hiss of the wall heater
clashes with the velvet rain
 
—stick your head out of the window,
beg for real air


Christina Maria Kosch recently graduated from Washington and Jefferson College, but is itching to get back into academia. She is using her gap year to write and edit until she is sick and tired of seeing her own words. She wants to be an English  Professor one day.

Kayla King

I’ll Make This List to Live Again


I. You

Just as the haze of this hell began, I opened the pages to Sylvia. 
There’s something about curling into the chaos of a chest cold, 
which permits this Plathian obsession. But maybe the better place 
to begin exists in that perfect splay of broken legs 
across the wall. Perhaps I’ll frame the death 
of the spider. It’s gotten me through the past few days 
with no voice. First words were a croak, so I said nothing 
more. And once again, there are too many thoughts; 
the stoic sabotage of a guarded heart. 
 
Remind me of those other days before I read Her words, 
how I didn’t know to listen for a bragging heart beating on 
and on and on with reassurances of self. But, like always, 
I wonder if you would’ve liked this version of me better. 
Such a question might’ve seemed nonsensical 
then, because we were still trying to pretend 
we were older. Now I pluck my own silvered strands 
from temples, to keep in jars, to line my purses, 
to carry out into the world as a talisman 
against the act of slipping back. 

         

 

II. You 

Such a lovely sky. Just there. Beyond the windows, 
colors remain braided together into one of those palettes 
people write about. But not you. I told someone else 
what you did, just before this sickness seeped deeper 
into my throat.  It’s a silly thought, but perhaps the universe 
has taken my voice as a penance. 
 
I never said it was okay, because it wasn’t. I imagine you 
crafting that text curled up beneath the desk with a glass of wine, 
eyes closed, the same way you used to write through the brutality 
of other things. The image goes vintage at the edges 
the longer I picture you in that place. But it’s temporary, 
as most things are these days. 
 
Ours wasn’t a chance meeting. I’d heard your name 
in passing. And it took too many minutes for words 
to find a place between us, but of course, I always chose 
those over another poison, because the taste, almost dizzy 
with drunk, seemed so sweet. I think I dazzled you 
with another rant about the Oxford comma. You didn’t look 
down at the foam fading from the edges of your beer or back
at your best friend. But now, there is only the mess and no one 
to tidy the room with the bed where I can’t move. I must sleep 
until the sleeping sets this something somewhere soft 
and softer. Like your smile, perhaps.

 

 

III. You  

There is a word I recite in my mind: oubliette
the place of forgetting. I plead with myself to keep you 
from those dregs as I drift beneath the sea of sleep again.
Fever takes me back to that place I so loved. Still do, 
I suppose. I think you’d like that city. There’s a hidden street 
past the park. There’s a gate and cobblestones and a canopy of trees. 
I think if we walked through together, it might take us 
to a different time. But I haven’t told you this. It’s better written. 
I think you might understand, because I’ve seen the look 
cross your face, but maybe I’m too used to the stories, 
the fictitious. 
 
I unfurl into the memory, because it is then and this isn’t now,
because the chills remind this is just the cold and the fever 
and the hallucination will haunt if I don’t list you out 
into all the people you might’ve been without me. And so I do: 
you and you and you and you and you and you and you and you.
And I imagine you tracing my edges before feeling for the back 
of neck. You always had a theory that my stories lived there. 
And I will keep you now. Like a fragile bird, perhaps I’ll crush you 
in my hands, always holding too tight.

 

 

IV. You  

And to you, you feversick nightmare; we’ve all got a part to play. 
You walk the halls of an old house, but you know the steps all the same. 
The wallpaper reminds that somewhere you would be better. 
And it really is such a lovely sky to converse with at night. You talk too much 
most days, and then you walk away. And the spirals and the houses 
and too many cups of coffee can’t cure this nothing. Obsession 
wakes you through the chills. And so you list 
the first and the second and the next and the last. 
Don’t let it consume you. 
         
Don’t let it consume. 
Don’t let it. 
Don’t let. 
Don’t.
         
As always, there’s the wondering. You realize we pay more 
for ifs than here and nows. And you sweat through the sheets now. 
It’s the middle of the night. You wake back to yourself 
and become an I again. 

 

 

V. You         

I told myself I wouldn’t. It applies to both this hungry ache 
for better words and this hunger, waiting in line behind 
too many cars with more thoughts than I wish to have. 
They greet me, voices crackling through the speaker, 
but the voice isn’t yours. I miss the way you talk through 
an idea from beginning to end. 
         
Will that be all? 
         
Yes.
         
I pull around. 
 
I make perfect change, pinching coins between fingers while I wait. 
There is the smell of freshman year. Much has changed in that time. 
As it must. But still I like the bitter aftertaste of nostalgia. 
Disguise it now with the first bite. 
         
I hope you’ll understand the duality between missing you 
and devouring this Crunchwrap Supreme with everything 
mixed all at once: the seasoning, the silk of sour cream, 
add the sauce with each bite. Meticulous. Predictable. One bite. 
A second. Three bites. Wipe mouth. It all makes too much sense. 
         
But the years.  
         
I wipe the drip of sauce from my chin, admire the leafy shape 
left behind on the napkin. Perhaps I should divine my life 
in these shapes. A fingernail. A candle’s flame. The sun medallion 
dipping between breasts. I read them like the three card spread. 
Temperance. The Empress. Judgement. One 
by one. 
 
This was never meant to be a ghost story, 
but the smell of Taco Bell will linger in the car 
for days to come, a haunting reminder 
of your absence here tonight.


Kayla King is the author of These Are the Women We Write About, a micro-collection of poetry published by The Poetry Annals. Kayla's fiction and poetry has been published by or is forthcoming from Firewords Magazine, Sobotka Literary Magazine, Fearsome Critters, Barren Magazine, and Pink Plastic House among others. You can follow Kayla’s writing journey over at her website: kaylakingbooks.com or her twitterings @KaylaMKing. 

Louis Zieja

Tarot Cards Covered In Cat Hair


Push the pile of unopened mail to the side. Don’t 
sit on the knitting needles. Shuffle the cards and cut 
the deck. Nobody knows why they’re so sticky.
I will scry through the crumbs and we will read what’s next.
 
See how the coins are scattered: four paired and one 
quarantined, inside looking out, sole witness to a knight 
lost in a field of red wine splatter staining the ottoman.
The chalice he is holding is both phallic
and vaginal, perhaps overflowing. Nest 
down and hover, look closer at the cards.  See?
The magician’s table is also cluttered.
 
This spread indicates that entropy has taken
hold, that the heat-death of the universe is 
upcoming. Every second you too are shedding 
follicles and flakes, tears and interests, phone 
plans and diets.  Look here, eight is the number of 
perfection but the magician is looking the other
direction towards the tower of empty 
amazon boxes that will 
never be recycled.


Louis Zieja is a cinematographer, collage artist and writer originally from Philadelphia. His comic book series The Subliminals, a collaboration with artist Anton Blake, will be published in 2020. Follow Louis on Twitter @IDriveACampfire.

Angelo Maneage

All Steps to the New Space


There is a clamp           a mass in the middle squeeze
The head becomes one to another thing
/
Once asked              
on one knee           oh my leg       / Rush to the rocks     /
-
Clump of mud we rub in our eyes     
before I could even think about the rest
 
If it made sense     just at the time of mass 
inclusive sky       to those ready to /        be included
to those hesitant will wait an hour          / in the car
In the hot afternoon 
flossed       in just married signature      
Cans connect to teeth
-
 
Toward the green of the pasture     yellow taper  
fire on the blade -
Whistles a scout could name       /
 
Strung from the ceiling
Lights knot underneath / a red
chasing me         / green     
into the waterbed 
-
Movement of the cans    crisp /       washed
Onto the rocks 
     / the way it talks   the water    -  the way we do not 
listen to each whistle 
alone    but as a whole 
-
Do        we hear /        grumble in
                       when the red revs
 
Voice in synchronic height aims us
       One said it will      chase all direction 
without an air release - - inhale
creaked hiss inside of the brick       
-
Watch in the pattern crumble      / in the up part 
The bumped neck    / my back arch /
- rust lines the steel underneath
the oil                        trap / based fireplace        
underneath       the red 
brick hand           
  to the sky       / 


Angelo Maneage is a grocery clerk and data associate in rural Northeast Ohio. He has work here, or coming to here: poets.orgHobartSprung FormalX-R-A-YInverted Syntax, other places. He is a poetry editor for BARNHOUSE.