Crime is Down All Over

My father says it’s time to lay in provisions.  At least a month’s worth.  His voice has traveled out of the woods a long way.  The way, he has said on other occasions, we must travel if anything happens: bomb, drone, wave, fire, a great poisoning of the well. Humans testing their species in this largest of North American cities.  We are not wasps, built for the hive.  Get in the car and don’t look back.

His garage is larger than his living space. Bundles of meticulously coiled nylon rope in the rafters, a society of tools below.  There is more than one of everything-hat, life vest, can of stew-at least a breeding pair.  The case of pilaf, when we visit, has gone off.

 

My husband and I, we are unafraid.  We have chosen density and signed the social contract.  We offer ourselves like a gift to the universe.  We press cell phones to our ears, allow cameras throughout the city to capture our comings and goings.  Our first aid kit has been pilfered and not restocked.  We do not have chlorine tablets, a fire ladder, or waterproof matches, do not kick the car tires.  We have not saved, do not save, will not be saved.  On an afternoon drive, we picnic happily among the plastic periscopes of a seeded landfill.

But my father’s phone calls persist and the idea of storage captures our fancy-nonperishables as art.  We draw plans for the shelter we would build if we thought we needed sheltering: there would be lead walls and a billiard room, an infinity pool-why not?  Then, in caricature or homage, my husband and I work for weeks in the hours after the baby is asleep, marking grains of rice, barely speaking. We inscribe a tiny segment of the architectural lines on each grain.  Brown rice because it is more nutritious, at least a month’s worth.

We begin in the hallway, that placeless place, the way out, and affix grain after grain with wheat paste, until the walls are covered.  We sit back on our haunches to appraise and we are pleased.  All those tiny lines, the shelter an open secret.  In the low light of the hallway, you wouldn’t know. Maybe it’s wallpaper, maybe stucco, maybe a fungus.

 

You really shouldn’t be riding the subway anymore.  That’s how they’re going to get you; that’s how they’re going to bring the city down.

 

Our upstairs neighbor has come for a visit, no she has come to ask about a whir in her floorboards/our ceiling.  She didn’t want to say anything, really it’s no big deal, she begins, and then trails off.  She’s staring at the wall.  The neighbor leans toward their nubby surface and then looks at us.  That is to say, she takes us in.

An art project, we say.  Art project.  We move toward each other and link hands, as if our proximity might comfort her-the appearance of benign domesticity.

We see in her eyes a sudden tabulation of the trust we must daily offer, uncountable if we’d like to think beyond our survival.  She has passed us many times in the stairwell; we say enough to facilitate a pleasant feeling and then swift forgetting.  But we haven’t been out in days.  We notice, now, the smell of trash hard upon us, and we notice her noticing that she’s standing in our space, her back to the door.  The disorder of our bookshelves could conceal almost anything.  Our walls are just below her walls and help to hold her up.  We see her recalibrating to a new set of threats.

The whir, she says, is not so bad.  No really, don’t worry.

 

She is gone and the hallway dampens the noise of the closing door.  And in the persistent quiet of the coming days, we hear her footsteps from one end of our ceiling to the other.  Her muffled voice funneled into a cellphone.

 

Would you like me to get you a shotgun?  Everyone should have one.  Just in case.

 

We have many walls to go, but we take a little rest, lay flat on the floor while the baby stumbles between us.  If the walls shake down now, we will be surrounded.  Plaster, layers of lead and acrylic paint, horsehair and sawdust stuffed into the hollows of the old apartment walls.  But also rice grains, each bearing a line that might connect to another line.  We will eat them by the millions to survive.

Our neighbor won’t survive.  Why should she?  “Should” won’t survive.

 

Two Poems

Excuse

What happened is the thing grew tired as snow &
like all good blood, stopped.

What I am trying to tell you is my excuse.

I don’t mean to mine any bones but there is no leaving without taking & naming without
the way my head felt when I said language should be violence the way my
tongue felt when I pulled it out of itself & gave it its own brain the way my feeling
felt when we sat in separate rooms close enough to hear a sigh

If you do not tell the story sitting on your throat
If you are not sorry

There is too much good weather.
Virginia is a terrible state to break things in, to make your head
the best china & smash, to not to fight the slippery lessenings.

When you tell yourself just because this
When you fill yourself with space
When you lie through your fingers

What happened
was you pulled yourself strand by strand
spaghetti from boiling pot,
what happened was you grew this tremendous appetite what happened was you grew a
whole new set of shining teeth you grew you grew.


Rapunzel Before Her Escape

The moon has always been a hieroglyph
of her troubles. She wraps herself in blonde braid-coils,
makeshift blanket wool-scratchy,
& gazes into that hopeless hunk of light.
She has been fasting. Rapunzel’s fingers have grown thinner
& she feels a pride in this, the child’s joy
in learning its actions can make change
visibly. But she is not a child
& some prince down there
is calling for her hair
& if only she knew how to speak
at least one language of air,
she would give just about anything
to lift herself & disappear
into a weightless ribbon of atmosphere.
Rapunzel feels dangerous. Rapunzel
lets down her hair & wishes
to be the kind of woman
that eats the head of her mate.

Four Poems from Rising Poets

Badgerdog, a literary arts non-profit in Austin, believes in creating long-term, creatively-engaged communities through the transformative powers of reading and writing. Under this big tent, we publish American Short Fiction, and we hire writers as teaching-artists to run creative writing workshops for kids and senior citizens. Jess Stoner, the Education Programs Coordinator, invites writers, artists, anyone interested in “responding” to our students’ writing (by publishing them, by recording audio or video, anything goes) to contact her at jessica.wigent [at] badgerdog.org. Below are four poems from students who participate in these creative writing workshops.


How I Know I’m Duke Ellington’s “Fleurette Africaine” — Juan, from Dailey Middle School

Because I’m mysterious and
I do things that are

unexpected. I don’t
sound like Lil’ Wayne.

I could be
as old as 1962.

I sound peaceful.


Oda a un bebe/Ode to a Baby—- Angie, from Winn Elementary

Bebe, te quiero mucho, te puedo
comer a besos todas las mananas y
todas las noches y hasta el medio
dia. Y tan chiquito estas y hueles
a grito.

Baby, I love you so much, I could
eat you alive every morning and
every night up until mid-
day. And you’re so small
and you smell like a scream.


“Boi”—- Kyalselle, from the Del Valle Opportunity Center

I am from the boat-shaped state
where the Cajun food is endless,
from the special treat around the corner.
I am from a smoke-filled house
where I can still taste the crawfish
and smell the gumbo,
from my small room where I lie down at night
and listen to the gunshots
hoping there won’t be a tenth hole
in my wall when I wake up,
from Boi, watch your mouth.


I Am— Mikayla, from Perez Elementary

I am the King of Sweet Donuts.
I have all the money in the whole world.
I am thinner than all paper.
I can turn into a small dog.
I can catch a low cloud in eight seconds.
I can win a race competing against slow air. I can hold the world by one big toe.

I can crack a spy car in one big punch.

I can kill a one-hundred-foot bear.
I can do everything.

On Our Rwandan Refugees: A Memory

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Zimbabwe, 1994

You have to remember:
sometimes a man does walk
out of the sunset, at first
staining the dark lily fabric,
then growing and becoming
a noise, a need, but it’s not
until you see one arm clearly
the red eyes, the paper skin,
not until you hear him ask
if you have any water please
please I have come so far

Two Poems

The Mecosta Burnout

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The sixty-seven Falcon, black as a court date suit,
shudders on the blacktop as mohawked kids pluck grubbies

from the puddled run-off that washed away
the curled skins of tire-treads.

The driver cracks her suicide-door like a Tall Boy.
The hand she raises can’t close from the busted jaw

she gave her son when she caught him in the woodshed
with the good gin, the neighbor girl.

She strokes the engine, the coo of high-intake manifold.
The crowd, sun cooked and booze wild, hollers

for all she’s got to give. She buries her heel.
The Falcon grinds, side to side,

like a trailer park dog fighting a chain.
She washes the crowd with a wall of white smoke.

The horses are in her chest.

She won’t let go

until everyone knows it.


Wendigo

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Grandpa told us about the winter of red snow,

but we already knew the slow math of months
is counted on the ribs. We named
every grain of wild-rice.

I remember the girl, how winter made her
limp, how my shoes didn’t fit
the gnarls of her toes.

She wanted to be full
of anything. She let me taste
her nipples, brown as maple candy.

Bottom round, backstrap, tenderloin.
We named our naked bodies
after cuts of meat.

My hunger was a saltlick.
Her skin, pure venison.

She always cried when she came,
Don’t let me go to waste.

Three Poems

THE LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY CHILDREN

for Oliver

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I could smell the sea salt, when they brought me to the ship, and my mother’s perfume, and underneath that, more salt. She led me down holding my hand, gave me to the captain who would take us all to our new home. “She can’t see,” said my mother, putting my hand into the captain’s hand that felt like bark. “She spent too much time reading in the dark.” The kind captain squeezed my hand, put a carrot in the other. Down in the hold I met the rest of the children who had not listened to their parents’ words: The dirty boy with potatoes growing under his fingernails, the cross-eyed girl, the boy who touched himself until his thingie fell off. There was one little liar who had been mauled by a wolf so badly, the others said they couldn’t stand to look at him. His face, where it should have been, felt like a pile of wet rags. Then there was the girl who swallowed so many apple seeds, an apple tree had grown up out of her stomach, up her throat and out through her mouth, so she had to walk around with her head tilted back and mouth open like a little baby bird. At night, we could hear her choking and crying, and sometimes the boy with no face would go and lick the tears off of her cheeks. I swear, those were the most delicious apples you ever tasted.


BECAUSE

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Because time was the new space, we stopped doing the dishes.
Because pancakes were the new contraceptive, syrup became unerotic.
Because funeral homes were the new fluorescence, we lowered our eyes.
Because cancer was the new consumption, we took stock of it.
Because running away was the new video game, everyone was on pills.
Because cherry blossoms were the new infidelity, every tree was blushing.
Because bruises were the new law, we prodded them daily


AMERICA’S GOT CANCER

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new and improved cancer. ultra-strength cancer. 24-hour cancer. nighttime cancer. fast-acting cancer. cancer on the go. cancer by ralph lauren. new wave cancer. blu-ray cancer. hd digital streaming cancer. cancer tonight. america’s next top cancer. are you smarter than cancer? two and a half men with cancer. the real cancer of orange county. john and kate plus cancer. cancer with the stars. ovarian cancer is from venus, testicular cancer is from mars. the seven habits of highly effective cancers. harry potter and the deathly cancer. the girl with the cancer tattoo. cancer and you. cancer for dummies. chicken soup for the cancerous soul. monday night cancer. survivor: cancer. real world: cancer. extreme cancer makeover. pimp my cancer. 15 minutes could save you 20% or more on cancer. tax-free cancer. no-spin cancer. 2011 republican national cancer. so you think you’ve got cancer? that’s not cancer. this is cancer.

Uuo

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Presented as a PDF in order to preserve the author’s intended formatting.

Three Poems

Amber

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She’d been looking everywhere, then Lisa,
an apparition in the hallway, and him
two seconds later, the smell.

She knew just what question to ask-
Lisa in the passenger seat, untied shoelaces
bouncing with each road bump- Where were you
and grandpa?

They tore her apart on the stand-
Look, I know I’ve been a bad mother,
but this isn’t about me…

I remember Baltimore,
Amber in her t bone bikini.
Seven months pregnant with Lisa then.

Tying the strings in the bathroom
mirror-her daddy was a navy seal– little black
daisies stretched over her hips.


Apology

For S.
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On the way back, you still at the wheel, the radio dial pinched between your fingers, I’d meant to say squalid, not sordid: “Go back to your squalid cabin!”…. And let’s not bring Freud into this because one old man is enough, and he was waiting for you, watching cartoons with his leg hitched on your bed. I meant filthy, as in physical filth, because of the dead rodent stench that blew from your Frigidaire, even after Gary chipped the ice-
encrusted tuna filet from the freezer space and the tub of expired yogurt was escorted out in a double bag.

And this makes a difference because, maybe had I said squalid, you wouldn’t have told me I was delusional about love and cruel, and, in the dark of your Hyundai, maybe your hurt and mine wouldn’t have buckled.


Motel Alone

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The bed frowns
and the dresser mirror
rattles when I yank open
the drawer:

Barrel through.
You wanted this, you…praying
mantis vixen brown
recluse.

Chin up, little bible!
Coffee
in the lobby
in the morning.

Maria in Drag

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Chica had no visitors, but once received a Bible in a brown box. Color coded text, red was where Jesus came in. She spoke His lines aloud as we ate our nails. Jesus liked the lame girls. The dark girls, field hands and whores. So Chica went and fell in love with Him. Not in the conventional way – as in, Thank you Jesus for dying for our sins. But like he was that tall kid on the varsity football team and his pop, the union leader or something. Jesus was the guy for Chica.

But when He up and died on her (page 334), she hollowed The Good Book out with her teeth and stuffed contraband blades and cigarettes into its womb. The things we ached for. She bartered those things, after we’d told her our secrets. Then made fun of how we mourned our scars. They’re yours, she told us. Own them.

She made us feel shame for our shame. For fuck sake, she’d whisper. We could be super heroes! She announced in Group that there is a congregation in New Mexico that shave their heads and renounce their sex and all that comes with it. It’s old school. Those hardcore Sisters, Chica said, are a blueprint to us. The way they cleaned a switch to work it like a lover against their backs. It’s accepted through silence, and praised by God, their mute shrink. But Chica took to heat, over switches and blades. Fire cleanses, Chica said. Cutting is for pussies.

Chica said she wanted to own a piece of Everything. We said we didn’t want to own anything. But cried when we found out she had kissed us all. That she made each of us slide up our gowns (by asking) then touched where flesh became wound. We cried that she never bared herself. That she was everybody’s and no one’s. So we betrayed her. A jackal of a nurse took her Bible and we stole her file. One night when she pulled that plastic curtain together, closing us out to bathe, we read her. This made us high, to learn she was just one of us in some tough drag.

Who knew she was just some migrant worker, digging earth with hands cold and scarred as purple turnips? Until her father was shot by white men who drank the blood of Christ and cored Chica out like the fruit she harvested. That she hid her breast from us because they’d taken blades to her nipples and peeled her back like a plum. That she was then given to the nuns who caught her with a whip to save her soul and clean her cunt.  That her name was Maria. That her burn marks ran across her body like brail. One so deep, it nearly reached her heart.

And when she stepped from the bath in her thin robe, suddenly she looked small. Like a shrinking brown bird, wrapped in gauze. The kind you’d keep in shoebox and straw.

The night she left us, a naked moon hovered at heaven’s black floor. It looked like a warrior. Or something exhausted. Many stars burned and sirens rose from below like soprano monks in chant. We sat cross-legged on the Hospital rooftop because Chica had gone down on the Gatekeeper who held keys to all doors of possible death. We wept for what we had done. Couldn’t cope with the intersection of freedom where panic and relief bled out to one.

Then Chica told us she forgave us and we came undone. She got up and walked the edge, a black robe beating softly about her raw knees. Her newly sheared skull shone like an egg in cerulean light. When she reached up and put Venus out on her arm, wind blew our condolences aside. A lone pigeon teetered on them . . . then yawned beautifully away into the closed window of a building across the street, startled that its lover was made of glass.

 

Roofers

Men are ripping off shingles across the street,
layer after blue, scratchy layer,
wrenching nails and flinging everything down.

The woman who lived there smashed her hip,
and as she was wheeled away-she rolled her eyes
when they told her she’d be home in a week.

She died alone miles from here.
In a new house-do you want to know
who died there, or if they were happy?
I never knew.

The men peel tar paper, toss each other
cans of pop, and clamber to the peak, whooping
with what sounds like joy. My day is lost.

They can see the bridge, the city
rising from the morning mist, the shimmer of water,
and are briefly silent.

In the mountains one summer,
we, too, made a new roof, our mouths full of nails,
Nina Simone on the radio; our tool belts clattering,
we swore we’d never leave.

The men sling blue tarps of trash
toward a truck and miss by a long shot.
Junk in the streets, they whoop again.

My neighbor walks his white dog, lets it pee
on the lavender. If he looked up, he’d see me
twirling a pen, spying.

Because of old, wavy window glass,
outside life is watery-the neighbor,
his dog, the workmen swimming,
the houses floating, a dreamed scene.

When we had nailed the final shingle, a deer
ran beneath us and then a coyote. They circled
the house and ran into the woods, the distance

between them unchanging. Watching was intimate
and awful. It was hard to choose: the deer
who devoured our lettuce or the coyote
with his fierce desire.