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Cover
Susan Wilkinson
Selena Spier
Red From The West
& other poems
Pamela Wax
Talk Therapy
& other poems
Ana Reisens
Honey Water
& other poems
Mark Yakich
Necessary Hope
& other poems
Bridget Kriner
A Few Lies & a Truth
& other poems
Keegan Shepherd
Silver Queen
& other poems
Alaina Goodrich
Sacred Conflagration
& other poems
George Longenecker
Those Who Hunger
& other poems
Hailey Young
Ball Room
& other poems
Sébastien Luc Butler
Aubade
& other poems
Savannah Grant
Ever Since (v.2)
& other poems
grace (logan)
Dynamic
& other poems
Samantha Imperi
A Poem for the Ghosted
& other poems
Corinne Walsh
Limerence
& other poems
Kayla Heinze
Stop checking the score
& other poems
Richard Baldo
Chasing Through to Dawn
& other poems
Alex Eve
A moment
& other poems
Robert Michael Oliver
Prison Hounds
& other poems
And you scare them away
the part of you I let live in me
I leave you in no particular order
I sold one lover’s necklace for $25
and all my friends for a living room alone
I want to steamroll
over some collection of bones within me and start over
I wake up in my teenage bed
flowered wallpaper and a peeling window
after midnight and all the lights are on
and you’re awake
and my door won’t close
in my dreams lately
there’s a way out of the house
but you always find me before I escape
all my lovers wrens as I am a wren full of bird bones
and they only love me if I am seed or suet
my sister’s father a bird hunter
30 years and I only ever got
one foot out the door
mother, I am your lamb, you slaughtered me
sister, you are favored, your father spilled my blood in the long grass in the back forty
and wouldn’t talk to me in the car
and bellowed as the auger twisted into the pine by the compost pile
and built graves for all our dogs
To paint a black drapery is not
vine black squeezed from the tube, but lavender
shaded with olive
and so I saw in The Magpie the snow all but white
rose and ultramarine shadows
read Flannery O’Connor, she said, April
is the cruelest month, do you have any idea the damage
you did to your sister? and that I continue to do
driving you to the ocean or the Pioneer Valley
like my father picking Japanese beetles off the neighbor’s lilacs
all we wanted was more than two days
to finally make it west where the Nevada desert and I
held each other as cliff-sides and yellow grass rolled through July’s herald
like a screen door we tear
harboring promises that should have been easy
and I didn’t know the word for it
until that bend in the road
eighteen years he’d been waiting
when the Pacific was the farthest I’d ever been from her
all we asked was two days, another eighteen years, sister,
she made me wait for you
In the time after pestilence we spin fire on the lawn. The cops roll by and we all troop inside, dressed as pimps in late November, a month I used to hate. The party is good, I don’t get any of their numbers yet, but it’s okay, I wasn’t around before, even just this August. It happened in college. You leveled me. I wouldn’t speak anymore, if I did, it would be all I could speak about. (I barely remember the names of everyone who won’t know I ever sat at a table with them. I wish it hadn’t happened that way.) But this party is good. Someone in a pink mustache-print scarf agrees that the Apocalypse part of the Bible is terrifying. He is sober now, too. At the bar I draw an eight-eyed, eleven-winged angel: don’t think I never had these mundanities of friendship, I just couldn’t keep them after you. I think it’s worse that way. In the time after pestilence we all get our third eyes stuck on by a girl’s thumb. They quiver around when we laugh. I try to remember the names of everyone whose shoulders I decided not to lean on. I don’t yet know the names of everyone who doesn’t know about you. The cops rolled into your driveway. It was early August. The lights echoed around me into November, I cried on the steps. I cried on the steps. (A girl held out my laundry bag for me, trying to help. I wasn’t all there. I grabbed it away, washed my hands again and again. I don’t remember her name.) You were drunk and I held the bathroom door shut with my foot. The lights in my dreams never turn off, it all comes from your room. If I eat the pomegranate, I will remain in hell. You sit at the edge of my bed and your jaw falls open. For eleven years you contaminated everything—In the time after pestilence I go to sleep and dream about you on the edge of my bed and when I wake up no one is here. I take my foot off the door and it is morning. I go outside and we spin fire on the lawn.
You asked me who was walking beside you
and, in July, I did not have an answer
it is August now, they all say you are over
but I am biking under apocalyptic sun, hazy and pale
yellow like the violets found only in one place
on one mountain
in one town I’ll never go back to
I am wondering if I miss my grandfather
or just that one corner of his yard
past the creek the water cut
from which I could see the high school
where I taught art to teenagers before leaving my mother for good
and she followed me all the way to you
oh the ways I’ve been left on the floor
I am asking for barriers against grief
and getting none of them
I am in the ocean surrounded by moon jellyfish
I am in the woods again
with a shotgun and shoes not fit for climbing over logs
echoing over flagstones
I am living a life without you, with you
I am shedding skins
I am admitting my love
I am eating again
I am leaving when I can’t sleep and never
been happier to drive home
I am spring peepers at night
I am renovated
I am in line at the grocery store
knowing full well I am unfurling with the violence
of daylilies in summer
Ever since, and I cannot pinpoint
the exact time when it became you
but ever since
I’ve been dreaming
of accidentally setting my bedroom on fire
and it can’t be smothered; it smolders
under the carpet and in the dirt under the windows
I was never an option and I mourn that
you’d never mourn that
I am a body on your couch just like I wanted
but not how I wanted: you lift me away
and smile so sadly, as you do, daybreak eyes
the same way you did in my dream when you said
not for a while
and moved your hands to a different girl
as if you’d announced a death
I find a white moth in a windowsill and keep it in my pocket: a reminder
of what I can never have
with you
I’m not protected from anything
there is no why
there is only is
when you dug your teeth into my spine
when you twined our fingers
gentle
as fuck
and told me to go home
when you calmed me to my core
I believed you
Savannah Grant lives in beautiful and serene western Massachusetts and cleans houses around the Pioneer Valley full-time. She is also a printmaker and poet, and has art hanging in several downtown galleries and has been published in Sixfold twice before. Her debut poetry chapbook, at the end of gospel, was recently published by Bottlecap Press, with more collections on the way.