February 23, 2011

Jack Hodil

 
No More Shade

I stopped writing about trees.

Like anything,
you get to the point where
you have just said enough,
and turn into nothing but
another lumberjack,
still stopping short of
the roots.



holding it in

they say you can't hold your
breath to death,
and after many attempts,
I agree.

the fading light always comes first,
then the blank dark,
then the hazy gray.
always this,
just like that.

but I still try to hold it in anyway.

so the dark keeps following
the light,
and I keep waking to gray.
always that,
just like this.


CP

Jack Hodil prefers dogs over cats and both over people. His poems have appeared in Word Riot.

February 16, 2011

J.R. Bouchard

 
Ways of knowing

My breasts are beginning to push to the side,
caught under my arm pit, and it’s not spoken

about between other women, mostly grand-
mother and me. Our tits shutter at geography, hide

when asked to impress, asked to join
in on important conversation. Her friends,

almost dead now, say there’s no escaping
genetics. I am growing into our likeness,

like our tulip bulb eyes. When we are together,
I see.


Permission

For weeks, I dressed in my bedroom
without considering the windows—
our yard has grown into drapes.
I would slink around as only modest women do,
cupping my breasts like neat nests, protecting
whatever is inside.

Tonight, I notice the man
watching television from his
porch, facing my direction, catching
glimpses of two frames
until I step away.

Does he know what he sees?
Does he know I hate the body I’ve
grown, the claw marks that question
gravity when I am no longer held up—
irreversible shapes to my flesh
that grow larger with each joy,
and each pain.

I am a silhouette between commercials,
any man can see that.

CP

J.R. Bouchard lives in Philadelphia, where she is working on her MFA. Her writing has appeared in Word Riot, Foundling Review, and Mad Poets Review. She will soon complete a collection of metaphysical poetry.

February 9, 2011

Meg Pokrass



In This Light


John does not own a wall mirror. “Sorry,” he says “we can use each other’s eyes to know we are human, okay?” He does not believe in reflections.

There are drops of semen on my lips when he says he loves me for the first time, and tears. I do not dry them.

*

Twelve hours after my husband David and his bike were destroyed by a truck, people distributed hospital smiles. My cheeks smiled back, bile gathering inside my throat.

Congratulations, you are now a bird with no tree.


They’d thought he was dead, then changed their opinions and had something to say to me when they found me sitting against a wall in the waiting area hallway. He was alive. But not his spine.

“You may have heard it wrong the first time,” the hopeless/happy face of the doctor/nurse said. Someone held my hand, my hands.

*

David had been home with twenty-four hour care for just over one year when I started walking alone in the city in the middle of the night. For some reason I felt an urge to buy milk in the middle of the night, which we were never really out of. I was not frightened under any circumstance.

One of the many nights, walking alone in midtown at two a.m., I was held up at gunpoint. A group of youths with hanging jeans swimming around their knees blocked me, squealing, “who the fuck said that?” They took my money, and one of them poked my nipple. I felt as though I were watching it happen a short, safe block away.

John owned the Ice Mart where I bought the milk. Every night he was there, listening to music on his iPod, talking to the few slumping, tired customers. He always stopped talking when I came in, said, “hello, nightingale”. The night I was held up, John looked at me very hard… but didn’t ask what had happened. He offered me Kahlua, and I cried a little. We sipped from the same small bottle — watched each others lips.

Maybe my cell phone knew something beforehand, because it vibrated often and for no apparent reason.

Now, John vibrates, I vibrate. I crave his lips, his eyebrows, the smell right below his stomach. What it makes my body feel, so stupid, so young.

*

David molds delicate cats and birds with colored clay. He can use his fingers very well now.

“His fingers do the walking!” the day nurse says. This nurse, Jill, a handsome and strong girl, has full breasts. David’s eyes rest on the window.

Behind his wheelchair, on the wall – a photo of us newly married. Goofy, grinning. Redwood trees. I am wearing the felt hat with the little pink cloth rose. David always said it made me look like Clara Bow.

“Okay, well, I’m off to finish up some stuff at the office and grab some supplies,” I say. “David, you take care of this fine girl.” Jill is used to this line, nods.

“Sure thing, and David will be very happy to see you tonight,” she always says.

I kiss him on the head before I leave. He says, “aaaah, aaaaah.”

His lower body is covered with a thin blanket, and this way, I do not have to see.

—From Damn Sure Right, 2011. First appeared in Necessary Fiction, 2010.

CP


Meg Pokrass's first collection of flash fiction, Damn Sure Right is available at http://www.press53.com/BioMegPokrass.html. Meg writes flash fiction, prose poetry and makes story animations. She serves as Editor-at-Large for BLIP Magazine (formerly Mississippi Review). She designs and runs the Fictionaut-Five author interview series for Fictionaut.  You can read and learn more about Meg at http://www.megpokrass.org.

February 2, 2011

Alejandra Garza

Interim

You’ll take off your wrist-watch before you lie beside me.

Just to lie. Is that necessary?

It’s like a token with subconscious neglect

before you leave me for long periods of time.

It sits near me with little presence felt and

ticks away building up time quietly

and I’ll notice it early on

or just before you come back,

depends on my luck.

The face of it covers my wrist, and it’ll slip off when

I turn my hand south. It helps me sleep as well.

Did I tell you?

It’s no replacement, more like a reserve.

It counts your absence,

counts my longing,

counts my blessings.

CP

Alejandra Garza is first-generation Mexican-American, born and raised in San Antonio, Texas. She has a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and Women’s Studies from Boston University. She currently lives along the lower Chesapeake Bay in Maryland, and works in nonprofit association management. Visit her at http://redpetals04.wordpress.com/