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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
Everywhere in Canada there are fires
And the sad truth is we’ve mostly given up
Everywhere in my mind there are also fires
But the kind that have already burned
And so it’s just ash and empty
Like all the people had to leave town
Here in Montana, where the smoke fled,
I’m running right on the edges
Of puddles, like I’m daring the world
To get me wet again, soak me
All the way, from sock to bone to soil,
Rain until we can remember green
I dropped my blue mug yesterday. And I am hearing that the last of the ice will melt soon. I fear we’ve lost the recipe. Those stupid pigeons I see every day. How do they manage iridescence against so much gray? The gas station sign below them. Its face that rises and falls. Neon ocean economy waves. I haven’t had the patience for puzzles in a long time. I think it started with a flat tire on Valentine’s Day—maybe this is all that the world will ever be—near the coast of Maine. A cloudy sunrise over the Atlantic.
I’ve been promised that vultures find use for even the dead. That there are billions of bacteria in my gut, and just as many stars, digesting the dark matter and passing it along. In that room of magic, I can hear the plants starting to talk back to me. You know what, some days you really piss me off. Maybe that’s it. The last straw that is also the first.
More good days than bad days says my great grandfather. More good years than bad.
When I was twenty
I spent the summer working on a dairy farm
I didn’t know what else to do
I fed the calves
and they would suck on my fingers
before I slipped in the bottle
See, they hadn’t been born with a taste for rubber
but that was what we had
In the mornings I drove the back roads
My engine an alarm
cutting sharp through the sleeping fields
The workers are arriving
It’s time to wake up
Be somebody
All summer I lugged 5-gallon buckets
back and forth on the ATV
Wore knee high muck boots
and I was not qualified for any of it
West Coast Ivy League
Great Plains manual labor
A lot of miles in between
Asking myself where to pull over
I still have clothes that reek of cow shit
The same questions on my mind
You can spend years chasing profit or purpose
I’ve done it
I’ve also stood alone in the middle of miles of alfalfa
I’m not telling you what to choose
I’m just saying,
Someone has to bring the water
Evoke osprey
Catch fish
How many ways
Does water flow?
Stop and look
Then go
Oceanward
Deathward
Lifeward
Onward
Big circle back
Home
Circle of eye
Bright iris
Fish come home
We go to fish
Evoke osprey
Come home
Here a single leaf bulging with green and yet
so thin it’s almost transparent in the evening’s glaring
Rays running straight through its flesh as if
its existence were merely a suggestion
and I have to touch it to make sure
it’s real or maybe that I am
Where we meet, I feel the fractal bumps
Her branching veins like an ode
to the rising limbs of her mother and all
her sisters are hushing me with their soft
dance of crushing delight
A thousand wings and she can’t fly
Anywhere, but wouldn’t you want
To lie in the sun your whole life too?
Kayla Heinze (she/her) currently lives in Missoula, Montana, with ties to Minnesota and the Pacific Coast. A recent graduate holding a B.A. in philosophy, she now works in environmental communications, telling stories about the relationships between people and wildlife. To nurture her newborn poetry practice, she spends as much time outdoors as possible. You can follow her work at kaylaheinze.substack.com