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Anne Rankin-Kotchek
Letter to the World
from a Dying Woman
& other poems
Sara Graybeal
Ghetto City
& other poems
Tee Iseminger
Construction
& other poems
Lisa Beth Fulgham
After They Sold the Cows...
& other poems
Mary Mills
The Practical Knowledge
of Women
& other poems
Monika Cassel
Waldschatten, Muttersprache
& other poems
Michael Fleming
To a Fighter
& other poems
Daniel Stewart
January
& other poems
John Glowney
Cigarettes
& other poems
Hannah Callahan
The Ptarmigan Suite
& other poems
Lee Kisling
How the Music Came
to My Father
& other poems
Jose A. Alcantara
Finding the God Particle
& other poems
David A. Bart
Veteran’s Park
& other poems
Greg Grummer
War Reportage
& other poems
Rande Mack
rat
& other poems
J. K. Kitchen
Anger Kills Himself
& other poems
Jim Pascual Agustin
The Man Who Wished
He Was Lego
& other poems
Jessica M. Lockhart
Scylla of the Alabama
& other poems
James P. Leveque
Three Films of Jean Painlevé
& other poems
Kelsey Charles
Autobiography
& other poems
Therese L. Broderick
Polly
& other poems
Lane Falcon
Touch
& other poems
Ricky Ray
The Bird
& other poems
Phoebe Reeves
Every Petal
& other poems
David Livingstone Fore
Eternity is a very long time...
& other poems
Tim Hawkins
Northern Idyll
& other poems
Abigail F. Taylor
On the Pillow Where You Lie
& other poems
Joey DeSantis
Baby Names
& other poems
Cameron Price
Every Morning
& other poems
David Walker
Sestina for Housesitting
& other poems
Helen R. Peterson
Ablaut
& other poems
He stands in my bedroom doorway and goes on about how this is it then, I won’t see him again, and I sit in my antique chair and cradle her while she sucks out the last ounce of her bottle, and he shivers a little in that threshold—don’t try and call me, nothing. When my daughter’s older, I’ll tell her the truth—and the silence turns pink in my mouth, then orange, then blue.
•
At five, he romped
barefoot in a pigpen
in the Dominican Republic,
his aunt would sterilize
a needle and pick whipworms
from the bottoms of his feet.
He, with a matching pair
of sneakers for every outfit,
whose rubber soles jut
just over the edge of my bed,
my incredulity matched
by wonder. In my dream,
the worm’s pointed head
pricks through the skin
of my index finger. Tweezers
finally grip the exposed
eighteenth of an inch,
and it stretches,
stretches, its length
lodged in my flesh,
til the tweezers slip
and the worm, still one,
snaps back into
position.
Why do they ignore me?
My sister and mother, who don’t
look themselves but svelte, decorous
in frosted lipstick.
The voice says you died.
Me? The ghost of this house
where I found what I stole? A broken
VHS and the diary
of the gastroenterologist I dated.
On the mantelpiece,
a picture of me at The Gala leans
without frame. How blithe I was
with my chipped nail polish
and glitter wallet, how little I cared
my hair clung to the fringe
of the circular rug . . .
The infant hatches from sleep,
a hiccup, chirp and gasp
reel me from bed
to the edge of her crib. Her eyes
jerk upward.
In minutes, they’ll latch onto mine
as I push the latex nipple
between her lips, hurry
to quell her rage.
She bats the anime toy clipped
to the car seat where I’ve placed her
while I mix Similac and nursery water,
my panic, a current an inch below the coos
One second Baby.
Hold on Honey,
I’m here—
If it would only grip, he says, just a little,
the plastic hose clamped between his bent
knee and elbow, as he tries to screw the open
end into the “duct.” I now know the name
for it—the part I circled with painters tape
from when I moved in six years ago (adhering
to itself, it twisted thin as twine as I brought it
round the hose, then patched it, again and again,
when chutes of humid air pushed through,
arrows of sun piercing clouds). Even the word
“grip” fits, what neither part will do as he seals
their tenuous kiss with aluminum tape, welding
the last few grooves of the hose to the duct’s
ridge.
Lane Falcon’s poems have been published in The Cortland Review, Rhino, Brain, Child Magazine, Pank, Word Riot, 2 River View and more. In 2012, she was awarded the Rona Jaffe Fellowship from The Vermont Studio Center. She lives in New York City.