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  • “Name your torture,”
    one of them said
    with a wink.

    I wanted an orchard
    but I swallowed the vodka
    he handed me
    willingly.

    “The Gorge”

  • I’m a sociopath,
    I practice in the car window.
    it’s 92 degrees and I
    am only half melt,
    half kept a bitch
    in a yard but
    with a water bowl,
    no chain. polyester
    pink collar says “PRINCESS”
    watching the screen door from eight
    am to nine dark.
    see if they’ll wave me in.
    there are two kids with snow
    cones dripping down their arms
    nearby. I smile
    you sneer.

     

    he wants to know everything.
    I tell him everything,
    I say, turning towards the
    young girl.
    she is wearing a pink dress,
    has long uncombed brown hair,
    stick legs, her older brother nearby
    and is taken by
    my insouciance.
    my foul mouth that
    yelled fuck
    earlier for no reason.
    my centipede tattoo.
    he takes her sticky hand
    and they race to the swings.
    she turns to see if I’m still
    wavering in the sun.
    truth is, I’m actually
    six feet in the ground
    and only children can see
    parallel lines.
    I smile.

     

    I’m wearing a mask,
    not touching a thing,
    sweltering. practicing
    honesty.
    practicing
    hugging
    people
    when
    they
    walk
    in the room.

     

    “affection”

  • “My dear girl is it that you are so lonely you had to create all of this?”

     

    —house of leaves

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  • I’m in the doctor’s office
    trying not to laugh
    as he keeps pressing me
    “what was your father like?”
    I don’t have time quite frankly.
    this man is asking me if I ever
    feel like I am watching myself from
    outside of my body.
    I say sincerely,
    sounds like you think I’m a ghost.

    I’m trying not to laugh.

    he is outlining various traumas
    I may have experienced in my life:
    my drinking,
    my family’s drinking,
    my previous assaults by men.
    I’m just talking about the mirror
    and gesturing a lot to the air
    about the fact I asked for it
    and then my legs went numb.

    that was the first time,
    I say.
    when I asked for her to enter me.
    before she did it without asking.
    I nod as if he is answering the questions.

    Sir, I am possessed.
    I don’t have time for this. 

     

    “LILITH”

  • I walked by my old apartment
    just to feel it
    grab me.
    what I would miss most
    were the stained glass windows
    and the birds surrounding my house
    but nothing else.

    it was marked off with caution
    tape and a sign that said
    it was dangerous.
    my side wall had burst.
    water shot out.
    the place flooded.
    there were bricks everywhere.

    people used to tell me
    the place vibrated
    and sometimes pictures fell
    of the wall.
    what I remember is the
    mirror and the way they made
    me undress and throw coins
    on the floor, buy them
    toffee. the way
    they never told me
    their name.

    laying naked looking at the
    ceiling guessing names,
    less than a year ago
    before the wall burst. 

    “Poltergeist”

  • I wore black every day
    just in case.
    the train was fifteen minutes
    late and I was
    one month
    and counting.

     

    “the accident”


  • I don’t like to talk about my
    house so I don’t
    but the garage
    is gone and so is everything
    that was in it. my
    childhood bedroom is gone
    and so is everything that was
    in it. one day the sink
    will collapse. we have snakes
    in there. other things too>.
      I have no
    yearbooks. I have a couple
    notes from my friends
    and a swath from a cologne sample
    my high school lover
    used to wear between
    fucking his wife and me,
    a note he wrote me once.
    but I am thinking of
    myself younger
    and the old lip gloss bottle,
    a roller, vanilla scented
    but pink
    that I had saved because it
    reminded me of an entire
    freezing december
    on my crush’s bench
    where sometimes they let me
    wear their sweatshirts.

    I am
    holding my hands to the ground,
    feeling vines wind up
    my calves.
    repeating,
    muttering.
    the way they describe me to the
    ambulance is someone who
    looked like she saw the horizon
    close in on her and
    collapsed.
    the way they describe me
    to the first responder
    is that I looked to be seized
    by terror like she saw the
    horizon closing in and
    just fell
    to the ground. 


    “Persephone”

  • when you find me
    I am sitting on the dirt
    twisting  a mask
    in my fingers
    and you could not catch
    what I said only that it
    was muttered,
    repeated and there is something
    not quite vapid about me,
    but lost and then
    filled with something
    else. the first thing I say to you
    is it’s torrential.
    I expect you to know what to say
    back. 

    are my hands changing colors?
     I examine them myself,
    fingers spread, string
    around index, mouth cover
    dangling.
    I expect you to know what
    to say back. 

    “Carey”

  • A neighbor once caught me staring at the license plates on my block.  I was five years old.  We lived in a court and I was allowed to play in the court by myself so long as I didn’t wander off too far anywhere else which I did often but I had grown used to crouching, hopping fences and often could slip in and out to Lea’s house undetected. I don’t know the circumstances of why I was outside but I do remember it was overcast. I do remember I had a light jacket on, probably a shade of pink. I am sure my hair was uncombed. I am sure my bangs felt too long. I am sure that I was trying to rid myself of this hindrance even so young, tossing it away with my hand constantly or tying it back in a ponytail, patting the back of my head when it was sopping from the heat wishing I could peel it off. When it was cooler, I left it alone. Left it down and I am sure I was wearing pink corduroy pants with brown spots in the center of the knees and they were permanent. I was sure I had been tucking my chin to my neck and twisting the pine needle with both hands and crouching, my knees strong then. My white sneakers scuffed. The tips of my shoelaces drawn brown with mud and I am sure I didn’t hear her approach me from behind. I am sure she heard me muttering. 

    I had been going up the driveway of each neighbor’s house and sitting behind the car, in front of the license plate. She had seen me from her window.  I was looking closely at the license plate, that is all she could see. I was looking at each piece of information. VA for state tags. To be clear it was VA, like VAH. Like the sound it made. Vah. I would say it.  The letters in front of the numbers. Some would be doubled. Some in doubles. That felt special, like they were chosen to be doubles. Like some plates required scrutiny. This one had a green tag in the top left corner which was usual but also did not have repeating numbers. XGH-2879. It would have sounded better, I am saying out loud, XGH-2873 when I hear her.

    “Honey?”

     

    I was five and soft and supple and ingenue and so much deeper than I am now. She said what are you doing? from behind me which scared me. I was tiny and crouched there with my most favorite one to hold; the withered needle. I am sure she heard me. 

     I said I’m trying to read the code.

     

  • if i was a man,
    i’d have a big dick.

    I got a nine millimeter, I say,
    casually, waving my hand over the wooden
    board. hidden in this house.
    I got this house lined with weapons.
    I place the orange butcher knife
    on the linoelum counter,
    scraps of tomato still clinging so
    I can
    scoop the slug up from beneath the
    dishwasher and put him
    back in the shade.
    he follows me out.
    easily distracted.
    we were having vegan charcuterie
    and he is drinking chardonnay.
    with me it’s always
    something, plentiful,
    homemade.
    he’s seen half my knife collection
    now and every inked guard;
    the other half tucked in various places.
    I gestured to the antique table,
    to the pepper spray,
    the hammer by the door.
    I point out the ants
    lining the sink.

    swathed with charms,
    I can’t kill a thing
    and half the town has figured it out.
    I wear my arms in
    muscle, others’ biceps.
    keep them around cuz
    I can’t kill a thing
    and half the town has figured
    it out. point to the baseball bat.
    show him my pearly growl.
    this is where the poem begins

    we both eye the slug moving
    through the garden
    til he disappears.
    I begin pointing out
    webs.
    it’s 7:42 pm,
    88 degrees and
    the sun is out,
    my shoulders dark.
    we are both tan,
    hurt, a possible onslaught
    if we were not otherwise
    stuffed and I am practicing
    silence,
    sitting on my bench.
    we are two inches from each
    other and I can’t help but
    melt when the cool breath
    hits my left cheek.
    I’m plucking at the hem.
    he grabs my hand
    to stop my ticking.
    what’s that?
    he says.
    this is where the poem begins.

     

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