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downtown brooklyn<br />

a journal of writing<br />

number twenty<br />

<strong>2011</strong><br />

english department<br />

brooklyn campus<br />

long island university<br />

one university plaza<br />

brooklyn NY 11201


editor<br />

Wayne Berninger<br />

editorial advisors<br />

Melissa Berninger<br />

Mary Kennan Herbert<br />

Michael Sohn<br />

cover artist<br />

Constance Woo<br />

Front cover. Air-brush Experiment. Collage, acrylic & air-brush. 10-3/4 in. x 14 in. 2007<br />

Back cover. Untitled. Collage embedded in handmade paper. <strong>2011</strong><br />

Downtown Brooklyn: A Journal of Writing is published by the English Department at the Brooklyn<br />

Campus of <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>. We thank Provost Gale Stevens Haynes for the generous<br />

financial support of her Office. Back-issues of the magazine are available in the Periodicals<br />

Collection of the Salena Library at the Brooklyn Campus; in the Little Magazine Collection of<br />

Memorial Library at the <strong>University</strong> of Wisconsin, Madison.<br />

See the appendix of this issue for contributors‘ biographical notes & for submission guidelines.<br />

<strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong> encourages freedom of expression. However, the views expressed herein are<br />

those of the authors & not of the editor, the English Department, or <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Downtown Brooklyn is printed & bound by Thomson-Shore, Inc.<br />

number twenty ISSN 1536-8475<br />

© <strong>2011</strong> by Downtown Brooklyn: A Journal of Writing. All rights revert to authors upon publication.


downtown brooklyn<br />

a journal of writing<br />

number twenty / <strong>2011</strong><br />

4<br />

Ana Almurani<br />

Jamey Jones<br />

65<br />

8<br />

Rudy Baron<br />

Kate<br />

69<br />

13<br />

Alicia Berbenick<br />

Anna Lindwasser<br />

71<br />

17<br />

Wayne Berninger<br />

Elspeth Woodcock Macdonald<br />

79<br />

19<br />

John Casquarelli<br />

Brady Nash<br />

82<br />

23<br />

Alane Celeste<br />

Uche Nduka<br />

83<br />

25<br />

Nik Conklin<br />

Steve Newton<br />

85<br />

26<br />

Cynthia Maris Dantzic<br />

Jon L. Peacock<br />

87<br />

28<br />

Julián del Casal (trans. G. J. Racz)<br />

Howard Pflanzer<br />

92<br />

31<br />

Wendy Eng<br />

Leslie Anne Rexach<br />

94<br />

32<br />

Christine Francavilla<br />

Beatriz Alzate Rodriguez<br />

95<br />

40<br />

Stephanie Gray<br />

Lisa Rogal<br />

103<br />

42<br />

Mary Kennan Herbert<br />

Desiree Rucker<br />

110<br />

45<br />

Aimee Herman<br />

P. J. Salber<br />

113<br />

47<br />

Katherine Hogan<br />

Micah Savaglio<br />

115<br />

50<br />

Daphne Horton<br />

Michael Sohn<br />

122<br />

52<br />

Tony Iantosca<br />

Jean Verthein<br />

129<br />

59<br />

Giuseppe Infante<br />

Sarah Wallen<br />

131<br />

60<br />

Gülay Işık<br />

Lewis Warsh<br />

136<br />

63<br />

Belynda Jones<br />

Tejan Green Waszak<br />

140<br />

64ff<br />

Eight Images by Constance Woo<br />

bio notes & submission guidelines<br />

143


Ana Almurani<br />

BOURBON AND CHOCOLATE<br />

Almost every night, there is a line outside of Downtown, the Lower East Side‘s newest addition to the<br />

string of bars suffocating Avenue B. Painters, poets, and musicians mostly. She stands outside in<br />

her cherry-red knee-length skirt and a lacy ivory sweater unbuttoned just enough to reveal the<br />

inviting jet black corset ―hiding‖ underneath. Her cleavage attracts stares from both men and<br />

women bustling by; some cast looks of desire or jealousy, others of disgust. She pretends not to<br />

enjoy the attention, but she knows that inside she is flattered to be in the spotlight for even one<br />

fleeting moment. She knew the type of attention her outfit would attract even before she put it on.<br />

She teeters on 3-inch stiletto heels, which bring her to a total height of 5‘10, as she leans against<br />

Downtown‘s outside wall smoking a cigarette. Her straw-blonde hair adheres in loose curls to her<br />

highly-placed cheekbones, which she‘s received compliments about since the days of ballet recitals.<br />

To her, those days seem too long gone.<br />

She makes sure to use one of her heels to stomp out the ember of her cigarette once it has<br />

reached its final resting place among a sea of dozens of others discarded butts. She gets sad when<br />

she sees the piles of litter that define New York, her hometown, growing at the rate of well-nurtured<br />

toddlers, but finds that she contributes to the problem. She tosses eleven cigarette butts a day on<br />

average. The thought of not yet having a child of her own to watch grow is on her mind almost<br />

constantly.<br />

After ten minutes of waiting on line, she reaches the bouncer. Her ear catches loud chatter<br />

coming from inside. ―I can‘t wait to hear him play,‖ a rather shrill voice is chirping.<br />

The older, muscular man stationed at the front door asks to see her identification. She often<br />

still gets carded at bars and clubs; her smooth, milky skin resembles that of a porcelain china doll<br />

and makes her look younger than her 29 years of age. He is genuine when he says, ―Enjoy your<br />

night, Magdalena,‖ as he hands back her I.D. She hadn‘t heard him telling that to any of the other<br />

women on the line before her.<br />

She walks over to the bar and asks to see a wine list before ordering an overpriced glass of<br />

Pinot Grigio. She sips the chilled wine at a quick, steady pace while observing the lounge itself,<br />

taking in as many details as she can since it her first time at Downtown. There is a wooden stage of<br />

about thirty feet in length to the left of the bar. A thick, black curtain is hanging, blocking threequarters<br />

of the performance area. As she looks around, she sees many neon colored posters<br />

covering nearly every space of the walls. Their loudness is apparent, as if she could hear them yelling<br />

to her, ―no, come to this show. cover only $5. fuck their band‖ in attempts to out due one another.<br />

The competition among musicians and artists to gain notoriety in an over-crowded city like New<br />

York is ridiculous; so much talent is untapped as a result of discouragement from unattended shows.<br />

The bricks of the walls, natural to the building long before Downtown opened, are covered and<br />

forgotten.<br />

One poster stands out to her from all the rest because it bears no color at all. Vertical black<br />

and white stripes intended to resemble piano keys occupy the length of its 24 inch borders. She<br />

squints to read ―Matthew Daniels‖ ―this Friday, April 2‖ ―Downtown‖ written in three centered lines<br />

in very minimal golden block-lettering at the bottom of the poster. There is no picture of Matthew<br />

Daniels, no allusion to the type of show his audience should expect.<br />

The corners of Magdalena‘s lacquered lips curl into a smile of appreciation for Matthew‘s<br />

soft-spoken and elusive advertisement. She pictures an older, dignified gentleman with a streak of<br />

gray in his hair sitting behind an equally distinguished piano on which the black polish is so finished,<br />

4


he can see his smiling reflection in it at all times. She finishes off her dwindling glass before she<br />

realizes that it is April 2.<br />

―Excuse me, bartender Can I get another Pinot Grigio And what time does Matthew<br />

Daniels go on‖<br />

―You still got about another fifteen minutes.‖<br />

―Oh, alright. Thank you,‖ Magdalena answers politely. She is doing a good job of<br />

concealing her anxiousness to discover who this mysterious Matthew Daniels is and what art he is<br />

about to share with the world.<br />

In the meantime, her eyes scan more posters. $15 cover to see Passion Falls, an ―eclectic<br />

heavy metal explosion of alternative components.‖ She never could control the cloud of laughter<br />

that escapes from deep within her belly when she finds something to be funny, and this time she<br />

ends her rather loud outburst with a snort. At once she puts her hand up to her mouth and<br />

straightens her back, which is naturally prone to a slouch. Embarrassed, she looks from side to side<br />

in the hope that no one has heard what just happened. She thinks she is in the clear until a strong,<br />

masculine voice startles her. It seems to come from every direction simultaneously, and has a raspy,<br />

melodic quality that makes every word seem like it is starting off a song.<br />

―That was quite embarrassing. I hope no one besides me heard that or they might make fun<br />

of you.‖<br />

―Excuse me‖ she replies meekly. She spins around in her barstool and is at eye level with<br />

the chest of a medium-build man clad in a silky half-buttoned collared shirt and pinstriped pants.<br />

His whole outfit is black, including the Nike Uptowns he wears on his feet. This man smells<br />

familiar, like a fragranced bath soap she once picked up from a small store in Venice years ago, but<br />

could never find again in the States. His sunny, cobalt eyes and playful smile make a stark<br />

contradiction with his onyx shagged hair and dark clothing.<br />

―I just mean that they should have stopped the music your snort was so loud. If that had<br />

just happened to me, well, I wouldn‘t know what to do. Oh, no need to turn the color of your skirt<br />

now.‖ He wears his grin from ear to ear, obviously amused by his flirtatious humor. Since grade<br />

school, he had always been the type to tease the pretty girls.<br />

Magdalena, enticed by his attempts at charming banter, responds with a quick flip of her hair<br />

and, ―Oh, come on! You would be snorting too if you saw the ridiculous ad hanging over there for<br />

a band called Passion Falls. It lacks any sense of an original identity. It‘s just trying to appeal to<br />

everyone, no matter what musical genre they are into. Sell-outs. Take a look for yourself.‖<br />

Her polished finger traces a line of sight for her new company to follow. He leans closer to<br />

her, and she closes her eyes for a brief moment to focus all the power of her senses on inhaling his<br />

scent. Her relaxation is broken by a brief burst of laughter followed by a snort.<br />

―Oh man, that was great. I see what you mean, I couldn‘t help it,‖ he responds with the<br />

same boyish smile plastered to his face. It doesn‘t make him look clownish at all; on the contrary,<br />

his light-heartedness heightens Magdalena‘s attraction to him. ―How can one band be both ‗heavy<br />

metal‘ and ‗alternative‘ at the same time And that poster! It‘s so bright and all-over-the-place. It‘s<br />

nothing like the poster of the guy that‘s playing tonight.‖<br />

―That‘s exactly what I was thinking that made me laugh so hard. I can‘t wait for this<br />

Matthew Daniels guy to come on the stage. I‘m so curious about him.‖ She pauses for a moment.<br />

―You just snorted to make me feel less embarrassed didn‘t you‖ She does not wait for his response<br />

before adding, ―That was very sweet…ummm….‖<br />

―Dan. You can call me Dan,‖ he says, extending his hand.<br />

She puts down her glass and replaces it with his warm grasp. ―Well, you can call me Lena.‖<br />

―Matthew Daniels is a pretty down to earth guy,‖ he says. ―I know him well. We were both<br />

at Berkeley some years back. He‘s got a real gift for music, not like a lot of the acts out here<br />

5


nowadays.‖ The lights dim and the crowded room falls silent except for a timid wave of mumbles<br />

coming from the back of the lounge. The curtain rises to reveal a balding man in his 40s wearing a<br />

Jim Morrison t-shirt standing at a microphone in front of a grand piano.<br />

―It is my pleasure to welcome the very talented Matthew Daniels to Downtown this evening.‖<br />

Putting his hands to his eyes like a visor, he scans the crowd. ―Where are ya, man‖ he asks. ―Oh,<br />

there you are. Come on up here!‖<br />

Magdalena turns her head from left to right trying to identify who the man on the stage was<br />

talking to. Dan turns to her, asks her to wish him luck, and walks briskly to the stage amid an<br />

eruption of applause from the crowd around them. Her mouth hangs open like a door off its<br />

hinges.<br />

Dan plays the piano with ease and grace during his set. All nine of his songs seem to be<br />

telling a story, although none of them have words. Some consist of soothing, melodic tones that<br />

make Magdalena feel like she is in a canoe drifting in circles on a placid lake. Others are choppy<br />

with escalating notes that cause her to become uncomfortable staying still on her stool. Her eyes<br />

stay fixed on Dan, and every so often she catches him staring back at her.<br />

After Dan finishes playing, most of the people in Downtown rush the stage to congratulate<br />

him, but Magdalena remains in her seat by the bar. She enjoys watching him from afar, letting the<br />

anticipation build up before their next encounter. It takes about ten minutes before Dan makes his<br />

way over to Lena, his face wearing the same boyish grin from earlier when he first started talking to<br />

her.<br />

―So, did Matthew Daniels turn out to be anything like what you expected‖<br />

******<br />

Out of breath, Magdalena pauses from kissing Dan. She feels as if all the blood from her<br />

body is rushing to her head and the skin on her face is pink and hot to the touch. She looks at the<br />

thin, crystal watch on her wrist.<br />

―Oh my God! It‘s 1:30 in the morning. I have to go home and get ready for work<br />

tomorrow‖ She grabs his face, pulls it in close to hers and whispers, ―We must have been making<br />

out for at least an hour and a half. I haven‘t had this much fun kissing someone in years!‖ She takes<br />

a tiny sip of his drink. ―And you taste so good, like a mix of bourbon and chocolate cake.‖<br />

―Thank-you. This definitely wasn‘t how I thought my night would go. I planned on just<br />

going home and throwing on my pajamas after my show. Not that I‘m complaining. This works<br />

too,‖ he declares with a wink.<br />

―Here, Dan. Write your number on this.‖ She takes a pen out of her handbag and puts it<br />

down in front of him on a napkin.<br />

―Are you sure you have to leave You can come back to my place if you want to.‖ He<br />

moves his hands up and down the length of her back, pulling her into a tight embrace.<br />

―Yes, I‘m sorry but I do. I promise I will call you sometime next week and we can set up a<br />

time to meet again.‖ She takes the napkin with his number on it, and places it securely in her wallet.<br />

―Sounds good to me. I‘ll help you catch a cab.‖ He walks her out of Downtown, flags down a<br />

yellow taxi, and opens its back door for her. ―Lena, I‘ll be thinking of you until our paths cross<br />

again.‖ He grabs her hand, and pulls it up to his soft lips.<br />

He watches as the car drives further and further down the street until it becomes an<br />

indistinguishable blur.<br />

******<br />

6


Magdalena slithers her key into her front door, turning it with precision in attempts to avoid making<br />

any noise. She walks in and takes off her shoes without turning on the foyer light.<br />

―Lena, I‘m so sorry.‖ A man in a matching blue pajama set runs down the stairs and grabs<br />

her in his arms. He is in his early 30s with dead-pan eyes and an ashy buzz cut. ―I was so worried<br />

about you. You left your cell phone here and I had no way of contacting you for hours.‖<br />

When she does not respond, he continues, ―Ok, I can tell that you are still angry at me. It<br />

scared me when you brought up the topic of us having a baby since we have only been married for<br />

two years; you have to understand that. Come on honey, it‘s so late, and we should get some rest. I<br />

promise we will discuss the topic more when you get home from work tomorrow over a nice dinner.<br />

I‘ll take you to that little Italian bistro down the street you love so much.‖<br />

He kisses her, and she tastes like a mix of bourbon and chocolate cake.<br />

7


Rudy Baron<br />

I DON’T LIKE<br />

poetry<br />

anymore<br />

it doesn‘t seem to satisfy<br />

my needs<br />

straddle a sensitive fence<br />

balance and juggle<br />

look down in perpetual fear<br />

at alligator filled moat<br />

words<br />

anxiously await approval<br />

will they look back<br />

will they respond in a chorus<br />

of halleluiahs<br />

will they bury themselves in<br />

selfish states of simplistic<br />

mediocrity<br />

will I be healed--<br />

I write blankly<br />

coil behind a dark curtain<br />

of closed eyelids<br />

wait for some majestic painting<br />

to unfold<br />

tapestry of skeleton<br />

my bones woven cloth<br />

in letters<br />

can I be read<br />

someone please tell me<br />

what those images on the cave wall<br />

actually mean<br />

that stain on my shirt<br />

bleeds from left<br />

to right<br />

vivid expression my emotions<br />

rarely return<br />

its novel state<br />

an island<br />

floats along<br />

complex strands of thread<br />

appeared one day<br />

suddenly burdened with the task<br />

8


to watch vigilantly<br />

over<br />

sterile fields<br />

I want to do something<br />

I want to do something<br />

for you<br />

I want to explain<br />

the taste of tomatoes<br />

and the taste of your tongue<br />

I want to lick the lines<br />

of your hand<br />

swallow the fortune<br />

of your<br />

future<br />

I‘m sorry I said those things<br />

I apologize for my meandering<br />

excuse me for spontaneous oral eruptions<br />

pardon that verbal misgiving<br />

forgive that last moment we were together<br />

will I wander back<br />

into useful language<br />

should I tell friends<br />

appropriate<br />

notes of encouragement<br />

hoping that last salutation<br />

will suffice for a sign off<br />

or should I heroically<br />

wave at ships<br />

that have left the pier<br />

succumb to previously<br />

heard vibrations<br />

9


THE NEXT MORNING<br />

The first thing she said<br />

―Your dick is too big‖<br />

How does one respond<br />

to such a greeting<br />

―Explain to me<br />

this exclamation<br />

What makes my dick<br />

bigger than his<br />

or his<br />

or his‖<br />

Are there classifications for dicks;<br />

have, unbeknownst to me,<br />

they been secretly measured<br />

and catalogued by size,<br />

mine listed somewhere<br />

between normal<br />

and enormous.<br />

Possibly there are volumes<br />

of Baron dicks<br />

detailed and dated,<br />

sepia toned<br />

vintage photography<br />

tracing my ancestral<br />

dick lineage.<br />

Or consider the many<br />

gym lockers I‘ve frequented<br />

surrounded by an immeasurable<br />

number of dicks<br />

in assorted<br />

shapes and sizes<br />

acting either shy and bashful<br />

or boasting its proud<br />

protuberant prominence.<br />

Maybe they are<br />

like wrinkles<br />

or snowflakes<br />

no two are the same<br />

the dick diversity<br />

incredibly increasing daily.<br />

10


Should I reach down<br />

and cup the package<br />

consider its mass<br />

in proportion to<br />

other ―too big‖ objects:<br />

elephants, whales,<br />

the universe<br />

Or perhaps I should<br />

resign myself to<br />

her proclamation and<br />

simply address my<br />

seemingly uber-standard staff<br />

like a friendly puppy dog<br />

happily going for a walk<br />

―Who‘s the big fella<br />

Who‘s the big fella<br />

You are, aren‘t you!<br />

Yes, you are!‖<br />

11


LINES<br />

The craft show in the park guarantees it will rain this weekend; a dog dances on sun baked slate<br />

sidewalks; water becomes a valuable commodity on days like this; let‘s arrange our children in order<br />

by height; cower under a shroud of leaves.<br />

The last conversation has been reduced to subdued discourse; a gardener collects an array of<br />

cacophonous sounds; on an arid cheek a tear is stranded; her fever eclipsed one hundred last night;<br />

the sound of beeping signals the end of an event; crowds head for tents at the sound of rumbling<br />

thunder.<br />

I think I‘ll dress my child in stripes today; watch her skip over cracks and explain why pavement is<br />

black; maybe she will pause and stare at my perplexed view; maybe she will stare at my perplexed<br />

view and question its existence; may be she will stare at me and question my existence; maybe she<br />

will stare and question whether my existence necessitates a perplexed view.<br />

The rain falls tonight in seemingly straight lines; it is cold and wet; the lines of rain are cold and wet<br />

and seemingly straight; if I stood in the rain I would stand straight and my arms would be stretched<br />

out above me; they would reach the lines of rain; they would be cold and wet and they would reach<br />

towards the lines in the sky.<br />

Tonight discussion is pressed keys; letters are touched and caressed; can we discuss our possessions<br />

in caressed moments of touched letters; can we sell them through description; can we sell our lives<br />

in simple descriptive phrases; six feet tall—loves poetry—likes blue jeans—is old and fading; will<br />

you spread your life body on my body like a classified ad on a naked newspaper.<br />

I want to talk in lines; I want to be sharp ridges in desert sand shifting with the winds; ridges<br />

explaining my shift; desert winds creating my lines; I want to be like the shifting lines on a desert;<br />

permanent yet always in motion.<br />

12


Alicia Berbenick<br />

STABLES<br />

I had to kill them; it was the only way I could save the animals. And Colleen. Mrs Tate turned in her<br />

sleep. Her long brown hair broke off in strands around her night cap; her dentures were sunk at the<br />

bottom of a drinking glass on her nightstand. Mr. Tate was snoring louder than my heart – thank<br />

god – because the sound of my organ thumping could have woken them both. I looked at Mrs.<br />

Tate‘s throat. Even in the dark I knew; I‘d remembered enough to know where to cut her - where to<br />

stick her so she‘d bleed out. I‘d learned how to do it so that she would not feel pain for long – the<br />

blood loss and death would happen all at once. That‘s what Colleen told me. She would know<br />

better than anybody, especially when it meant killing her parents.<br />

I realize what I did, and what happened, but you gotta know there was more to this than just<br />

Colleen gettin‘ beat, I mean it goes further. Mrs. Tate one time locked Colleen in the stable with<br />

Moriah, the mare that just gave birth, because Colleen tried to skip town. That horse was already<br />

going crazy and when Colleen tried to escape, the horse went wild and kicked Colleen in the face. If<br />

you were wondering if Colleen was beautiful before the accident; she was, she still is to me. But I<br />

never forgave them for what they did to her. For what they did to that mare. Mr. Tate went off and<br />

killed that mare that day. All that animal wanted was for to be with her colt. That colt came from<br />

inside of her. It‘s something that animals have that not all humans have I guess – the instinct to<br />

protect each other. Humans are the strangest, most unkind animal, if you ask me. Sometimes we<br />

don‘t protect each other the right way.<br />

I guess, after the accident, I was the only one who knew the truth and who loved her face<br />

still. The Tates never knew a thing and they‘d let me sleep over to not let it seem like they were<br />

keepin‘ Colleen hid from the world. When I slept there, Colleen and I‘d sneak out in the middle of<br />

the night to go out to the stables. Across that long yard, the smells of grass, shit and earth made you<br />

feel carnal. There we‘d be, me and Colleen and the animals. Lookin‘ up at the big black night, we<br />

envisioned ourselves ridin‘ off on our horses, just feelin‘ the wind under us and through our hair. I<br />

wouldn‘t let her get cold and the horses, well they‘d just know where to go. They‘d want to escape<br />

just as much as us.<br />

We would stay out in the stables sometimes all night. I can remember the hay being itchy<br />

and us throwing it around, rolling around in it, just feelin alive. Sometimes we‘d just talk all night,<br />

not about other people. We‘d talk about us and the future, about how we were gonna get out of<br />

Belmont just as soon as the year was over. Sometimes we‘d get high a little. Sometimes we‘d make<br />

love or just fool around a bit. But even in these more intimate times, something was just never right.<br />

Sometimes I‘d catch Colleen staring wide-eyed into the wooden roof, lookin‘ like she wanted to<br />

scratch through the cielin‘. And if I ever asked her what was wrong, she‘d say ―nothin‖ or that she<br />

was worried about a test in class. I knew it was just better to love her, to make her feel safe and to<br />

not ask her any questions during those times. How stupid I was then.<br />

In the morning, we‘d always be back in our beds in her bedroom, but I‘d be up just wanting<br />

to be gone already. Once the Tates were up, the world came down over us like a storm with a whole<br />

lotta banging and clamberin‘, shoutin‘ and awful cookin‘ smells. Mr. Tate liked his bacon lightly<br />

fried, almost raw and he made Mrs. Tate cook everything from scratch. He got her to make hash<br />

and biscuits, too, on Sundays, with over-easy eggs and sausage links they made on the farm. Outside,<br />

the land felt dead, like the animals knew about their brothers and sisters layin‘ on plates in the<br />

kitchen. I found my fists clenched at the end of these thoughts, my nails cuttin‘ into my palms.<br />

That morning, a Friday it was, Good Friday, in fact, because we had off from school. Pastor<br />

Malinate had more sway with the school board than the superintendent. Mr. Tate woke us up, comin<br />

13


in to the bedroom, sayin that Colleen had to earn her keep around here, if she was goin to be the<br />

only offspring he had. He nodded to me to join her in getting dressed. He was going to show us<br />

something. Mr. Tate walked out of the room and Colleen grabbed me. She was sobbing and I knew.<br />

I told her I would take care of it. I told her everythin‘ was gonna be ok. We dressed quick, put on<br />

our jeans and sweatshirts and went downstairs. Mrs. Tate halted us at the back door, tellin‘ us to put<br />

on galoshes. Through the screen door, I looked over the Tate property. It‘d rained the night before<br />

and the fog concealed most of the land past the stables. Mr. Tate was already unlockin‘ the door to<br />

the stables in the distance and his fat body moved inside. Our galoshes smushed the earth with sick<br />

sounds. Colleen was shakin‘. Her stringed blonde hair fell flat over the side of her face, ripplin‘ over<br />

the half-moon hoof scar on her cheek. She couldn‘t look away from the stables. I whispered that I<br />

loved her, but it didn‘t change the fear in her eyes. We walked closer to the stables and heard the<br />

pigs shufflin‘ and snortin‘ inside.<br />

―Get on in here, you two.‖ Mr. Tate said from somewhere inside.<br />

We walked in and down the line of horse stables. Some of them were stampin‘ their hooves;<br />

the younger ones didn‘t know any better yet. Mandy, the youngest colt was layin‘ in her corner, like<br />

usual. I was wishin‘ I had time to get her out – to get Colleen out, too – before the kill. The only<br />

light we had was comin‘ in shards through the old wood walls. We kept walkin‘, the hay pressed flat<br />

under our feet, the smell of manure and wet sod was coursin‘ through our nostrils, and the sounds<br />

of Mr. Tate strugglin‘ with an old sow filled the thick air. She was squealin‘ and stompin‘ her hooves,<br />

slidin‘ all around as Mr. Tate wrapped thick rope around her hind legs first and then tied them in<br />

knots around her fronts.<br />

―Don‘t jus‘ stan‘ there, Colly, get down here!‖ He said. ―Grab the blade.‖ He motioned with<br />

his head to the next room, where we knew the tools were kept. Colleen didn‘t move, she just stood<br />

there cold and wet clutchin‘ at her sweatshirt. Mr. Tate looked at her like he was gonna wrestle her<br />

to the ground next if she didn‘t go. I remembered my promise to protect her. I went through the<br />

shed door and looked over the tools, all rusted red and unclean, hangin‘ there like corpses. I grabbed<br />

the machete and ran back.<br />

―Colleen, yer good fer nothin‘‖ he said. ―Can‘t even do what yer pa tell ya. Can‘t even stuck<br />

a pig like I tell ya.‖<br />

He looked back at me over his shoulder with the sow under his beefy arm and I couldn‘t tell<br />

which one was the pig.<br />

―Earla.‖ He was wrestlin‘ with her still. ―That‘s a good girl. Give me the knife.‖<br />

In my left hand, my nails were piercin‘ through my palm.<br />

―Earla! Give it here!‖ he said, the fire in his eyes forced disobedient, hateful thoughts out of<br />

my mind. I gave him the blade.<br />

―Now, see Colleen.‖ He said, chokin‘ the pig under his arm and holdin‘ the blade in his left<br />

hand.<br />

Colleen wasn‘t lookin‘. She was closin‘ her eyes.<br />

―Look, God damn you, Colly!‖ His anger was risin‘ in his throat, so much his voice was<br />

crackin‘. ―Look at me!‖<br />

Colly opened her eyes. Tears fell down her face and she was starin‘ straight at me. I was<br />

lookin‘ back at her, promisin‘ to hold her gaze. Mr. Tate cursed under his heaving breath.<br />

―It‟s ok‖ I mouthed to Colleen.<br />

There was a snapping, an air-escapin‘ gurglin‘ sound. Mr. Tate sighed, tired. And then there<br />

was just the rushin‘ out of her blood into a dry bucket, like a waterfall, and Colly and I were trapped<br />

under it right then, stuck without air.<br />

14


Mr. Tate beat her after that. He beat Colleen so bad that she didn‘t show for weeks at<br />

school. The school would call her house, but Mrs. Tate just said that Colleen had the<br />

mononucleosis. Said she wouldn‘t be in school for a month. Mr. Tate wouldn‘t let us see each<br />

other, either. I‘d call the house, but at the sound of my voice, the Tates would hang up. I didn‘t<br />

know when I would see her again and decided to just go there one night.<br />

I road my bike there. Past Fischers farm and the lake. The cold air stung my ears and my<br />

jacket whipped tight against my arms. It was for her, I thought, I had to ride for her. I had to make<br />

sure she was alright. The lone streetlights gave me just enough light to get to her, but all around me<br />

were shadows. Ahead of me, I could see the outline of their house, the black shutters on the dark<br />

grey sidin‘ looked like eyes and the doorway was an opened, scared mouth, callin‘ me. I pedaled<br />

faster.<br />

I walked my bike around the back of the property and stared up at Colleen‘s window.<br />

Behind me off in the distance the animals lay resting, the land was still and I was suddenly aware of<br />

the fear beatin‘ in my ears. I searched around on the ground for a stick, or somethin‘ small to throw.<br />

When I found one, I lifted my eyes up to her window to take aim.<br />

Colleen was already there, starin‘ down at me in the dark. Her blonde hair looked white, the<br />

ends waved in the cold breeze. Her skin looked blue in the dark and her eyes were now as black as<br />

holes. She caught me so off guard, I fell back on the ground, into the soft wet earth. Catchin‘ my<br />

breath, I got up, ran to the drainpipe and climbed my way up to her window. She grabbed my arms<br />

and helped me into her room.<br />

Seein‘ her now in the dark, she wasn‘t like I left her a month back. I could see violet circles<br />

under her eyes, her arms were all spotted with bruises and scrapes. Colleen stood there just starin‘ at<br />

me and I didn‘t know what to say. Nothin‘ would come out my mouth except a sob and I pulled her<br />

into me, huggin‘ her close, smellin‘ her damp hair. Her arms wrapped around me, too, but with little<br />

strength. This was not my Colleen anymore. They‘d hurt her real bad. She was changed and inside<br />

me something changed, too. As I was holdin‘ her there, I swore I heard the rushin‘ out of blood,<br />

only it was my own blood, hot as fire and coursin‘ through my veins.<br />

I said her name. I asked her what I could do. I asked her what I could do to make her not<br />

feel this way anymore. And that‘s when she said it. She took the words from inside my head and<br />

made them real.<br />

―Kill them,‖ she whispered. Her breath cut out in sharp points. I looked down at her hands<br />

as I held them. One of her thumbnails was ripped off. My eyes met hers and I took my hand,<br />

smoothin‘ back her white hair. My thumb edged along her cheek, feelin‘ the roughness of her scar<br />

and I pulled her face to mine. Kissin‘ her right eye, I leaned into her ear.<br />

―Alright,‖ I whispered back. My breath drew out, heavier, longer. ―Alright.‖<br />

I had to kill them. In the dark, blood is black and thick and it swims in your mind with the<br />

smell of salt. I didn‘t stay in the room there with them. I ran down the hall to Colleen‘s room, where<br />

I told her to wait for me. As I burst through the door, the light was off, her suitcase was still on the<br />

bed and the window was still open. Outside, behind the waving white curtains, I saw the stables, the<br />

oaks were black staunch figures on both sides and the moon was shinin‘ directly overhead. I ran to<br />

the window and looked out, just to be sure I understood what I was seein‘. The stable door was<br />

open.<br />

I ran out her room, past the ghosts of Mr. and Mrs. Tate, flew down the stairs, through the<br />

greasy kitchen and out the back door. My lungs heaved with sadness and fear at what I‘d just done<br />

and I wanted to hold her so bad. My feet rustled through the grass, picking up pace as I drew closer<br />

15


to the stables. I called her name and heard it come back at me in the wind. My breath caught in my<br />

lungs and I stopped there in the threshold. The animals were stampin‘ and cryin‘ out to me, as I ran<br />

past them, down the line of rattlin‘ boards, toward the slaughterhouse. I fell over somethin‘ in the<br />

dark and felt my face fall into thick wetness on sharp hay that stabbed at me. When I opened my<br />

eyes, there she was at my feet. A shard of moonlight was comin‘ through the wall, right there across<br />

her cheek, on her half moon scar and her eye was lookin‘ at me.<br />

16


Wayne Berninger<br />

GUESS WHO I CUT IN TWO LAST NIGHT<br />

my best friend is to all-natural & naked as the day she was born as lead or mercury or cadmium is to<br />

super-genius & sight for sore eyes is to home-cooked meal as howling wind is to good music for sex<br />

& music to the ear is to deliquescence as codependent is to an embarrassment of witches &<br />

pickpocket is to fictional cave monster as graduation with honors is to larger than life deep sea<br />

creature & overflowing bathtub is to frantic whistling as benevolent rule is to rich farmland & cornfed<br />

corporal is to the successful prosecution of arctic warfare as late night backrub is to the<br />

recharging of dead batteries & the setting of a kitchen match to dry paper is to tickertape parade as<br />

pay raise is to a night alone in the crow‘s nest & rock the boat is to hair grease as overplayed power<br />

ballad is to lifeguard station & suntan lotion is to the impending argument as the old man‘s car horn<br />

is to surprise company for dinner & spare the rod is to prison camp as good character & competitive<br />

nature is to seaworthy vessel & duty upon same<br />

17


NOW I’M REALLY BLUSHING & WITH GOOD REASON<br />

how was your trip to the ancient barber shop you ask / I did not get to ride in the little car I<br />

confess / much to my disappointment I add / but there was excitement enough when the shaky<br />

old man withdrew his straight razor from a drawer / I invite you to accompany me to the new<br />

supermarket in Red Hook / will it be an eye opening excursion you ask / I predict as follows /<br />

not only will your eyes be opened but no matter how widely you open them you will still not believe<br />

them / I‘ll wear a sassy little tank top you say / did I mention that the supermarket has no air<br />

conditioning I ask / when I promise to punish myself for being so forward I say that I will hit<br />

myself with a brick / my brick collection testifies to my enthusiastic appetite for pain I say / In<br />

the car (safe & secure from all alarms) I quip as follows / the good thing about the gnashing of<br />

academic teeth is that once they have worn their teeth down all the way then they are defenseless &<br />

I can move in for the kill / upon arrival at the supermarket I am nervous / too scared to take you<br />

in my arms among the vegetables / or the canned goods / or the fantastic array of dairy products<br />

/ or the bread<br />

18


John Casquarelli<br />

NATURAL MOTION OF WIND<br />

there are forms<br />

of communication<br />

beyond language<br />

a satisfaction that<br />

extends across<br />

borders of species<br />

and belongs to<br />

everything<br />

when i was young<br />

i would pretend<br />

i was an insect<br />

roaming through the woods<br />

i would wait<br />

until after a storm<br />

then brush the leaves<br />

with my body<br />

anticipating their response<br />

in the woods one loses<br />

a sense of time<br />

beneath the stone<br />

in the underbrush<br />

one can see<br />

the cosmos<br />

19


BRAIN IN A JAR<br />

we spoke for hours<br />

under the coconut tree<br />

imagined ourselves<br />

on paper airplanes<br />

I like to be<br />

alone in the<br />

morning<br />

feel the<br />

rumblings<br />

of the iceberg<br />

your capitalism is<br />

schizophrenic<br />

it would make<br />

Derrida scream<br />

from the infinite<br />

pharmakon<br />

of the mind<br />

in my cottage<br />

you light a candle<br />

then hide in<br />

the undertow<br />

as a child<br />

I tried to capture<br />

the moonlight<br />

dizzy from<br />

the rhythm<br />

of its name<br />

the faint<br />

echoes<br />

of antiquity<br />

still reverberate<br />

the orchestra<br />

plays in my<br />

neurons<br />

random collisions<br />

in a long<br />

vanished cloud<br />

20


I came searching<br />

for rain<br />

hoping to return<br />

to the maple leaves<br />

the scent of<br />

saffron in<br />

the air made<br />

her wings<br />

shiver<br />

21


A Place Where Trees Are Silent<br />

maybe<br />

it was one<br />

of those moments<br />

when you would<br />

pause<br />

leaving crumbs<br />

of laughter<br />

on the floor<br />

next to your<br />

sandals<br />

I don‘t recall<br />

the first time<br />

I disappeared<br />

or<br />

trembling in the<br />

morning mist<br />

when we sailed<br />

the rivulets<br />

surrounding Bsharri<br />

22


Alane Celeste<br />

THE HAVE-NOTS<br />

Flies hovered over our heads<br />

Knowingly consuming the<br />

Miserable air above our existence<br />

As they flew, they<br />

Tickled my little<br />

Starved pot belly<br />

Stuffed with sugar water and hard candy<br />

Covered in the remains<br />

Of the pretend playground we longed for<br />

Our world was made out of dry dirt<br />

And an empty<br />

Floor in the living room of the shack<br />

That was my home.<br />

Whenever it rained,<br />

The four walls were<br />

Overwhelmed with musical sounds<br />

As the drops fell<br />

Hard upon the metal roof<br />

We were certain that we were<br />

Being touched by the salty tears of God and<br />

That was our chance to squeeze between the holes<br />

Of the metal bars in the living room door<br />

And escape our cage<br />

To run around free<br />

With the other have-nots<br />

In the rain<br />

The warm<br />

Black coffee rain<br />

With remnants of sweet sugar cane<br />

and coconut water.<br />

The world, as it rained,<br />

Was empty<br />

With fearful adults who hide from<br />

Such inevitable<br />

Happenings<br />

And shake with fear the fall of a drop upon<br />

Their hard earned pesos<br />

And their sacred untouchable flesh.<br />

They would run and leave the world<br />

And the streets<br />

A quiet and open space for us little ones<br />

The have-nots<br />

To run around freely<br />

And sing tunes that the grown-ups sing anonymously<br />

23


To the rhythm of their calculated steps<br />

Songs we knew not the meaning of<br />

But somehow<br />

Merged with the rhythm of the rain<br />

Taking with every drop<br />

The dirt from my topless<br />

Belly<br />

And my chubby shoeless<br />

Feet and<br />

Exposing the color of my skin once more.<br />

As the afternoon rain stopped,<br />

The joy ended,<br />

The grown-ups came out<br />

Resumed their lives<br />

And we, the have-nots<br />

Snuck back in<br />

The same way we came out<br />

Through the metal bars,<br />

Until we were allowed back out<br />

By those who governed<br />

Every movement we made<br />

Or until the rain<br />

Came once again<br />

And we could run free.<br />

24


Nik Conklin<br />

HOLLYWOOD HILLS<br />

Hilltop, nighttime<br />

Cool outside<br />

She‘s cool in my arms<br />

Blankets and pillows and bed<br />

Of my truck<br />

Indigo sky, gold glitter<br />

Big dipper<br />

Cars, capillary roads<br />

Highway lights<br />

Earth so distant<br />

Midnight colored sheet so close<br />

Good to be this high<br />

Up<br />

Trees, bushes, makeshift parking lot of dirt<br />

Cookie cutter, movie scene,<br />

City below<br />

25


Cynthia Maris Dantzic<br />

A PALETTE OF HAIKU<br />

January morn.<br />

Overnight, a wash of white.<br />

Never too much snow.<br />

Fat yellow circle<br />

Up in the right-hand corner.<br />

Every kid‘s drawn sun.<br />

Taste of candied yams,<br />

Of cantaloupe and carrots,<br />

Just-squeezed orange juice.<br />

Ruby, scarlet, rose,<br />

Vermilion, alizarin,<br />

Each uniquely red.<br />

Violet, lilac,<br />

And soft-scented lavender,<br />

A sense of purple.<br />

Lilac, lavender,<br />

Soft-scented heliotrope,<br />

A violet bouquet.<br />

26


Sing me that song of<br />

Purple mountain‘s majesty;<br />

Sing America!<br />

There‘s only one blue,<br />

Shimmering ultramarine.<br />

(Painters know it‘s true.)<br />

Kermit tells children:<br />

It‘s not easy being green.<br />

Earth demands we try.<br />

Coffee and chocolate,<br />

These, the most comforting tastes,<br />

Deliciously brown.<br />

Absolute darkness,<br />

Silent, frigid, vastly starred,<br />

This moonless black night.<br />

Turn off your night light.<br />

Be enveloped in darkness.<br />

Sink into cool black.<br />

27


Julián del Casal<br />

TROPICAL LANDSCAPE<br />

All dust and flies. A lead-tinged atmosphere<br />

where echoing peals of rattling thunder sound<br />

and clouds, like snow-white swans on muddy ground,<br />

offset the ashen color of the air.<br />

The sea becalms her aqua-green depths there.<br />

Above her breast a bolt of lightning bound<br />

for more ethereal climes where peace is found<br />

emits its fire-red breath with jagged glare.<br />

The sleepy tree nods off with drowsing eye.<br />

A deep calm floats atop the lingering slack.<br />

Swift seagulls rend the airways opposite.<br />

A flash of lightning sparkles in the sky<br />

and rain falls on the steaming earth‘s broad back<br />

in bulging drops that crackle as they hit.<br />

Trans. G. J. Racz<br />

28


THINGS I LOVE<br />

I love fine porcelain, bronze, crystal ware,<br />

lush stained-glass windows wrought by master hands,<br />

beflowered tapestries of golden strands<br />

and bright Venetian moons beyond compare.<br />

I love likewise Castilian ladies fair,<br />

medieval lays from troubadour-rich lands,<br />

Arabian steeds a-wing on foreign sands,<br />

the lightness of a German ballad‘s air,<br />

the rich piano‘s sonorous ivory keys,<br />

the horn that resonates within the field,<br />

pale olibanum‘s balsam redolence<br />

and that gold, marble, sandalwood bed‘s ease<br />

wherein pure virgin loveliness will yield<br />

the bloodied flower of its innocence.<br />

Trans. G. J. Racz<br />

29


SALOME<br />

Within the Hebrew palace floats a wave<br />

of sun-pierced perfume seeking the unknown<br />

aloft through lattice ceilings, skyward flown,<br />

or dissipating mid the spacious nave.<br />

There Herod sits, his stony aspect grave,<br />

with sunken chest and graying beard full-grown,<br />

hieratic and erect upon the throne,<br />

entranced as though by birdsongs that beslave.<br />

Before him, clad in rich brocade emblazed<br />

with precious gems of flaming radiancy<br />

and moving to a bandore‘s stringed delight<br />

twirls Salome in dance, her right hand raised<br />

displaying, all refulgent in her glee,<br />

a golden-pistilled lotus of pure white.<br />

Trans. G. J. Racz<br />

30


Wendy Eng<br />

FOUND POEM: BEAUTY IS ART<br />

Block chandeliers hung on walls<br />

Sprouted, gilded sconces<br />

Obscure edifices, lip smacking<br />

White concrete<br />

Stone, pristine glass<br />

Box, dragon topped pagodas<br />

Stylized thicket bamboo<br />

Shaped like the fall of Saigon<br />

And king sized white house<br />

Away from labor camp<br />

And coup<br />

With its breathtaking folly.<br />

31


Christine Francavilla<br />

EXPOSURE<br />

The terminal is cavernous, open, wide. I pick at my nail polish, chipping it slowly as I wait on a line<br />

that snakes around for what seems like miles. Jim is off to the side. He thinks I won a three day<br />

cruise to St. Thomas. That‘s what I told him. I proceed to the next available cruise specialist and<br />

give my name, then hold my breath, hope the reservation has been lost, that there‘s been some<br />

mistake and our cabin given away. But the young woman clicks away on the keyboard and<br />

everything goes smoothly.<br />

―Two beds,‖ I say as she processes my key card. ―I requested a cabin with two beds.‖<br />

―All set,‖ she says, smiling. She slides our key cards across the table and looks off to the<br />

distance ready for the next passenger. I see my last means of escape vanish.<br />

From the moment Jim‘s hand touched mine and he sang my name, Layla, I began to have<br />

doubts. His hand felt warm and strong compared to mine. I should have painted my nails a softer<br />

color, not red.<br />

We have more lines to stand in, one for pictures, for boarding, elevators, even luggage. No<br />

one seems to mind this rush to wait. They know something wonderful is on the other side. I am in<br />

no hurry either, though not for the same reasons. Once the ship pulls from its slip, it‘ll just be him<br />

and me, two strangers adrift in a small cabin. We‘ve known each other for two years, meeting—<br />

chatting—online. This is the first time we‘ve actually met. He‘s taller than I imagined and looks<br />

older than his picture. His hair is two toned, white on the sides, reddish brown on top. His face<br />

bears scars of long ago acne, making his skin thick, lumpy. He‘s wearing worn, cracked cowboy<br />

boots with pointed toes and creative, curly stitching and as we wait he‘s typing furiously on his<br />

Blackberry, reluctant to see the end of his service.<br />

I booked the cheapest room, the inside cabin. Jim enters first, paving the way. There is no<br />

room for us to stand side by side. The beds are narrow; I‘m sure his feet will hang off. I‘m relieved.<br />

There‘s nothing one can do on these beds but keep from falling off.<br />

I open drawers hidden in entertainment units and nightstands, inspect the closet, count<br />

hangers and towels. The room is a tribute to efficiency and economy. There is little here that makes<br />

it look like anything more than a room at the Y. I suppose if I were looking for romance, I‘d have<br />

booked the cabin across the hall, the one with a window. Perhaps the Caribbean sun would lighten<br />

the deep orange and beige bedspread, reveal the subtle stripes in the cream colored wallpaper, make<br />

the room look bigger, even opulent. But there are some things that fare better in low light.<br />

Jim grabs the remote and turns on the TV, switching channels, reading the TV program.<br />

―They have some good movies on tonight,‖ he says. His accent comes from up north, New<br />

York perhaps. There are lot of them in Ft. Lauderdale. Funny how his favorite possession seems to<br />

be his boots, as though he jumped feet first into his new life.<br />

―Seems silly,‖ I say ―to spend such a short cruise inside the room. You can watch movies at<br />

home.‖<br />

His expression changes and he switches off the TV, tossing the remote onto the bed. He<br />

inspects everything I‘ve already checked out. He opens drawers, closets, inventories the bathroom.<br />

―There‘s only two bath towels,‖ he says. ―I usually use two.‖<br />

The thought of him naked brings me back to reality. ―We can ask the steward for more,‖ I<br />

say. When I thought of our time together, I imagined us by the pool, having drinks, listening to<br />

music, dining, seeing shows. I always stopped short of thinking about the evenings. Washing under<br />

my arms, flossing, peeing…who pictures herself doing that<br />

32


―I think I‘ll check out the buffet,‖ I say reaching for my bag. ―Dinner is at 6:30. We can<br />

meet in the dining room if you like.‖<br />

―No, wait for me,‖ he says disappearing into the bathroom. The room is so small, so quiet, I<br />

can hear him unzip. I wait outside the room where there‘s air.<br />

By the buffet, I excuse myself, so nervous I nearly slip into the men‘s room. I change course<br />

and head for the ladies room, making for the nearest stall. I sit rubbing my temples, pants bunched<br />

around my ankles. Three days had hardly seemed like enough time to unwind when I booked this<br />

cruise. Now, the time stretches ahead of me like eternity. No one goes on a three day cruise to<br />

relax, I realize. They go to drink. Let loose. Get laid.<br />

I wash my hands in the small, gilded bathroom, lathering well. There are germs everywhere<br />

or so I‘m told. But then, getting sick might not be bad. I inspect my hands under the dryer. The<br />

knuckles are large, ugly, the nails short, wide. I wish my fingers were long and slender like the rest of<br />

my body but then my ass is so flat, I need silicone pads to give it some shape.<br />

Jim is still waiting for me outside. I check his expression for annoyance but find none, and<br />

we go into the buffet. There are food stations every few feet occupying the center of the floor.<br />

Nothing has been overlooked. There are fresh salads, sandwiches, pizza, hot entrees, soups,<br />

desserts, bread and fruit and yet, with all that, the air is remarkably sanitized, aroma free. All I can<br />

smell is Jim‘s cologne masking his sweat. We walk around with our trays though we know we‘ll have<br />

Chinese once we spot it. We‘ve been typing out our likes and dislikes for a long time, each chat a<br />

test to determine whether we have more in common than not.<br />

We find a table on our third lap around. Around us, no one can move once they‘ve finished<br />

eating. They sit like beached whales, sucking their teeth. We‘re no better, filling our plates with rice,<br />

noodles, spare ribs and chow mein. Somehow, we all seem to have switched to survival tactics. I<br />

forget dinner is in a few hours. I stare at the view of the city and wonder what Jim is thinking but I<br />

don‘t stop eating long enough to ask. Jim looks around at the tables, chewing wildly, lips softly<br />

smacking. He licks his fingers after each rib.<br />

―I‘m going outside,‖ I say when both my stomach and ears have had enough. ―Sit in the<br />

sun.‖ I am sure he will hang back, finish his rice, want some time to himself but he follows me. A<br />

waiter approaches as we lower ourselves into deck chairs. I order a Bloody Mary, Jim has a beer. I<br />

look around at the partying that has already begun. Balloon bottomed glasses dot the small tables<br />

next to deck chairs, their paper umbrellas shielding what remains of ice cubes. A few seasoned<br />

cruisers have worn their bathing suits under their clothes. They strip down in front of our envy and<br />

dive into the pool. Loud music begins to pour from recessed speakers and we have to shout our<br />

conversation.<br />

―This should be fun,‖ he says as we wait for our drinks. ―Crowd looks lively.‖<br />

―Nice of you to come,‖ I finally say.<br />

―I‘m surprised you asked me.‖ He continues looking straight ahead. ―After so many<br />

hints….‖<br />

―Well, as I said, it is what it is.‖<br />

―Really puts things in perspective, doesn‘t it‖ he asks moving his eyes in my direction.<br />

―Make or break.‖<br />

I fidget, trying to prevent the idea from rooting. I had not meant this to be seen that way,<br />

had specifically said we didn‘t need to pretend to be a couple, that we could go our separate ways if<br />

we wanted, connect at night when conversation would flow as it did on our evening chats. Our<br />

drinks arrive. ―We‘re not out to prove anything,‖ I say.<br />

Jim grunts as if I had dispelled some silly idea. ―Still, we can‘t go back to the way we were,‖<br />

he says. ―No matter what happens.‖<br />

I take a long sip, force a smile. ―What do you think will happen‖<br />

33


He laughs. ―I don‘t know. Neither of us do, it seems. It‘s virgin territory.‖ He squints over<br />

at me. I squint back. ―Imagine…virgins….at our age…‖<br />

We have talked about sex in our nightly chats but not about doing it together. He‘s been<br />

married twice. I told him I had been married, too. It‘s best to lie. People who have never married<br />

are viewed suspiciously, like time bombs. He‘s told me some of the positions he‘s tried, that he likes<br />

having sex in forbidden places. I imagine that‘s long in his past. Jim has had many lovers or so he‘s<br />

said. I asked him to count once and he said it must have been over fifty and that was a conservative<br />

number. I liked that he did not ask me. They were not worth mentioning.<br />

―Did you bring a bathing suit‖ he asks sipping his beer. I think about the black one piece<br />

rolled up in my carry on. I tried it on just yesterday and liked it even less than when I bought it.<br />

They haven‘t made a suit yet that hides the imperfections as well as a computer screen, that lies as<br />

well as my fingers typing on keys. ―They have hot tubs,‖ he says pointing to the one at the far end<br />

of the deck.<br />

―Aren‘t they breeding grounds for bacteria‖ I ask regretting it as soon as the words are out.<br />

I sound like an old lady.<br />

―You germophobic‖ Jim asks.<br />

I shake my head. ―I work with people who are.‖<br />

―Know what I like doing in hot tubs‖ he asks. ―Take my suit off. Let the bubbles<br />

explore…it‘s what I imagine dentures must feel like when they‘re being cleaned. Ever try it‖<br />

I watch the couple already easing into the hot tub. ―That‘s easier for a man,‖ I say.<br />

―We‘ll go at night. When everyone is sleeping. You‘ll see.‖<br />

I let the suggestion drop, pretend I haven‘t heard it. He puts down his empty glass and<br />

adjusts the back of his chair so that he lies flat. I adjust mine slightly and close my eyes. Together,<br />

we drift off.<br />

Dressing for dinner is complicated in a small room. A man‘s sense of modesty differs from<br />

a woman‘s. Jim thinks nothing of pulling off his pants, walking around in his underwear as he looks<br />

for the right shirt. His briefs look uncomfortable. They ride up in the back, expose a hairy cheek. I<br />

grab an outfit from the closet and duck into the bathroom, where I reach into my pants to free my<br />

own underwear from where it‘s caught in my crack.<br />

―Is my deodorant in there‖ he calls out.<br />

I am ready to open the door and hand it to him when he comes in, shirtless. Luckily, I‘m still<br />

dressed. Standing behind me because there‘s no room in front of the mirror, he raises an arm and<br />

coats the hairs with a roll on. He doesn‘t leave when he‘s finished. Just stays watching me. I try to<br />

draw a straight line with my eyeliner but my hand shakes. I watch him watching me. Does he see<br />

what I see The curly hair that has no choice but to be kept shorter than I‘d like, the hands that can<br />

only belong to a man, the hormone produced breasts and the phantom beard lurking beneath the<br />

surface of my jaw that only I can see Can he tell that once I, too, was a man<br />

―I love watching women put on their makeup,‖ he says when my gaze meets his in the<br />

mirror.<br />

‗It‘s meant to be private,‖ I say, keeping it light. ―You‘re supposed to think we always look<br />

like this.‖<br />

―Don‘t let me stop you,‖ he says.<br />

―There‘s not enough room in here for two,‖ I say, trying for coy. Jim drops the lid to the<br />

toilet and has a seat, his face dangerously close to my artificial ass. He stares at it in a way that says<br />

he‘s hoping to get more than I offered when I invited him on this trip. ―Really,‖ I say, ―you‘re<br />

making me nervous.‖<br />

―Didn‘t your husband ever watch you‖ he asks.<br />

34


―No.‖ I search for something that‘s not in my cosmetic bag.<br />

Jim rises, nodding. I lock the door after him and change clothes quickly, avoiding my<br />

reflection in the mirror. I‘d rather imagine the way I look than see it for real. I take my time<br />

finishing my makeup and brushing my teeth. From outside, I hear the TV. I stare at the toilet and<br />

decide to risk it while he‘s distracted. In the middle of my flow, he lowers the volume, listening to<br />

me pee. I reach over and turn on the bathroom faucet and the TV volume rises once more.<br />

The dining room is wide and two stories tall. Our table is on the lower level and we follow a<br />

waiter as he wends his way among round tables and square ones, here and there a lonely rectangle.<br />

The noise is nearly deafening. Curtains are pulled back to reveal the setting sun and the scent of<br />

flowers overpowers any smells that may be trying to escape from the kitchen. One is meant to savor<br />

cruise ship food with the eyes rather than the nose. Silverware and glasses clink. Bodies press into<br />

tight corners, hands reach out, people introduce themselves by saying where they‘re from. We have<br />

a table to ourselves. No one will shake our hands, ask us where we‘re from, scratch their heads at<br />

the thought of two strangers masquerading as a couple.<br />

I run my hand over the tablecloth, white, pristine, unbelievably free of stains. I study my<br />

napkin folded in the shape of a bishop‘s hat and carefully unwrap it, trying to learn how it was made.<br />

There is a string quartet playing one of Vivaldi‘s seasons. No one seems to be listening.<br />

―Quite a spectacle,‖ Jim says, opening the large menu. ―It‘ll be hard to go back to eating in<br />

front of the TV.‖<br />

Jim has said he lived in a large studio, about the only thing he can afford after the second<br />

divorce. I haven‘t told him I own my mother‘s house now, inherited the money that allowed me to<br />

have the surgery so I can live as a woman. Instead, I said I live in a one bedroom with just enough<br />

to make ends meet. At one point, it was the truth. I have to be careful, remember what I‘ve told<br />

him.<br />

I order a glass of red wine even though it doesn‘t go with the shrimps I‘m planning to have.<br />

Jim settles on the oysters. He reaches for the bread and two round balls of butter.<br />

―So what do you want to do tonight‖ he asks. ―How ‗bout that hot tub‖<br />

―You go. I might do a little reading.‖<br />

He makes a face. ―Seems silly to come on a cruise to read.‖<br />

I give him two points for using my logic against me. ―I don‘t think I care to sit naked in a<br />

hot tub unless I have a bar of soap.‖<br />

―You have a one or two piece‖ he asks. ―Bathing suit.‖<br />

―One.‖ Is he picturing me in it Is that what his look is about<br />

But he says ―It‘ll be a bit more difficult. But not impossible. Trick is not to take the suit off<br />

completely. Just have it down around your knees. This way, all you need to do is pull it up quick.<br />

No fuss.‖<br />

―It sounds disgusting.‖<br />

―Ever try it‖<br />

No, I want to say. I never sat naked in a hot tub, never been married, never lived my life<br />

fully as a woman until I was nearly forty. But I haven‘t told him anything about myself that was the<br />

absolute truth so far—why start now ―Don‘t know if I want to,‖ I say. ―Why do you‖<br />

He shrugs. ―It makes me feel...free.‖<br />

―I‘m not doing the hot tub thing,‖ I say.<br />

―Okay, okay,‖ he says as if he only conceded that round.<br />

The progress from course to course reminds me of walking underwater, slow and laborious.<br />

We avoid each other‘s gaze, comment on the dining room, judge the people around us, guessing<br />

what they do for a living. The conversation that flowed from keyboard to keyboard for two years in<br />

the small hours of the morning doesn‘t translate well to this candlelit table with soft music in the<br />

35


ackground. There are distractions here, his eyes studying me, the feel of his hand patting my knee,<br />

the hope he has of seeing more than I‘m willing to show, my own ambivalence about wanting<br />

affection without sex.<br />

After dinner, Jim suggests one of the nightclubs for a drink. I take out a map of the ship<br />

and we wander from the Rodeo Bar playing generic country-western to the disco Hot Stuff to the<br />

Captain‘s Lounge with its drowsy piano music. Nothing grabs his attention and we make our way to<br />

the quietest bar to be found, The Underground. It‘s located on windowless lower level, with black<br />

walls and red velvet chairs. There is a low stage where a crew member is setting up a microphone<br />

and some equipment. People stroll in without the exuberance of the crowd upstairs. They look<br />

around furtively, as if afraid of running into someone they know. Everyone takes a seat toward the<br />

back. The waiter no sooner brings our drinks than the emcee announces that most awful of<br />

entertainments: karaoke.<br />

―Shall we leave‖ I ask.<br />

Jim shakes his head. ―Let‘s watch.‖<br />

The evening opens with a rendition of ―Feelings‖ by a guy who keeps his eyes closed. He<br />

knows all the words but sings them a few beats ahead of time: the effect reminds me of a badly<br />

dubbed foreign film. The man finishes with a flourish to some polite applause and struts back to his<br />

seat, draping an arm around his wife.<br />

―That was embarrassing,‖ I say.<br />

―Takes courage,‖ Jim replies. ―Can you sing‖<br />

I shake my head. ―You‖<br />

The emcee asks for another volunteer. People look around, their expressions saying they‘re<br />

here to see the show, not be it. Suddenly, Jim leans back and pushes himself up, heading toward the<br />

stage. I reach for his arm but he‘s too quick and my fingers swipe at the air. He says something to<br />

the technician then works at freeing the microphone from its stand. I hold my breath, praying he<br />

doesn‘t sing the obvious but yes, there‘s the guitar lick from ―Layla‖ and I slide down in my chair.<br />

Jim‘s voice is thick and he doesn‘t so much sing as talk. Without his reading glasses, he has<br />

trouble reading the words and so resorts to saying what he thinks they are and mumbling through<br />

the parts he doesn‘t. It would be an utter failure if he didn‘t always come back strong and on key<br />

every time he sings my name. By the end of the song, a few in the audience have loosened up<br />

enough to sing the refrain with him. He finishes to more applause than the ―Feelings‖ guy got and<br />

makes his way back to our table with a look that says he‘s proud of himself. Before I can think of<br />

something nice to say he picks up my hand and kisses it.<br />

―I didn‘t know you like karaoke,‖ I say.<br />

―Never tried it before,‖ he replies.<br />

―Weren‘t you scared‖<br />

―Sometimes that‘s a nice feeling.‖<br />

On the way back to our cabin, Jim takes me by the hot tub. He wants me to feel the<br />

bubbles, warm, round, popping around my fingers.<br />

―See,‖ he says holding my hand beneath the swirling foam. ―Doesn‘t it feel nice Now<br />

imagine that down below.‖ My nipples tingle instead. I feel nothing down below.<br />

In the room, he gets out of his clothes quickly, draping shirt and pants over a chair. He says<br />

he sleeps in his underwear. I pretend to take it in stride and step into the bathroom. I scrub my<br />

face, brush my teeth again to the sound of the TV being cycled through the channels. I have yoga<br />

pants and one of those oversized T-shirts to sleep in. I leave my bra on.<br />

―There‘s a western on,‖ he says. ―We missed most of it. This is the end.‖ I crawl under the<br />

sheets as Jim watches the last few minutes of ‗The Good, the Bad and the Ugly‘. The room is too<br />

36


warm for this heavy cover and I‘m afraid somewhere in the night I‘ll throw it off in my sleep and<br />

expose myself. Jim is stretched out on top of the covers, socks on. I watch the movie for awhile<br />

but my eyes want to close. I turn off the light on my side and turn toward the wall so the light from<br />

the TV doesn‘t bother me, so the only thing Jim sees is the back of my head. He finishes watching<br />

the movie and switches it off and our little room is suddenly completely dark. I listen for Jim to get<br />

under his covers but hear nothing. I imagine him sitting there, propped against his pillow waiting<br />

for his eyes to adjust, get his night vision. I can‘t fall asleep knowing he‘s waiting for me to take<br />

shape in the darkness. His breathing becomes noticeably irregular and I feel his foot reach over and<br />

caress my ass through the blanket.<br />

―Layla‖ he whispers. I shift my position and it stops, resuming a short time later. I shift<br />

again; it stops. We keep this up for five minutes. Finally, he gets up and picks his way to the<br />

bathroom where I hear the shower run.<br />

I wake up sometime later with the room still pitch black. Jim has his hand on my thigh, his<br />

fingers dangerously close to my crotch and he‘s shaking me gently He shows me his watch with the<br />

illuminated face. It‘s ten o‘clock. Without the sun, I feel we have slept the entire day away. I<br />

shower quickly, checking twice, three times that the door is locked. My elbows hit the wall around<br />

me and I‘m still damp when I tug on my bathing suit covering it up with a pair of shorts and polo<br />

shirt. He is ready and waiting on the bed with his book. He‘s wearing shorts, a T-shirt and his<br />

boots.<br />

―I forgot to bring beach shoes,‖ he says. ―Maybe we can go shopping when we make port<br />

later.‖ He asks me to put his book, Lonesome Dove, in my tote, then gives me his wallet too.<br />

On our walk to the buffet we note that the deck chairs are nearly all taken. Jim spots two on<br />

the upper level, completely exposed to the sun, undesirable because they‘re a staircase away from the<br />

pool.<br />

―Betcha they‘ll be gone by the time we finish breakfast,‖ he says grabbing two towels and his<br />

book from my tote. I watch as he runs up the stairs, the noise from his boots clamoring on the<br />

metal resonating across the deck, calling attention to himself. He spreads a towel on each chair and<br />

anchors one with his book. People by the pool snicker at the man in cowboy boots but Jim doesn‘t<br />

seem embarrassed or show that he‘s noticed them. To me, he looks handsome and for the first time<br />

I feel my nervousness ebb slightly at the sight of him making an effort—partly, at least—for my<br />

comfort.<br />

We‘re just in time for the tail end of breakfast. We fill our plates with eggs, bacon, pancakes<br />

and toast. The dining area is nearly empty and we have no trouble finding a table.<br />

―I wonder what they do with all the leftover food,‖ I say as I unroll the silverware from its<br />

napkin.<br />

―Recycle it,‖ he says taking a mouthful of eggs. ―I‘ll bet you‘ll find the scrambled eggs in the<br />

fried rice this afternoon.‖<br />

―They can‘t recycle everything,‖ I say. ―What must the waiters think of us, all the waste<br />

Most look like Third Worlders.‖<br />

Jim grunts. ―What do you care what strangers think Will you be seeing them again‖ I‘ve<br />

always cared, I realize. And not just strangers. My own family, mother, sister. ―That‘s the nice<br />

thing about going away,‖ he says. ―You can do anything you want and no one will be around next<br />

week to remember.‖ He cleans the last bits of eggs and bacon from his plate and rises. His pancakes<br />

are left, untouched.<br />

―I‘ll meet you outside,‖ he says. ―I want to make sure no one takes those chairs.‖ He grabs<br />

his mug and walks away. Within minutes, a young waiter—Vietnamese-- comes by and gathers up<br />

Jim‘s plate of half eaten food. I take my time eating and wrap what‘s left of my toast in a napkin<br />

before joining Jim.<br />

37


He is stripped down to a Speedo, the slip of fabric straining to keep his bulge from shifting<br />

right or left. His skin glistens with suntan oil filling the breeze with the scent of coconut. In the<br />

sun, I can get a good look at his body. For a man nearing fifty, he‘s been able to hold on to the<br />

outline of the body he had twenty years ago. Muscles that round out his shoulders and biceps are<br />

held up it seems by veins close to the surface of his forearms. His chest is smooth, nearly hairless<br />

and I can‘t resist running my finger over the few strands clinging to the middle. ―Tryin to grow<br />

something there‖ I ask. I really want to warn him about skin cancer but refrain. He drains the last<br />

of his coffee and pushes himself up.<br />

―The hot tub beckons,‖ he says. He sees my look and chuckles. ―Don‘t worry. Nothing<br />

lewd with people around. Tonight though….‖ he calls over his shoulder pointing a finger first at me<br />

then the hot tub.<br />

I watch as he makes his way down the stairs, admiring how his shoulder blades form a nice<br />

hollow in the middle of his back, how small and compact his cheeks are. He eases himself into the<br />

swirling foam and arranges himself on the seat. His expression relaxes as he leans his head back<br />

draping his arms around the tub‘s perimeter, like a lovely martyr. The sun is strong and I fish<br />

around my tote for my sunglasses. Every few seconds, a heavy drop of sweat plunges south toward<br />

my groin but I‘m not ready to wear nothing but a bathing suit just yet. Even though I dreamed of<br />

this my whole life, the day I‘d walk around in a woman‘s bathing suit, free of the bulge that I‘ve<br />

been admiring on Jim, I still feel uncomfortable at the notion that something is definitely missing. I<br />

eye the women in bikinis, whether they have the body for it or not and wonder when that day will<br />

come for me. Caribbean music plays on the loudspeakers while bartenders set up for the afternoon<br />

rush. Some men mill around nearby waiting to secure their perches.<br />

Jim remains in the hot tub a good fifteen minutes before rising and slipping into the pool.<br />

He lets out a little scream as the cold water hits his groin. A group of young girls giggle as he floats<br />

by shooting a mouthful of water in the air like a whale. He looks at them in the same way I saw him<br />

looking at my ass yesterday. If he notices the look of amused disgust on their faces, he shows no<br />

sign. When he returns, he shakes his head at me like a dog adding pool water to the sweat that‘s<br />

already soaked my clothes.<br />

―Why don‘t you take a dip‖ Jim asks, settling into his lounge chair.<br />

―Too many people in there,‖ I say. I have an urge to reach out and feel the cool water<br />

rolling off his skin.<br />

―No one in the hot tub.‖<br />

―That‘s because it‘s 90 degrees. Only you want to boil yourself.‖<br />

―It‘ll be nice tonight, with the cool breeze. We have to do it.‖<br />

―You can. I‘ll watch.‖<br />

His eyebrows furrow. ―I meant sex.‖ He twists around and reaches out, pulling open the<br />

collar to my shirt. I flinch. ―What are you hiding‖ he asks.<br />

―Nothing,‖ I say. ―Just think of everyone who has to use the hot tub.‖ He wears a blank<br />

expression, as if the picture had never played out in his head. ―Sitting naked in a hot tub. Having<br />

sex. What‘s the fascination with that‖<br />

He smiles. ―You‘ll see.‖<br />

He‘s like a dog with a bone. It is our topic of conversation throughout the day, following us<br />

to the tourist shops in Charlotte Amalie, sliding onto the bar stool next to us for a drink, following<br />

us to the dining room, making me regret ordering the boiled lobster. My attempt to stall by taking in<br />

a show only works into his plan to sneak to the hot tub when everyone else is in bed. I tell him a<br />

cruise ship is like New York City: it never sleeps. His eyes light up and I realize that‘s what makes it<br />

fun for him. In the room he sits on my bed, threatens to pull off his clothes if I don‘t change into<br />

my suit. I protest, tell him I‘m tired but he stands and begins to pull down his pants, humming the<br />

38


theme song to ‗The Stripper‘. I realize it‘s easier to go along. We wrap ourselves in the thick<br />

terrycloth robes that hang in the closet and slip into the sandals we bought that afternoon. It is<br />

nearly 2 am when we reach the hot tub. I am relieved to see a net over it, the water calm and<br />

transparent. Jim is undeterred. He figures out how to remove the netting and locates the switch to<br />

turn on the whirlpool. The noise is loud and I am sure someone will come out, tell us we‘re<br />

trespassing, order us to leave. But no one comes and Jim slips into the water.<br />

―Come on,‖ he beckons with a smile. I can run but how far Sooner or later, I have to stop<br />

and allow myself to be caught. I loosen the belt to my robe and lift it up as I step into the tub. With<br />

my back toward Jim, I whip it off and drop into the water. My legs search for a spot his hasn‘t<br />

claimed but his feet are everywhere. Our knees touch. ―Now,‖ he says, ―watch and learn.‖ I see his<br />

arms disappear under the white foam and he arches back as he lifts his cheeks off the seat tugging to<br />

the left, then right. Soon, I feel his suit touch my knees. I attempt to jerk my legs back but he has<br />

my feet pinned under his. ―See how easy that was‖ he says. His arms emerge and spread out<br />

against the tub‘s rim. ―Your turn.‖<br />

―I‘m not doing that,‖ I say.<br />

―Why‖ he asks. ―Got something I haven‘t seen before Just slide the straps off your<br />

arms.‖<br />

I can do at least that, I think, seeing that the only way to get back to the room is to give in a<br />

little. I scoot down until my shoulders are under the foam and pull the straps off letting them hang<br />

around my arms. My knee comes close to his groin and he slides forward causing me to push back.<br />

I cross my arms over my chest hoping to create something there that resembles a larger cleavage.<br />

―There,‖ I say and lean my head back, closing my eyes. We are quiet for awhile and I think he has<br />

given up.<br />

―Now just push the suit down to your waist,‖ he says. ―Feel the bubbles on your breasts.‖ I<br />

decide to keep my eyes closed, pretend I‘m sleeping but then he moves forward and I realize he‘s<br />

going to pull it down for me. My hands jerk up and I motion for him to stay put. I inch the suit<br />

down on either side while trying to keep my arms crossed in front of me, preventing him from<br />

seeing anything more than what I‘ve shown. ―Well‖ he whispers.<br />

My nipples are erect. A thousand nerve endings have sprung to life and there‘s a stirring<br />

down below that makes my knees squeeze together.<br />

―Now just tug the thing off,‖ he says. ―Let your suit rest against my knee.‖<br />

Beads of sweat gather on my forehead. There is an ache in my groin that signals the first<br />

stirrings I‘ve had since this journey began. My entire body, in fact, screams to break loose. I arch<br />

my back and pull it off, dragging the suit to my knees. It diverts Jim‘s attention. He smiles, his toes<br />

loosen their hold on my feet and he slides a foot up the side of my calf.<br />

―Now,‖ he says, ―was that so scary‖ Content, he closes his eyes and leans his head back. I<br />

look up at the sky, at the constellations above my head. My legs inch open and the swirling water<br />

massages places I have neglected for so long. The bubbles squeeze inside crevices, tickling,<br />

popping, exhaling hot breath where none has ever been. I feel lightheaded. I close my eyes and<br />

slide down so that only my shoulders are exposed. I breathe deeply, uncross my arms hold onto the<br />

tub‘s rim and allow my breasts to bob beneath the water‘s surface. My toes lift off the tub floor and<br />

nestle in between Jim‘s legs. I‘m amazed at how aroused he‘s become.<br />

―There‘s a lot about me you don‘t know,‖ I say.<br />

―Yeah‖<br />

―Aren‘t you curious‖<br />

He opens his eyes a crack. ―Maybe.‖ He lets his eyes close and his foot moves higher up my<br />

leg.<br />

I take a deep breath, let go of the tub and float.<br />

39


Stephanie Gray<br />

TWO DUETS FOR TWO VOICES<br />

I’m telling you, don’t forget<br />

To remember who you were<br />

To remember what it was<br />

To remember what it is<br />

To remember how it was<br />

To remember what it went<br />

To remember how it said<br />

To remember how it sounded<br />

To remember how it went<br />

To remember what they did<br />

To remember how it goes<br />

To remember what it meant<br />

To remember that‘s what she said<br />

To remember what it aint<br />

To remember who said what<br />

To remember what said what<br />

To remember who knew who<br />

To remember who died then<br />

To remember who all knew who<br />

To remember what was what<br />

To remember who didn‘t die<br />

To remember who said what they said<br />

To remember who didn‘t remember you<br />

To remember who didn‘t want to know<br />

To remember who tried to change you<br />

To remember don‘t be a cliché here<br />

To remember don‘t let this poem be 8 th grade desperation<br />

To remember you‘re trying to do something with 8 th grade desperation<br />

To remember maybe you can deconstruct 8 th grade desperation in a way the language poets would like<br />

Or A Tonalists<br />

Or Quietudes<br />

To remember, once again, all together now, the more things change the more they stay the same<br />

To remember most poets don‘t want to hear that<br />

To remember most news publications have a rule for what not to say<br />

Including<br />

The more things change the more they stay the same<br />

To remember most people will forget you said earlier in this poem it was a sophisticated attempt to turn<br />

around a cliché<br />

Can it be encapsulated in Hey.<br />

Maybe ok<br />

To remember maybe these lines need to be more of a mystery.<br />

To remember somebody might be reading between the lines<br />

To remember there‘s a poem in between the lines<br />

To remember in between the lines is where everything happens<br />

So why should I even write<br />

Anything<br />

40


I’m telling you, you gotta remember<br />

Don‘t forget they didn‘t know<br />

Don‘t forget what they said<br />

Don‘t forget who knew that<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s what they said<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s what it is<br />

Don‘t forget it‘s all there<br />

Don‘t forget they said keep it moving<br />

Don‘t forget she didn‘t die<br />

Don‘t forget he‘s never there<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s their stuff<br />

Don‘t forget they‘re telling you is what they‘re telling you<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s how it is<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s how it said<br />

Don‘t forget it‘s changed<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s what it said<br />

Don‘t forget they (k)new all along<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s where it was<br />

Don‘t forget I wasn‘t there<br />

Don‘t forget that‘s the truth<br />

Don‘t forget they never change<br />

Don‘t forget he‘s not there<br />

Don‘t forget she went there<br />

Don‘t forget I was there<br />

Don‘t forget there it was<br />

Don‘t forget you just can‘t forget this<br />

Don‘t forget it stopped at 2 am<br />

Don‘t forget it didn‘t start<br />

Don‘t forget it hasn‘t happened.<br />

Don‘t forget whatever happened<br />

Don‘t forget what it is.<br />

Don‘t forget you have to remember their names ok<br />

Don‘t forget you will remember them tomorrow<br />

Don‘t forget she always remembers<br />

Don‘t forget Rocio Durcal<br />

Don‘t forget Cliff Burton<br />

Don‘t forget no one rode the lightning.<br />

Don‘t forget they are telling you for the 1,000,000 th time, IT IS WHAT IT IS OK<br />

Don‘t forget the string around your finger that fell off yesterday<br />

Don‘t forget Cliff ‗em all<br />

Don‘t forget Randy Rhoads<br />

Don‘t forget you lose people in a poem with proper names<br />

Thus don‘t forget you gotta keep it universal<br />

I realize you haven‘t traveled the universe<br />

But I‘m expecting you to do this.<br />

So<br />

Don‘t<br />

Forget.<br />

Remember that, ok<br />

Ok.<br />

41


Mary Kennan Herbert<br />

WALKING ACROSS THE PRINCETON CAMPUS<br />

Dead guy, you knew it was a pleasure here. Green now,<br />

but pretty too in the deep drifts of February. Allow<br />

these images, mundane. The famed black squirrels<br />

mark the place. Nassau Hall. Dead guys in there, still,<br />

voices and the fluttering of leaves and bird song<br />

like Whitman‘s thrush or other choruses, Tigertones<br />

and the stone bench marked with names of the WWII<br />

Class that did not make it back. Dead guys all, yet I<br />

feel there is a good thing about it all. They‘d be happy<br />

if they were here this sunny afternoon, like me<br />

walking across this campus garnished with Ivy angels.<br />

I feel at home among these reminders of scholars<br />

and veterans. It‘s a university campus, not a graveyard,<br />

but a memorial all the same, look at the stars–<br />

bronze stars, plaques, bronze markers, stars,<br />

and still more stars, reminding me of stars. . . .<br />

42


MAKE ME TO HEAR<br />

"Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the bones<br />

which thou has broken may rejoice." – Psalms 51:8<br />

No, broken bones won‘t kill me, but do<br />

slow me down in my fast lane life. The Deity<br />

said, "Listen up!" but I too often do<br />

not. It‘s an acoustical universe, divinely<br />

inspired. The Word. Aural literacy required.<br />

Survival in the Black Hole, unseen, might be<br />

under the sea. No sunlight below 656 feet.<br />

Lord, I crawl like a crab, hoping to hear Thee,<br />

the ping of your holy sonar. Thousands<br />

of times I was admonished to pay attention.<br />

Some translations say “crushed” bones.<br />

I will be given a chance, among stars and stones<br />

43


ALL MY HIDDEN PARTS<br />

"Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts:<br />

and in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know<br />

wisdom." – Psalms 51:6<br />

Hidden inside this little velveteen door,<br />

you can see my ticker. It keeps on working.<br />

Amazing. All the other gears and pulleys<br />

keep on trucking, but dependent on the core.<br />

Under the thatch, that aging dome,<br />

note the brain still firing like a pin ball<br />

machine. No rhyme nor reason to it all,<br />

ball bearings rolling comically home.<br />

Behind guileless, misleading eyes<br />

you will see pages of commandments<br />

and a variety of sins hung out to dry,<br />

on a clothesline designed to mesmerize.<br />

44


Aimee Herman<br />

DEGREE OF DARK SPACE FORTY FIVE ANGLED CONFUSE/REFUSE:<br />

COMPOUNDED<br />

slap x///twenty-fourth letter///against ex///fifth letter plus twenty-fourth///current above<br />

former/// vowel+consonant///repeated by equal amounts of apart///and a part<br />

if x= divisor of curved implement//porcelain percentage to the fifth power/packaged by ziplocked<br />

container of intricate integer///corpse of sixty-two inches climbing into wooden mouth///nails of<br />

skin///straining prepositional fraction///where ex=mistake///error///oversight in calculations<br />

and x=dry ice over blown glass///enclosing drunk lipstick///stained smoke rings/// take<br />

ex///subtract e///affix striped face onto complicated equation omitting parenthetical<br />

excuses///excusing unhygienic estimations///<br />

smear shattered rubber from<br />

flat parchment-inhalation<br />

moment of movement<br />

leaning lending integer<br />

minus one hour for<br />

traveling, unraveling<br />

green particle of algebraic strand<br />

sitting atop root of<br />

shoulder divided by blade<br />

ur counted 2 x<br />

(m)e subdivided by<br />

fractioned ellipsis<br />

…/…<br />

where percentage is minimalized by<br />

enlarged compass of firm directions<br />

read:<br />

end before beginning<br />

conclusion before hypothesis<br />

black tar trigonometry<br />

curvy, voluptuous geometry<br />

shape of angled knuckles surfing into<br />

independent variable<br />

functioning as alternate for<br />

mast(r) bait ng<br />

slick back polynomial<br />

complicated expression eluding<br />

clash of theorems, where<br />

ex becomes negative like<br />

diagnosed distillation, deconstructing<br />

smoothed out quadratic confusion<br />

45


sharpen wood with .8 percent of lead<br />

leading to sweetened substitute for ex<br />

additional limbs, concentrated by<br />

subtracted imperfections<br />

multiples of six i‟s<br />

(i) (i) (i) (i) (i) (i)<br />

translated into<br />

forty-five angled compounded equations<br />

46


Katherine Hogan<br />

BY THE LAKE<br />

—with Richard, Fran and James<br />

Lore has it that<br />

ducks‘ quacks don‘t echo.<br />

What we hear as echo is merely<br />

the overlapping cacophony<br />

mallards make<br />

as their flotilla paddles en masse<br />

toward the bread we toss—all<br />

except Richard, who walks ahead<br />

along the bank, resting on each succeeding<br />

park bench.<br />

A lone <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> duck, the only<br />

white feathers among clusters<br />

of tawny brown and glistening green,<br />

hops on the bank and marches<br />

—as well as a duck can be said to march—<br />

up to Richard, quacking orders to report<br />

for K.P. duty. On the double.<br />

A uniformed officer, the park ranger, rides<br />

over to say ―Halt! You‘re breaking the law!<br />

Don‘t you see the signs ‗NO Feeding<br />

the Wildlife.‘‖ Wildlife These ducks<br />

are tame, part of the neighborhood.<br />

But we‘ve run out of bread anyway<br />

and the ducks are drifting off,<br />

their quacks echoing<br />

in our overlapping laughter.<br />

47


UNMASKED<br />

You always play yourself as tragic queen.<br />

At every gathering you cast a pall,<br />

show off your wounds and scars to one and all.<br />

I believed you back when I was young and green.<br />

The curtain rises on this present scene.<br />

Your back‘s against the crumbling castle wall.<br />

The guttersnipe in you knows how to brawl<br />

when cornered—vents an ample spleen.<br />

Your mask of tragedy begins to slip,<br />

reveals the startled countenance behind.<br />

The self-deluding plot starts to unwind.<br />

Struggling to adjust your tilted crown,<br />

clutching the train of your artfully tattered gown,<br />

you sweep offstage. Be careful now. Don‘t trip.<br />

48


SAPPHO TO THE MAIDENS<br />

What did Sappho teach her girls,<br />

except how to love —Ovid<br />

At first were only Chaos, Earth and Love,<br />

Love, the source of all that came to be,<br />

most beloved of the gods,<br />

longed for, shining, with wings of gold—<br />

I, whom the Muses call sister,<br />

who have drunk deep draughts of Hippocrene‘s<br />

immortal waters,<br />

caressed Pegasus‘s silken mane,<br />

danced with the Graces<br />

among the roses of Pieria,<br />

will teach you hymns in Love‘s praise.<br />

So garland your soft curls<br />

with sweet-scented violets that<br />

charm the Graces to lift their rosy feet,<br />

join us in joyful epithalamia—<br />

sweet marriage songs<br />

pleasing to Aphrodite—<br />

for Song is Love‘s accomplice,<br />

is it not<br />

Yet for all their giddying fragrance,<br />

Pieria‘s roses also have their thorns<br />

whose piercings call up songs<br />

of lamentation. You‘ll also learn<br />

Song‘s paradox,<br />

Love‘s conundrum:<br />

their pain flows from the same<br />

fount as their power.<br />

49


Daphne Horton<br />

NO WINGS AND FINS AT ALL<br />

Lovely Lady Lockheart is so so pretty in pink<br />

But when you look real closely, she‘s not what you may think<br />

Her eyes you cannot capture although they pierce your skin<br />

Her teeth they hold no laughter although they surely grin<br />

She‘s like a fallen solider or like a broken wing<br />

Your arms you hold out for her, you long to hear her sing<br />

She said ―if you are dying she needs a man alive‖<br />

She claimed ―my car is loaded so take me for a ride‖<br />

And out it poured away she soared upon a wooden stick<br />

She cast her spell and down they fell like being slapped with bricks<br />

She gathered all the Roasters because to waste is sin<br />

And then she humbly rationed her wares again and again<br />

<strong>Long</strong> lean legs, soft pink skin, watermelons, honey buns, rin tin tins<br />

No Wings and fins and all, no wings and fins at all<br />

Her eyes they drew me closer, her stench made me confused<br />

So slowly I reached out to her to taste of her that dew<br />

She laughed so hard and loud at me her deck began to deal<br />

She took away my lipstick, she smoked my sex appeal<br />

And then she looked me in the eye, my neck my ankle too<br />

She said ―no one will want you when I am through with you‖<br />

I never meant to harm her, I fixed her broken wings<br />

She shook her perfect pinky and cautioned me one thing<br />

No pigs no snails no puppy dog tails<br />

No feet no rhyme no money no time<br />

No wings and fins at all, no wings and fins at all<br />

I took my hair and made a pack together we must stay<br />

I placed a backpack on my back that‘s how I spent my day<br />

My nights were long and full of sound<br />

The morn I could not hear<br />

Then off I go and to and fro to where I was not bound<br />

I think I saw the Lady, it was like de ja vu<br />

―You must be friends with Linda‖, ―That‘s Ms. Lockheart to you.‖<br />

Her skin her wings her puppies things her sex and your appeal<br />

No feet no rhyme no money no time<br />

I think you know the deal<br />

I always kept my head below my eyes they watch her trail<br />

But then he crept up from behind and smacked me on the tail<br />

Said I‘ve been looking for you so please tell me your name<br />

I‘m Lovely Lady Lockheart the master of the game<br />

If you were such a lady you‘d speak when spoken too<br />

My collar‘s white my blood is blue don‘t think there‘s nothing new<br />

50


He shook his perfect pointer and cautioned her one thing<br />

You‘re like a broken record don‘t want to hear you sing<br />

My nickels my dime my city my wine<br />

I think I‘ll do just fine, I think I‘ll do just fine<br />

I‘m glad to her I humbled to her I owe one thing<br />

My heart it often grumbled yet walked a perfect ring<br />

To all those that you gathered of all those that you boast<br />

I bet they wish they‘d lathered I know you want me most<br />

You may have took my stockings or borrowed diamond rings<br />

But you will never ever know what true fulfillment brings.<br />

51


Tony Iantosca<br />

PRAISE BE<br />

the night becomes a hologram through which nothing appears coherent not even the idea<br />

at 9:26 p.m. fall empties its pockets and a pile of postcards from beaches carrying<br />

summer air falls in place of leaves. left to shuffle through them and recognize no one,<br />

these examples from another time collide like shopping carts slamming into billboards<br />

with wanting to transfer feeling from its inner locus to the popping sound and smoke<br />

faint in the sky after fireworks in the cold. if there were time before the show for<br />

another question to be resolved by just sitting before the drafty light coming in the city<br />

window. take a moment and regard the mind‘s dappled shadows, the blank spaces<br />

that make thinking bear the weight of some microscopic ribbon from one memory‘s<br />

embedded desire to the next. would anyone believe that could be praise. another kind<br />

of worship of where the person began as the heater comes on. a breath like that cannot<br />

be feigned as in some in-flight movie knowing that in the kitchen a stove-flame‘s<br />

purchase on air is not through. below the window it‘s a cannot canyon filling with<br />

songs known for their anti-aging properties. the end of my eyelash touches<br />

the back of my arm.<br />

52


AND LATER I SPEAK<br />

in a minute I close the book and pigeons circle<br />

their shack on the roof across the street<br />

as if some aftermath of something without a peak or a low point<br />

were falling, the idea of which is sunlight the idea of which<br />

is washed away now by this beat down below the stone and setting sun<br />

in a minute there is memory, in a minute the sound of memory<br />

and then after that some dent in the air where something<br />

was and now isn‘t gone there is only music which is the sound<br />

of memory an old drunk relative repeating stories from when landscapes were<br />

static and grass began somewhere just beyond this kitchen table at 3 a.m.<br />

there is only a comma after every later to indicate that after a hole<br />

has been placed in the narrative you must follow the source of light<br />

coming through that hole trembling like paper from smudged wind<br />

called formless renting a smell of dead chickens or fresh bread<br />

from the poultry market next door there is only some other language built<br />

from other scaffolding looming in dark spaces between words made into referent,<br />

that or that you see it too filling with itself and then with itself smothered<br />

you see it brush itself off but what is it a minute later and I speak<br />

into the phone and try to read the book at the same time I touch my hand to tile<br />

on the wall in the bathroom with the phone to my ear and misplace words<br />

it can‘t be other than this because the ruins of what was stretch between<br />

the sidewalk and push their way back out green you see it too filling with itself,<br />

that‘s what it is it can‘t be and isn‘t another thing I wanted<br />

to include here is a smothered story but one where<br />

the edges which we call the beginning and end are still apparent<br />

like mud at either side of a pond<br />

53


GLOWING OPENING<br />

a how-to guide for floating the equation that builds this vision of tenuous plains<br />

colored by clusters making sense sing songs each to herself in an effort to fracture<br />

the sayings into a glowing opening left by stains on windows now gone I feel a<br />

please dissolve this jig-saw commercial coming on know the paper-weighted<br />

will falls through if any sun will wait long enough over the highway‘s leading<br />

lights chewing the concrete I remember now how to render the number a storefront<br />

writes backwards and in neon quivering in the stalled train of an ink stain I‘m<br />

remembering where to put the keys sinking onto a table‘s familiar silence that undulates<br />

inwards to this headache to verify the where and why of this once-dull wondering,<br />

venture inside the fumbled paper yellowing where language bug-zaps every memory of<br />

itself<br />

54


ARRANGEMENTS<br />

you can start anywhere<br />

this body feels snow-melt<br />

collaborate with caffeine jitters<br />

at sunrise the dentist urges restraint<br />

and of course people are being<br />

damaged and the syntax used to present this<br />

utilizes declarative arrangements of blame:<br />

he blew himself and ten others up<br />

you can start anywhere and the same<br />

invisible characters follow they are<br />

pumping insulation between skeletal<br />

outlines of walls across the street<br />

and the engines used to describe a building<br />

are growing hoarse because this city<br />

with its knobs levers and switches crawls<br />

out anew from behind the eye<br />

to lift its voice and shine its flashlight<br />

on a minute growing thin and meek<br />

asking our passages for more space<br />

within which to hear birds<br />

discussing radio waves<br />

55


SUNFLOWER SEEDS<br />

through the revolving door into a drugstore‘s heated music<br />

for shampoo and juice and black beans I walk under slanted<br />

mirrors in the aisles a woman with a man‘s voice sways<br />

an aged purse and waits for her name to be called so she can<br />

run to pay and pocket her pill bottles into the cold under<br />

the train that passes spraying water down from steel and<br />

rainforest wood when the drops touch the back of my<br />

hands I want to say to a stranger walking the other direction<br />

that this project of pulling daytime together by speaking<br />

splits itself on smells of toothpaste and whiskey and when<br />

we‘ll be anywhere depends on how she throws down<br />

sunflower seeds and a soda can to cold pavement bent<br />

under sirens inviting pigeons to gather and imitate how<br />

day exits through narrow passages cut on windowpanes<br />

deflecting sunlight‘s last glances but really I‘ve said nothing<br />

56


FIELD RECORDINGS<br />

No pronunciation of native names could stop bulldozers. There was no sense that anyone was doing<br />

any wrong, just that changing was wearing her make up and eating less and less. Now as guitars from<br />

Agadez chime in on daytime sunshine over tenement trees, I‘m looking through the crosshatched<br />

grid of fire escape and box fan, red and white and colorless autumn light. A certain balance in<br />

electric riffs delivered from the North African desert flying like sand in kinetic onslaught. Someone<br />

threw me into the bushes outside the school because because. A field turning from green to red dirt,<br />

then onwards to steel skeletons and conveyor belt insomnia. Then onwards, a reason to lash out, a<br />

rash rising on memories. At night after homework I watched tornadoes on TV, convinced myself<br />

that they would come unglued from that glass and spiral away with the house. Loose-leaf paper.<br />

Write what you know. What you don‘t know too. A staircase zigzagging down from a highway.<br />

Cornfields wove snakes into their folds and we ran through sometimes until there were none. Until<br />

an aisle: hand soap, cheerios, cold milk perspiring in fluorescence, sponges, bleach, dog food, chips,<br />

soda. The air tasted the same, or did it. Because he knew where to get them and I didn‘t, he put<br />

cigarettes in the jacket that was hanging in my locker. On the old stone bridge over the swamp I<br />

coughed and woke up the geese. The dog named Kevin snapped one of their necks with his jaws.<br />

Virginia summer walked us and the grass towards dumpsters and what there was or wasn‘t to be<br />

found, though we could always find it at home. If you had a car, you had a car. You‘ve probably<br />

wrecked a car. It was enough to drive home and lie to the mechanics later. He had blood on his<br />

dress shirt, so I lied to the cop and said we were going to the hospital, please let us go. The aisles<br />

rattled and the lights went out, I got a tornado for my birthday. Big wanting was an elixir for not<br />

knowing a thing about wanting, she took me to the barn, I slept in her bed. Shopping cart theft,<br />

always a shopping cart in every clearing in the woods. Chains of airplanes in Brooklyn look like<br />

lightning bugs in daytime clouds, which move in opposite directions, clouds, planes, bugs. The<br />

Tuareg people staged an uprising in the year 2008, according to the notes on the CD case. This next<br />

song is called Tenere Etran. The men cover their faces and ride horses and sing about independence<br />

while the women dance and sing along from the crowd so loudly that the microphones pick them<br />

up, them whose voices crash louder than the cymbals. In 2004 Aaron went to prison for three years,<br />

the FBI had gotten involved. The night before he left, we smoked a joint on a dock over James<br />

River rapids. In January I returned to the dock, wrote a poem and threw it in the water at 2 a.m. As<br />

the parking lots began to crack, all my friends moved into old buildings by the university. I went<br />

where there were no billboards. Aisles of radio hits, every look on every face an apology, a word<br />

shattering into many or a word never uttered. A drop of coffee on my shirt, a yawn. Shopping or<br />

shoplifting, two words. A house that was never finished on a hill by the river, by the highway<br />

running through the sleep-breaths in the one room in the one house in the whole neighborhood<br />

where someone lived. Prices of homes went down slowly. Our feet smelled like gasoline. At the top<br />

of the hill next to the Burger King, you could see the Federal Reserve building ten miles away. Its<br />

basement dives deep into the earth‘s rocks, maybe there are billions in there, maybe I can have five<br />

dollars to buy enough gas to get back to the farm. The first half of the album is acoustic, the guitars<br />

are not in standard tuning, a tuning I don‘t recognize, there is clapping, no drums. Between tracks, a<br />

camel groans and someone shouts. Field recordings. Despite sub-prime everything, it is happening<br />

57


again. Someone thinking straight about designing the angles of windows to be, to be looking out<br />

onto Route 250, to be wearing a jacket in a heat wave, the last piece of land sold. Hand it over, admit<br />

that you can‘t catch a storm cloud with a fishing net, everything more imminent than before. Jump<br />

from hay bale to hay bale. Hum a tune. Tip a can. Secret cigarettes. Wait for John‘s name to show up<br />

in the newspaper, for developers to ask for an apology. Come home. Steal beer from the fridge and<br />

listen for the absence.<br />

58


Giuseppe Infante<br />

DINNER FOR TWO<br />

Once she stepped out of Mariano‘s corner bodega, the aroma raging from her apartment wafted<br />

onto the busy streets of 4 th Avenue. Vehicles of different color and design passed by the Sunday<br />

afternoon streets, containing some folks eager to return to their homes before the football game‘s<br />

coin toss, and some going out to George‘s World Famous for a late lunch after the twelve o‘clock<br />

services. After mass she used to stop at the bakery for her favorite desserts, seven layer cookies or<br />

―wainbow cookies‖ as she had called them as a child.<br />

She could tell it was her sauce from the strong garlic and basil fusion tickling her olfactory<br />

receptors. Angelica entered her building and the smell of the sauce became stronger as she climbed<br />

the dilapidated, off-brown steps with the gold-plated edges that tried to give the shabby staircase a<br />

furnished look. Her railroad apartment was on the third floor above Mariano‘s. When arriving at the<br />

top of the stairs, she stood for a moment, gazing at the festive holiday wreath covered in candy<br />

canes, red bows and miniature silver gift boxes on her apartment door. She then felt the life in her<br />

chest increase a few heavy beats.<br />

Thump! Thump! Thump! Thump!<br />

This was nothing unordinary for the overweight woman of 72 years, 47 of which she<br />

smoked Camel unfiltered. The thumps occurred every time she climbed a staircase—in her building,<br />

at the R train stop on 36 th Street, Sundays at St. Mary‘s. Her once curvaceous body was now<br />

occupied by a round potbelly acquired from uncountable bottles of Budweiser she had guzzled over<br />

the past six years while sulking in her widow‘s depression.<br />

As she was catching her breath before entering the apartment, her dark eyes met her darker<br />

eyes in the foyer mirror opposing the wreath of primarily green and red. She noticed her salt and<br />

pepper perm was thinning after each visit to the beauty parlor. Her gut was growing, this she was<br />

sure of as she needed new shirts every few months lately—though really it was because her garments<br />

would gather food and beer stains.<br />

She removed the two forty-ounce Budweiser bottles from the black plastic bag; she put one<br />

in the freezer and one in the fridge. Angelica turned towards the vintage O‘Keefe & Merritt stove<br />

supporting the sauce pot that rested over the medium orange, though blue at the root gas flame. She<br />

used the wooden spoon in her apron to turn the tomato sauce. With every turn she grazed the walls<br />

of the stainless steel pot.<br />

Tink! Tink! Tink! Tink!<br />

Meatballs of veal/pork/beef mix and fennel-less sweet sausage floated in the tomato sauce.<br />

She had a special recipe she had learned from her grandmother as a child: Chop and mince basil and<br />

garlic, then let them simmer in olive oil for twenty minutes before using the mixture in the sauce.<br />

Giraud always claimed never to have tasted a tomato sauce quite like Angelica‘s.<br />

She removed the beer from the freezer and poured some into a goblet she loved. The goblet<br />

was the glass Giraud had used to drink his beer from. ―Never drink from the bottle,‖ he would<br />

always tell her.<br />

From the cupboard she grabbed a pot slightly smaller than the one she used for the sauce.<br />

Angelica filled it with water, set it on the stove and turned the flame on high. Linguine was her<br />

choice of pasta for today. She began to set the table, placing out two napkins, two forks, two knives,<br />

two wine glasses with ice water, the bread basket and the butter case. She cooked for two every<br />

night. She ate for two every night. She missed him.<br />

59


Gülay Işık<br />

ANIMAL STORY<br />

When I got home she was masturbating. I heard her moaning from the hallway. I could see her feet<br />

because she left the door ajar. I wanted to push the door open so I could see her completely, then I<br />

thought it was a better idea to peek through the door. The TV was on but I wasn‘t sure if she was<br />

masturbating to a porn movie. Then I heard Audrey Hepburn‘s voice. She had been watching<br />

Breakfast at Tiffany‟s. Whenever she felt moody, she watched that stupid movie. Her right foot kicked<br />

a book in the bed and the book fell on the floor. She liked sleeping with books. She didn‘t<br />

necessarily read them. She just liked sleeping with a bunch of books. She moaned deeper as Audrey<br />

Hepburn sang Moon River at her fancy NYC apartment‘s window. I liked watching her touch herself.<br />

She took deep breaths. She knew I was behind the door. I walked towards the kitchen avoiding her.<br />

She had been watching Breakfast at Tiffany‟s and I knew trouble was coming. I hoped the orgasm<br />

would help her calm down.<br />

Why didn‘t she just watch a porn movie We had a porn DVD collection. That‘s how we<br />

met, actually. We had attended this underground porn club a few years ago. I had heard about it<br />

from a friend. We gathered in a small basement room on Friday nights at ten in Park Slope. The<br />

crowd was made of losers who had nothing else to do on a Friday night. People coming in changed<br />

every week except for regular members. They were mostly old and married people with children.<br />

There weren‘t many women because they would feel uncomfortable in a dark basement with about<br />

thirty men. What do you expect, eh The director of the Basement Project was a fat guy with lots of<br />

hair on his face, arms, and even fingers. His name was Paul. He had strict rules. He even framed the<br />

rules in big print and hung it on the wall. Rule number one: No masturbation allowed in the<br />

basement. He occasionally turned the lights on to check on the audience to see if anyone was doing<br />

something. He kicked a few men out who had been caught masturbating. Paul was short but very<br />

strong. No one wanted to deal with him. Rule number two: Males are not allowed to approach the<br />

female members. Rule number three: Members who violate the first two rules would be banned<br />

from the club for good. Paul believed in porn movies like one believed in Buddhism, you know.<br />

He liked me. I had been to his tiny apartment upstairs a few times and he had shown me his<br />

collection of Playboy magazines. He picked an issue from his bookcase and handed it to me as if he<br />

were honoring me with a royal crown. He told me to be careful as I turned the pages of the<br />

February edition of nineteen eighty six. We looked at a half naked woman eating a cheese burger<br />

leaning on a diner counter. Paul looked at the fake blond like a biologist looking at a rare butterfly.<br />

He dragged his middle finger on her legs. I wasn‘t allowed to touch the page.<br />

―This is art, ya know‖<br />

I looked at the fake blonde‘s face. I wondered if her mother could recognize her in so much<br />

make up. She only had a pair of blue jeans on and her back turned to the camera so we could only<br />

see her butt and her right breast touching the arm that was holding the cheeseburger. Her pinkish<br />

lips were half open. She had ketchup on her chin. I thought of her without makeup and breast<br />

implants. I thought of her as a child. I pictured her in a light blue cotton dress running in the streets<br />

of some suburban town.<br />

―She is not that hot‖ I said sadly.<br />

―I‘m talking about the photography,‖ he said seemingly frustrated at my shallowness. And I<br />

felt so damn shallow.<br />

Turning the pages we looked at couple of more pictures of women bending over on<br />

couches, motorbikes, pool tables, etc. They were all different. They were all the same.<br />

Then he told me about his rock band in college and played some Iron Maiden on his guitar.<br />

60


―You got a woman‖ he said looking at the strings.<br />

―I have many women,‖ I had said laughing and downed my beer.<br />

I had looked at his face behind the bottom of the beer bottle that I was holding next to my<br />

mouth. He wasn‘t laughing.<br />

―Many women equals to no women. You‘ll end up lonely‖ he said seriously. He looked like<br />

he pitied me. It was an awkward moment. He hadn‘t seemed like the type that would care. I had<br />

never seen him with any women. Then he pulled out his wallet and shown me the pictures of his<br />

fourteen years old girl and twelve years old son. He had been married for sixteen years. We didn't<br />

talk much that night. I left his apartment after eight beers because he kindly told me his wife and<br />

children would be back from their visit from the auntie‘s any time. He picked up the beer cans and<br />

put them in a trash bag. Then he called for a cab for me and punched me in the shoulder for<br />

goodbye. We were friends.<br />

As I was listening to her feet touch the ground gently, I thought of the day we met. I had<br />

been attending to the Basement Project meetings about a month or two perhaps when I saw her<br />

sitting in the front row. She didn‘t talk to anyone and looked at the curtain as if someone in the<br />

movie was getting hurt which was true, actually. Since Paul had strict rules about approaching the<br />

female members I waited until the film was over to talk to her. She told me she was a writer and<br />

doing her master‘s thesis on pornography. I told her I was a writer too. I had been writing screen<br />

plays and working on a collection of short stories. ―Interesting,‖ she said with an uninterested voice.<br />

We went to an Indian restaurant in the city on our first date. The place had a heavy curry<br />

smell, of course. I wasn‘t a fan of spicy food but she had told me she liked Indian cuisine, so I took<br />

her there. We talked about movies and books. She said Charles Bukowski‘s arrogance annoyed her<br />

that was why she liked him. She worshiped Kafka. She had been working on a children‘s book. We<br />

drank wine. She kept touching her hair which might mean she was bored or she liked me. I regretted<br />

not reading the article in one of Paul‘s magazines about how to know that chicks like you by reading<br />

their body language. Her blushed cheeks told me that she liked me then I remembered it was so hot<br />

inside the restaurant and we were eating spicy food. She took off her scarf. Her neck was beautiful,<br />

probably her most beautiful feature. She had olive complexion and dark blonde locks falling on her<br />

shoulders. Her neck looked like unearthed treasure. It was hard to tell if she liked me. I was<br />

spending my last fifty dollars on that dinner and I had spent all day cleaning my apartment. She<br />

better fucking like me, I thought when she reached for naan and dipped it in the chicken masala.<br />

Her funny accent sounded even funnier when she got drunk. It was hard to understand what<br />

she was saying. She occasionally started a sentence in her native language and switched to English<br />

by the end of the sentence.<br />

―You will rescue me from my loneliness, right She said gulping the wine in her glass. She<br />

didn‘t look at my face. She was staring at somewhere between the tandoori chicken and salad plates.<br />

I hesitated for a moment. Was she talking to me or the tandoori chicken There was a pause.<br />

―I think you should have more food.‖<br />

She frowned and poured some more wine in her glass.<br />

―I'll be worthy right Only when you realize the gem I am‖ she said stabbing a piece of<br />

chicken. Her hand holding the fork was jittery.<br />

―We are just having dinner, for God‘s sake!‖ Now, I was looking at the plates too. For a<br />

moment, I thought of excusing myself to go to the bathroom, then asking for the check, and calling<br />

for two cabs to go in different directions. That would be it. I don‘t need this. I can go home and jerk<br />

off. What the fuck is wrong with women You take one out for dinner and the wedding bells start<br />

ringing in their heads. If only some men had pussies, the world would have been a nicer place, I<br />

thought. The restaurant was very hot. We had been sitting there for hours. My butt was hurting. The<br />

61


spicy food was messing with my stomach. I knew it was my only chance to leave her at that<br />

moment. I made a gesture at the waiter and asked for one more bottle of wine instead.<br />

―I don‘t date writers‖ she said looking at an oil stain on the table cloth after another long<br />

pause.<br />

―Neither do I,‖ I said looking at the waiter who was approaching our table with a bottle of<br />

wine. She looked at me for the first time after a while and burst into laughter then smiled at the<br />

chicken tikka as if she knew something that the chicken didn‘t know.<br />

―Good.‖<br />

62


Belynda Jones<br />

RED THRONES<br />

Amidst it all the results are<br />

within the noise and grave gashes. . .<br />

Reasons will perish<br />

It‘s time for canes and stones. . . !<br />

Features sound out in chains and veils,<br />

young seas rip.<br />

Bared no more can the same be<br />

for slanted and ―proper‖ tones.<br />

63


Constance Woo<br />

PHOTOGRAPHS OF MIXED-MEDIA IMAGES<br />

Artist’s Statement, April <strong>2011</strong><br />

A committed detritivore, I use low-tech processes and quotidian materials meant for the trash bin:<br />

pencil shavings, tea leaves, newspapers, comics, burlap scraps, pages from dilapidated children‘s<br />

books, pictures from magazines.<br />

Half of the works included in this issue date from the last seven months; the other half from the last<br />

few years. For all of the works, I used a free-hand, impromptu approach, bypassing sketches, drafts<br />

or measurements, as opposed to the methods I‘ve used in past years to produce artist‘s books, which<br />

require careful calculations and crafting. Most of the pieces were executed as classroom exercises,<br />

often taking a desultory path before completion. The image on the front cover, a spur-of-themoment<br />

test of an air-brush and whatever images were at hand, was a piece of detritus meant to be<br />

thrown away, which I recently found under a pile of scraps while foraging for paper. Some pieces<br />

happened by accident, such as Item #3. Carried away by a Japanese punch, I recalled the line from<br />

Keats, ―with beaded bubbles winking at the brim,‖ several weeks after finishing it. The ink and<br />

manuscript piece (Item #5) materialized from an exercise on drawing lines as shapes and doodling<br />

with a calligraphy pen. Items #6 and #7 were made from left-over scraps of Japanese papers and<br />

inspired by the work of Rakuko Naito, who creates texture from folded paper.<br />

These images appear on the following eight, unnumbered pages.<br />

1. Landscape. Vintage floral stamens woven on burlap. Detail of original. 12 in. x 31 in. The<br />

floral landscape is oriented horizontally; rotate the page 90 degrees to view. 2009<br />

2. Paper Detritus. Discarded library catalog cards. 2-3/4 in. x 5 in. Postcard. 3-1/2 in. x 5-1/2 in.<br />

Collage, pastels. 2009<br />

3. Untitled. Tea bags, newspaper. Detail of original. 10-3/4 in. x 16-3/4 in. 2009<br />

4. Untitled. Pencil shavings, rubber stamping on handmade paper. 8 in. x 12 in. 2010<br />

5. Exercise on Line. Ink & collage on drawing paper. Detail of original. 12 in. x 18 in. 2010<br />

6. Untitled. Tea paper on Japanese paper. Close-up of original. 8-3/4 in. x 13 in. 2010<br />

7. Untitled. Ink, watercolor, various Japanese papers on handmade paper. 8-3/4 in. x 12 in. 2010<br />

8. Quilt. Mixed media on muslin. Detail of original. 13-1/2 in. x 18 in. <strong>2011</strong><br />

64


Jamey Jones<br />

AVENUE VISION 1<br />

At precisely 11:06 AM, a well-dressed man walks just past the no parking sign, turns to look back<br />

and up at the brownstone building, shields his eyes from the sunlight with one hand, puts a small<br />

camera to his eye with the other one, and snaps a picture. In my notebook I write, ―A well-dressed<br />

man catches a river in his hand as if it were a baseball hurled from the other side of the street by a<br />

young skateboarder behind the dumpster.‖ The man‘s camera in no way resembles a river, but I like<br />

the idea of him, or anyone, catching a river in his hand. I‘d just read about Cayne‘s dad pouring her<br />

ashes into the Mississippi. How he sobbed, standing by himself. The sun shined. A breeze blew. I<br />

wanted to make a poem. And I had also been thinking of my baseball-fanatic-teacher- friend,<br />

Durant. There‘s a cool little skater I see a lot who lives in the apartment building next door, but I‘ve<br />

never seen him throw a baseball. Awkwardly parked by the curb, however, not far from where the<br />

man is standing, camera in hand, there is a rusty, tortured looking, freighter-like, blue dumpster with<br />

white capitol letters on its side that say, ―GUMA.‖ This dumpster is full of white and black framed<br />

windowpanes, some broken, others intact, dropped there by Mexican laborers throughout the<br />

morning as the sunlight began to filter over the rooftops and onto the avenue, as I awakened, made<br />

coffee and grabbed my notebook and pen.<br />

65


AVENUE VISION 2<br />

On the roof across the street, beyond the prayer flags, in the glare of a bright light, a man in a suit<br />

passionately takes hold of a woman in a long flowing dress while another man crouches and points a<br />

camera at them from just beyond the light. Obviously having trouble getting the scene right, the<br />

actors repeat their embrace over and over again, pausing between takes to laugh, converse, smoke,<br />

stretch, and vainly attempt to keep the wind from destroying their manicured hairdos. The prayer<br />

flags are flapping toward Manhattan, and the people walking on the avenue below have no idea of<br />

the spectacle unfolding up above. Down there it‘s business as usual. Avoid eye contact. Keep to<br />

yourself. An old man walks his dog. A young woman pushes a stroller. Cars line up in the street,<br />

waiting for the light to change. Suddenly some guy shouts, ―Jesus Christ wrote the bible you fucking<br />

asshole!‖ The light from the film set, gently reflecting off of the numerous rows of windows across<br />

the street, moves as the couple continues embracing. Above all of this, tiny clouds the size of<br />

rowboats hum westward, nearly glowing, as a jet in the distance lifts itself closer to the edge of<br />

visibility, a light slowly fading, steadily dimming, inching, away. Fragmented constellations surface as<br />

the night‘s darkness deepens into an opaque expanse while the couple, tiny ant-like dancers, finally<br />

embraces in just the right way, before the bright lights are cut, and the trio film crew exits the roof,<br />

leaving the wind and prayer flags quietly to themselves.<br />

66


LIKE THIS<br />

—for Steve Bailey<br />

it‘s like this<br />

the life of a stone has its own advantages<br />

ants are unaffected<br />

sun pounds down with indescribable force<br />

wind shifts everything around<br />

sand pollen sticks leaves<br />

until the sky drops<br />

and the rain comes<br />

and the house floats away<br />

as if space let loose its livestock<br />

as if hammers were singing<br />

to become rivers<br />

leading into oceans<br />

turning into space<br />

humming<br />

for no<br />

particular reason<br />

similarly<br />

the hawk as seen<br />

from the kitchen window<br />

tries to correct its botched attempt<br />

at snatching the squirrel from the yard<br />

but in the end that doesn‘t work<br />

it underestimates the squirrel‘s<br />

obliviousness<br />

and its own inability to maneuver<br />

amongst the limbs of crape myrtle<br />

however, its talons match<br />

the intricate yellow fractals<br />

of the turtle‘s head and shell<br />

as it steps and stops and blinks<br />

in the grass<br />

in time<br />

charting its course<br />

tuned into the edges of shade<br />

and song, buzzing numbers<br />

of continental drifts<br />

or the abandoned eggs in the mailbox<br />

dear postal person<br />

they say there‘s no rhyme<br />

or reason to things<br />

67


ut you sometimes have to wonder<br />

which connects to our decision<br />

to remove the nest and its two<br />

unhatched eggs from the box<br />

for whatever reason<br />

the mother never returned<br />

you may go back to putting<br />

the mail in there now<br />

thanks for your cooperation<br />

we‘ve placed the eggs<br />

on the window sill<br />

they are beautifully speckled<br />

and seem to have a plan<br />

feel free to have a look<br />

if you‘re so inclined<br />

68


Kate<br />

FOUR POEMS<br />

These poems appear together on page 70.<br />

• where everything wakes and dies<br />

• incapable god<br />

• afraid to be woman<br />

• preferences of a wallflower<br />

69


where everything wakes and dies<br />

sun opens mouth on split legs,<br />

slowly illuminating paintings of blood<br />

across inner thighs. this is where<br />

everything wakes and dies.<br />

my head is hung back<br />

over the edge of the tub,<br />

heavy with thoughts of how beautiful<br />

her palms were<br />

against the ugliness of mine.<br />

my hands, my ugly ugly hands,<br />

now caught red in murder<br />

of my own womb.<br />

molding over my egg, something grows<br />

more relentlessly than cancer.<br />

i am not big enough to hold it in,<br />

but it stays. it clings to membranes,<br />

like a babe's skull in mother's hip bone.<br />

my birth canal faces the mouth<br />

of a broken faucet which leaks a dirty color<br />

gathering in a small flood to where<br />

my blood travels, ever so precariously,<br />

as this monster in my body erupts,<br />

pushing life out.<br />

silently, i watch the reflection of a fused ceiling fixture<br />

where my present unfolds in slow motion;<br />

remains of me lingering towards the open wound<br />

of an inanimate object, ready to absolve their existence<br />

because they cannot stand the decay<br />

that is me.<br />

incapable god<br />

here lies the silhouette of a stranger<br />

crawled up on a park bench across from me.<br />

his breath is searching within,<br />

deep within that shriveled body<br />

to fill something he cannot reach.<br />

i am god,<br />

unable to touch his forehead to tell him<br />

it's going to be okay.<br />

it is not going to be okay.<br />

the sky is a black hole.<br />

the ground is a war zone.<br />

there isn't a place to escape.<br />

frigid. he, i, and this night<br />

are frigid.<br />

he will wake before the sun rises<br />

and prepare to waste another day<br />

pretending to be whole.<br />

and i will return another night<br />

as an incapable god.<br />

afraid to be woman<br />

at the age of five she stands<br />

like a man<br />

bare chested and strong<br />

in the river flowing<br />

between undeveloped breasts<br />

over the body of mother<br />

sand runs through those tiny fingers<br />

curved toward god- mercy-hungry for life<br />

as pupils look into void<br />

of what was once mother's eyes<br />

it runs like blood<br />

from a sparrow's skull<br />

like man<br />

her chest must grow<br />

not with breasts to feed<br />

or above womb for home<br />

but with muscles<br />

like stone<br />

so that she will cease to be<br />

mother's daughter<br />

she will shave head<br />

burn dress<br />

and never return to<br />

woman's demise<br />

preferences of a wallflower<br />

i prefer to be depressed.<br />

and alone.<br />

to live with the blinds turned down on my face.<br />

i like the conversations of the radiator<br />

with the lights dim.<br />

the crackling of a news reporter's loneliness<br />

on the radio.<br />

the gloom that rain brings.<br />

the gray of heavy clouds.<br />

the fragility of my wrists.<br />

the splitting soles of my sneakers.<br />

the frizz limping on my head.<br />

i like to think i'm almost dead.<br />

and float above everyone,<br />

watching a bud open,<br />

the breath before a first kiss,<br />

the tears of a proud mother,<br />

the holiness of an intact home.<br />

all the things i don't have.<br />

i like to take it in<br />

and die willfully.<br />

70


Anna Lindwasser<br />

BIRTHDAY<br />

sometimes i say it's my birthday.<br />

sometimes once a month.<br />

twice a month.<br />

twice a week.<br />

fourteen times a day last time and it wasn't even true.<br />

i say it to different people so<br />

it's not like they catch on or anything.<br />

it's not a big deal.<br />

i just want it to be my birthday,<br />

because then maybe someone would pay attention to me and i…well nobody really does because…it<br />

doesn't really matter if i'm there so…it's not like anybody notices.<br />

i calculated it. i have a lot of time to do those things.<br />

i'll be 436 years old the next time i tell you it's my birthday.<br />

i usually don't bother the same person with my birthday again and again but.<br />

i want to see if you can catch me.<br />

if you'll ask me, ―lily wasn't it your birthday like a week ago don't you remember i brought you that<br />

cupcake‖<br />

you didn't really bring me a cupcake.<br />

you had about five of them mashed up in your bag from your birthday, so you could've. easily.<br />

you don't even like cupcakes.<br />

but you did say happy birthday. you did ask how it felt to be fifteen. this year i'm really going to be<br />

sixteen but…it's the thought that counts. i'm a little person, so I can see why you though that i was<br />

younger than you.<br />

still, if you ever paid any attention to me you'd know i couldn't possibly be any of the ages that you<br />

think i am. i feel closer to 436 than fifteen.<br />

so.<br />

are you going to remember<br />

are you going to realize i've done nothing but lie to you for every minute that i've known you, that<br />

71


my name isn't even lily like i say i just really like that name. it's my sister's. she isn't using it anymore<br />

and my name is stupid. and you know what it is. i told you it was lily later on. if you can remember<br />

me before i started lying then you'll know.<br />

i am not going to tell you.<br />

i am testing you.<br />

please study hard for this.<br />

-----------<br />

guess what<br />

your school grades are total crap, but you somehow managed to pass my test. you caught me.<br />

when i came up to your desk today and told you lies you didn't believe me. you said, ―lily, wasn't it<br />

just your birthday there are only so many you can have in a year, you know‖<br />

obviously it was really awkward. i'm sorry for flipping out like that. at least i didn't wet myself. i am<br />

going to do that in front of you one day if you let me be with you.<br />

i won't ask for more than fifteen minutes a day, and i will clean my own pee if i get nervous.<br />

i will also learn about capitalization and proper grammar. because apparently you are one of those<br />

mean people who will tell you when your their should be there or even they're. so i want to do<br />

things like you want me to.<br />

after all, you passed my test. i knew you were perfect and i want to be perfect too.<br />

-----------<br />

i did tell you a couple of truths you know.<br />

i still want to know if you can find them.<br />

and if you ever read this, i want to know which parts you think are lies.<br />

it's pretty easy if you think about it.<br />

i do wet myself. all the time. and writing the right way scares me so bad i hyperventilate.<br />

72


maybe you could learn to love my random phobias<br />

-----------<br />

you weren't here today.<br />

not at your desk.<br />

not at anybody else's desk.<br />

not even in another classroom.<br />

i don't understand. it's school. you have to come here. you don't have to come to my house when i ask<br />

and you don't answer, but who gave you a choice about here<br />

where are you! please don't make me actually pay attention to the lesson, or to the popular girls<br />

planning their weekend.<br />

please don't make me realize how alone i am. i don't know how to talk to anyone except you.<br />

-----------<br />

you've come back.<br />

i'm debating whether or not i would like to kill you.<br />

i don't know. if i actually had a reputation it would be as the sweet girl. the quiet girl. and they always<br />

say it's the quiet ones you have to watch out for. i really hate that. it isn't true.<br />

so i guess i shouldn't prove it then, right<br />

still. you cut school. you can't cut school. you have to get your grades up, go to college. they're only<br />

low right now because you're not trying, i know you can do better.<br />

who were you with when you did it anyway<br />

if it's a girlfriend then i think that i will scream.<br />

-----------<br />

i have had your screen name memorized for months.<br />

kidneyface.<br />

73


i don't know where that could possibly have come from but,<br />

i like your brain.<br />

kidneyface.<br />

if anybody thinks of anything that beats that, i will forget about you entirely.<br />

i cannot believe i am lucky enough to know somebody with the screen name kidneyface.<br />

maybe one day i'll talk to kidneyface with the screen name that you never asked for.<br />

and i won't tell you that it's me.<br />

-----------<br />

last night i printed all your facebook pictures.<br />

the one with you kissing your sister on her cute little nose.<br />

the one where you're soaring down the ramp at the skatepark near the highway. the one taken soon<br />

after where you're brandishing a cast on your arm, smiling.<br />

the one with your sister in that baby-tee that says 'i love my boyfriend.' you know the one that only<br />

sluts ever actually wear not to say bad things about your sister but.<br />

good girls don't need to prove they're good.<br />

i only printed that one because of your hand in the background.<br />

and yes, i know she isn't really your sister.<br />

your sister is in college. and she's much uglier than this perfect-looking girl.<br />

but i want to be deluded.<br />

-----------<br />

fuck you for not answering my instant messages.<br />

i have all the time in the world for this shit, but that doesn't mean that i like it.<br />

i will only put up with your callousness for five more minutes<br />

then i am going to the store.<br />

74


even if you message me five minutes and one second later, it will be too late. i will be gone. i will be<br />

eating poptarts. mint chocolate poptarts, and you cannot stop me.<br />

it hasn't been five minutes yet. are you talking to her<br />

-----------<br />

you stayed away again today.<br />

i sat at your desk while you were gone.<br />

and told the girl with the purple hair and septum ring that today was my birthday.<br />

she gave me an eraser.<br />

it was shaped like a skull, which i feel like i should think is creepy. you have a shirt with a skull on it<br />

that you wear sometimes. so it doesn't even matter that she cared about my birthday.<br />

you'd better be back in school tomorrow. you'd better have a damn good excuse.<br />

-----------<br />

i didn't mean to do what i did last night, and i'm sorry.<br />

i can see why you thought it was creepy.<br />

you had every right to be absent, i just didn't know. i thought you were with your girlfriend.<br />

she was absent yesterday, too. i was so focused on you, i didn't notice until i thought about it,<br />

but she was.<br />

turns out, it didn't matter. you didn't see each other, you were out for different reasons. she for a<br />

cold and you for your aunt cassandra's funeral.<br />

i'm sorry. i know you were close to her. i didn't mean to make things worse by scaring you.<br />

i know how you feel, i mean it.<br />

i know how it feels to lose someone you love.<br />

-----------<br />

i should probably explain that last thing.<br />

75


it was my sister, lily. she was older than me by two years. now, she's younger than me, and the gap<br />

between us is just going to get bigger as time goes on.<br />

especially if i keep on having all these birthdays.<br />

she was brilliant. perfect grades, scholarships coming out of her ears. when she sang it sounded like<br />

something other than a trapped owl. the noses she drew looked like noses, and her capitalization was<br />

flawless. she wasn't intimidated by first person pronouns.<br />

she was beautiful. everybody loved her.<br />

nobody even remembered what my name was.<br />

if they did, you would have said something when i said my name was lily, right<br />

-----------<br />

it's not that i was jealous, not really.<br />

okay, maybe a little, but lily actually paid attention to me. she braided my hair and corrected my<br />

grammar, helped me hide my soiled sheets.<br />

no one else did, but lily remembered my name. she called me by the whole thing every day.<br />

abigail lucinda laudi. murmured in my ear like i was someone.<br />

i wasn't expecting her to die.<br />

she wasn't sick. she didn't do anything reckless. we were shocked when we heard that the driver was<br />

drunk.<br />

turns out, he wasn't drunk. turns out, he was epileptic, and that was his very first seizure. nobody<br />

knew until the autopsy.<br />

both of them were dead before the car burst into flames. both of them died on impact. thank god,<br />

but<br />

i wish they'd both been drunk. maybe then she could have known what it was like to live before she<br />

stopped.<br />

76


i don't know what living is, but i think that for lily, it might have been something like disobeying<br />

mom and dad. not being perfect, for once.<br />

for me, it's being noticed. loved. i don't think either one of us is ever going to live again.<br />

-----------<br />

i'm sorry.<br />

i shouldn't be taking all this out on you. it's not your fault my sister died. it's not your fault you<br />

remind me of the boy she died with.<br />

what i'm doing is stalking. i shouldn't follow you home every day after school. i shouldn't scour the<br />

internet for every mention of your name.<br />

your family hangs up now when they hear my voice. you've blocked me on aim and you will not<br />

return my pokes on facebook.<br />

i want to stop. i'm trying to stop.<br />

it isn't easy. i probably won't change. i just want you to know that i'm trying.<br />

-----------<br />

you didn't need to go as far as you did.<br />

i was never going to hurt you. you knew that.<br />

calling the police was cruel and pointless.<br />

i'm sorry. i know you're afraid and i know you can't stand me, but did you really have to strike me<br />

so brutally<br />

my parents will kill me. they won't understand. i've hardly said a word to them since lily died and<br />

they…<br />

they'll think i'm crazy. they won't let me live with them anymore.<br />

because they don't love me, and they will be ashamed of me. and you don't know how that feels.<br />

i guess you will take out a restraining order.<br />

77


i guess i will have to switch schools, if i don't wind up in jail. i hope i'll go to jail, because i don't<br />

know what to do otherwise.<br />

i hope you know you've ruined a small and useless life.<br />

i hope you know i could have loved you.<br />

i hope you're sorry, and i hope you know that today really is my birthday.<br />

-----------<br />

78


Elspeth Woodcock Macdonald<br />

IN CLASS WITH THE NEW ONES<br />

Mine is a long trajectory (her arm makes a great arc in the air)<br />

Years since I left the ground.<br />

Below, it‘s granular, undigested, missed.<br />

Far above the earth,<br />

I‘m used to the words I‘ve brought with me.<br />

You‘re still close to the ground.<br />

You can reach the new words.<br />

Grab one and bounce back, or toss it, smuggle others.<br />

It‘s sometimes difficult to see what you mean.<br />

I squint. The colors are blurred.<br />

If I try one of your words, I miss and fall.<br />

Sentences are better, more to latch onto,<br />

I dive for one and dangle. Rappel, rather.<br />

Up here, a bird sings, I don‘t know its call.<br />

Have to learn the birds before I hit earth: one<br />

―When, when, when‖ another, ―Blue, blue, blue, white,‖<br />

―Egret, egret, no regret, regret,‖ and ―steady, steady‖<br />

And one cries, ―No, no, no, yes.‖<br />

79


FOR MY THERAPIST<br />

Is your birthday March 2nd, too<br />

Are you a worrier<br />

When not at work<br />

Do you lose things<br />

And wish you were better<br />

Do you disappoint people<br />

And think of all the things<br />

you might have done<br />

for your son or sons<br />

And more<br />

Then, maybe, there is hope.<br />

80


PACKAGE<br />

Do you feel me calling you<br />

Don‘t tell. I want to be strong.<br />

Thank you for the basket – for the bee sting.<br />

The smell of flowers, the birdsong.<br />

For sardines so delicious no balsamic vinegar is needed.<br />

For olive oil. Mundane. But from you, delicious.<br />

For ginger and lemon tea. For Tagore.<br />

Why do you do this to me Why do you remind me<br />

Do you rub your scented hands on the package,<br />

So I will be unwrapping you<br />

81


Brady Nash<br />

UNTITLED<br />

The muse asks, where did my muse go<br />

Is this music or the world recorded<br />

The world perceived without<br />

the bending blade, the sickle of sight<br />

Lonely for other instruments.<br />

Does that tool feel the force of its hand on golden wheat at sunset<br />

I don‘t. I don‘t. and I don‘t.<br />

The muse asks, where did my muse go<br />

Lies down and goes to sleep.<br />

Thinks these sheets look like hospital sheets.<br />

82


Uche Nduka<br />

HALF PAST ZERO<br />

no hard feelings i said but good times won't roll not tonight. antimacassars will cuss out your salon.<br />

Narcissus is always there for you and your shrink to dissemble. kindly RSVP to worms of celebrity. a<br />

bean a gorge a martinet. hope for help for a repressor. footprints of speed on a postage unpaid.<br />

where did you stash it. niggardly in riot. ant-line of road-menders. once before:while a man sought<br />

how to live. signal from a stand-up comic. hope for help for tuberoses and chickadees. to see this<br />

city afresh & listen. with ink-stained sphincter. with hiccoughs . whatever note you've peeled from a<br />

broken door. i don't want to make this crow suffer. i only want it to build a new tent for me. & for<br />

jackass and pumper when they lean into a juicier hosanna. suppose he thinks he will be fair to what's<br />

not him or his. all fabrications guaranteed. was that when he got maxed out slicksters to do his<br />

bidding. a hairy ringmaster walking between sandbars. & a fence brews a future. whichever way you<br />

go there is a clench to break. someone's looking at the sky in your right palm. moving ahead carrying<br />

fishing poles the circus horse living in your spine. for they are not there among the crowd don't<br />

know what's going to happen. crushable a smidgen of it. tests for cheesecloth on plinth.<br />

83


BY THIS BUZZ<br />

while we still have time. don't rush me between asparagus & bagel. a nomad at my door. to really<br />

slight the conductor of that orchestra. paint a lake. own your oracle. bend & break a template. take a<br />

moment & stuff it. if anybody needs me on the electrolane. find a home before a yellow leaf stylizes<br />

a light. on one of its spin-offs:digging into pretzel. a robin swims from branch to branch. you seek<br />

sanctuaries online. i will throw you off balance. an order different from exiting a sieve of<br />

consequence. cowhide being sawn. halfthrust; substep; your immunity & insecurity. a hurricaned<br />

pear. shorts & Botticelli butt. the gap between bonfire & correction. exactly what you were not<br />

looking for. what you shouldn't have seen/heard. the tyranny of the topical. who schools who in the<br />

shadow of a brown wastrel. the caterwauler's enroute to wherever.<br />

84


Steve Newton<br />

DRIVING WITH ABSENT FRIENDS<br />

Sometimes I ride through the night with friends<br />

Who have gone away, in the cars we used to drive<br />

All those years ago. Summer crickets in the trees or<br />

Snowflakes on the windshield, we might as well<br />

Be sailing on the far side of the galaxy, which was<br />

A game we used to play, pretending our car was<br />

The Enterprise, and all of us part of the crew.<br />

Now they all have been beamed up to a place I<br />

Can‘t go, a world where they no longer grow older,<br />

Leaving a man with a gray beard and bald head,<br />

Missing people he laughed with as a young man,<br />

Never knowing at the time that this was the moment<br />

On which a life could turn, a spoke around which<br />

Memories would circle like leaves in an October wind.<br />

85


WHEN I SAW RAYMOND CARVER READ<br />

When I saw Raymond Carver read one lung was already gone.<br />

He was so short of breath he could only read poems,<br />

or very stories. Prior to this reading<br />

I had just vaguely heard of him, but the next day<br />

I ran into someone on campus and told him about it.<br />

I saw something last night that changed my life!<br />

I remember saying that. Those were the exact words I used.<br />

Six months later he died. He was fifty years old.<br />

He had described himself as a cigarette with a man attached to it,<br />

but he changed my life, somehow, this brave man still reading<br />

to a college audience in upstate New York,<br />

with only one lung left and a few months to live.<br />

Now I am older than Ray Carver was when he died.<br />

I‘m almost nine years older, actually.<br />

And one thing that has stuck with me, along with<br />

all the rest of the memories of his reading,<br />

has been the way that he had changed his life.<br />

It must have been so strange finding himself<br />

at that reading, wearing a suit in front of an audience,<br />

knowing that he was gravely ill and that for all of<br />

the goodness he had found in life, there was this joker<br />

in the deck, that had popped up at the very worst time.<br />

I, too, used to be a drinker. There are entire years I look back<br />

on now and just shake my head. What on earth was I thinking<br />

But it‘s only now, really, that I understand, or think I do,<br />

what Carver meant by changing your life, the way that he did.<br />

It‘s only now that I see that I was not leading my own life<br />

back then, but rather, someone else‘s, someone wearing beer goggles,<br />

every day all day, for years. Or maybe now I am the one living<br />

someone else‘s life, the college professor teaching and writing poetry,<br />

sober every day. Who knows Of course none of this stuff<br />

about two lives is really true. It all happened. But it‘s just one life,<br />

with a before and after, although it sure feels that way at times, like<br />

two lives, and no matter how long I, or anyone else, goes without<br />

a drink or toke or snort or cigarette, the joker is still going to pop<br />

up when least expected, at a birthday party or wedding, the<br />

face in the shadows nodding her head, indicating that it‘s time.<br />

86


Jon L. Peacock<br />

Ferry to the Mainland<br />

―…We would like to once again welcome you to DFDS Seaways; the casino and duty-free store are<br />

now open; DFDS Seaways is part of the DFDS Group of Companies…‖<br />

―Cheers, my friends,‖ Jim says with a raise of his Newcastle beer, ―to the land we come<br />

from, and to the land we go to!‖<br />

―And cheers to Katherine!‖ adds Lissa, to the counter-clerk who helped us buy our tickets,<br />

and we drink again.<br />

―And cheers to DFDS!‖ L adds, hearing the loudspeaker repeat the name again and again,<br />

and they drink to the ferryboat taking them to the mainland. L will later regret making this praise.<br />

―Okay,‖ L says, ―we hit the duty-free for a flat of beer, and roam this ferry toward sin until<br />

the wee hours, then hit up a movie and a sauna.‖ He looks around, walking backwards, and the<br />

other three nod attentively. ―Anything else‖<br />

―Quick,‖ Jim points at L, saying, ―What‘s life‖<br />

L stumbles, turning around in a full circle before continuing. ―Life is experiencing things<br />

until you die an‘ go to Hell.‖<br />

―Ah-hah!‖ Jim exclaims, ―but you don‘t believe in Hell.‖<br />

They buy a flat of beer, warm, and look in vain for ice. Restless, they walk around, not really<br />

stopping as they pass the casinos that imitate Vegas with a lack of windows and lots of lights from<br />

the flashing slot machines. All throughout the walk L thinks of Gelka, the girl they‘re going to see in<br />

her hometown of Bonn, Germany. Gelka is the exchange student that L‘s friend Boy dated last year,<br />

the only person anyone in the group knows living in Europe.<br />

On the outer deck they watch the North Sea wage war with the wind, large waves lapping<br />

the horizon and along their ship. Lissa and L return inside, wary of the wind, and wander through<br />

the ship.<br />

―Lissa, what is life‖<br />

―Friendships,‖ she answers.<br />

L stops and turns to a model of the ferryboat they‘re on, large and ominous in its glass case,<br />

etching the ship‘s modelwork in his mind, then leads Lissa through the leviathan. Their first stop is<br />

the discothèque, but inside the dark cave are teenagers dancing to songs usually played at junior high<br />

winter dances. The purple-dressed girl, wearing two ponytails, draws the most attention, and she<br />

does a dance-walk with two spins and a sideways shimmy down the middle of the room with finger<br />

guns shooting high, allowing the others to part for her as she goes. She‘s fifteen or thereabouts,<br />

taller than most the boys in the room. The lights flash like a poorly prepared rave, and the DJ<br />

decides to speed things up with the song, ―Time Warp.‖<br />

L and Lissa‘s next stop is just as twisted as the last. Near an overpriced bar is a mock lounge,<br />

with plush velvet and deep red tones offset by stage lights and bright costumes of a band playing<br />

―Sweet Home Alabama.‖ They don‘t know the verses, and keep returning to the part that digs at<br />

Neil Young, and the song drags on. As they repeat the chorus for the sixth time Lissa and L leave.<br />

They arrive at the only full-service restaurant just as a man is pulling out the floor-pole<br />

‗closed‘ sign. Lissa begs the man for a quick, take-away order of fries. He responds that they<br />

wouldn‘t serve chips without fish, anyway, but no possibility on anything regardless, because it‘s ten<br />

o‘clock, they must realize, and ten is when restaurants close out here, even on ships such as these.<br />

The overnight ferry left in the late afternoon, and even though it set sail only four hours ago,<br />

everything is already closing down. The man says that, possibly, for the next hour, the deli on the<br />

bottom deck will have some food left. Lissa and L get there as two employees start closing the deli,<br />

87


ut food is still on display, and Lissa takes one of the wrapped sandwiches. They only have tuna<br />

sandwiches left, so L doesn‘t order anything.<br />

―Do you consider Jim a companion‖<br />

―Of course!‖ Lissa laughs. ―He‘s my husband!‖<br />

―Yeah, but…‖ he looks at Lissa‘s sandwich wrapping twisted on the table. ―Can you tell him<br />

everything, like everything…without reserve‖<br />

―Well, L, honestly…no. I love Jamey with all my heart, with everything I am,‖ she looks<br />

down at the wrapper, and L looks at her, ―and if anything were to happen to him I don‘t know how<br />

badly I‘d break…but there are some things that I just can‟t tell him. Not because I think they‘re bad,<br />

or because I want to hide anything from him, but it‘s more like criticisms, you know He is just so<br />

sensitive, and sometimes the smallest things can really make him upset, and I never like to see him<br />

upset – he takes it so badly.‖ L and Lissa laugh. ―I dunno…I‘m fine with it all, and I think he is<br />

too…why‖<br />

―Well…I have all these good female friends in my life, you know…all these friends<br />

throughout the years, I‘ve always been so close to girls…Emily, and Scarlet, oh, and my sister and<br />

my mom, and Kate Americanhorse, and…oh…I dunno, all these girls…Megan Bilbee back in high<br />

school…but I‘ve never had a companion, you know I‘ve never been with a girl who I could share<br />

everything with…to be a partner with.‖ He looks up at Lissa, her face now taut and stern. ―Is it<br />

possible Something like that‖<br />

―Oh L,‖ she looks away, watching as the shutters slowly curl down the deli window, ―I‘m<br />

sure it is. Just because I can‘t spill my mind out to Jamey at every moment of the day doesn‘t mean<br />

anything, and you have all those close female friends of yours, I‘m sure one of them would love to<br />

listen to your darkness, just as I listen to Jamey…maybe that Kate Americanhorse girl.‖ She stands<br />

up, snatching the twisted wrapper off the table and tossing it away, touching the metal shutters<br />

before turning back to L. ―Let‘s go find the boys.‖<br />

Lissa walks ahead, stopping short when she comes to another floor-pole sign. Do Not Enter,<br />

it reads in English between what looks like Dutch and French. Forbidden Zone. They‘d just navigated<br />

this area to get to the downstairs deli, but the sign is so foreboding they decide to turn around and<br />

find a different way, becoming lost and running into two more ‗forbidden zone‘ signs before<br />

returning back to the model ship where they‘d left Jim and Marshall.<br />

Almost like clockwork, Marshall and Jim enter from the blazing winds of the outer deck,<br />

looking at Lissa and L as if they were there all along, never missing a beat. Both their faces are<br />

smiling and bright pink.<br />

―Oh God, Jamey, I wanna get off this stupid ship,‖ Lissa says, going to Jim. When she gets<br />

close to him she stops. ―Have you been crying‖<br />

―Yeah,‖ he laughs, ―we both have.‖<br />

―We‘ve been talking about everything back home,‖ chuckles Marshall.<br />

―Fantastic,‖ Lissa says. ―But I wanna go to the room now.‖<br />

On their way, Lissa explains the turn of events on the boat, and her point is emphasized with<br />

another ‗forbidden zone‘ popping up seemingly without reason. Jim convinces the group to go to<br />

the sauna and relax before bed, but when they get there they meet a man on a stool. He‘s half asleep,<br />

and stands up when the four get close.<br />

―Zorry,‖ he says with a hand raised to Jim‘s chest. ―Zuana‘z clozed.‖<br />

―But,‖ Jim rubs a hand over his face, ―why You don‘t need anyone to be on duty for a<br />

sauna to run…and you‘re here to guard it being closed Why!‖<br />

―Zorry,‖ the man puts down his hand and sits upon the stool. Sitting there, his tired eyes<br />

glaze down to the floor. The four look at him for a few seconds, then at one another.<br />

―Well,‖ asks Jim, ―now what‖<br />

88


―I‘m fucking going to bed,‖ responds Lissa, throwing her towel over her shoulder.<br />

―Yeah, man,‖ Marshall looks at Jim and L, ―let‘s get some sleep for tomorrow.‖<br />

―But,‖ Jim stammers, ―but I wanted to see the movie…Lissa, the movie…Marshall…L…the<br />

movie!‖<br />

The glass doors to the sauna, which is still on, are densely fogged. The guard sits on his<br />

stool, his eyes dart here and there, but he never looks up.<br />

―Oh fine, Jamey, let‘s stay up for the movie…when does it start‖<br />

Jim startles L, dazed watching the guard, as he lifts L‘s wrist to look at his watch.<br />

―Three hours.‖<br />

―Forget it, dudes,‖ Marshall looks at Lissa, ―I‘m goin‘ ‗a sleep.‖<br />

―Fine Jamey, you win.‖ Lissa starts to walk away, then turns around. ―Come on, boys, let‘s<br />

go back to the room and let Marshall sleep while we wait for the movie.‖<br />

Marshall lies down while the other three stand in the cramped quarters to drink left-over coffee and<br />

swigs from L‘s flask to stay awake. They leave him back in the dark room, arriving at the makeshift<br />

lobby thirty minutes before the one am starting time, long after everything else has shuttered and<br />

closed. The few people still walking around look scared, and all seem to avoid contact as Jim, Lissa,<br />

and L pass by. They wait in the lobby for forty minutes while hearing another movie play in another<br />

room, until Jim finds someone to ask about their movie. A man, in a red vest, doesn‘t quite know<br />

what Jim talks about until he suddenly pops straight and uses both hands to grab his open vest.<br />

―We was thinking to cancel that one, it is so late, you know.‖<br />

―Oh my God man,‖ Jim pleads. ―Please let us watch this movie – we‘ve stayed up much<br />

longer than we wanted just to see this movie, please for the love of God, let us watch this movie.‖<br />

The man moves away from Jim, then comes back and says yes, they will be showing the<br />

movie after all. They enter a small, unlit room and are the only ones there, making themselves<br />

comfortable in the fold-up chairs. The movie starts with a couple of clicks, and the red vested<br />

employee yawns as he sits behind the projector at the back of the room. The screen is roughly ten<br />

foot by ten, and the image slips on and off its edges as it waves to the ship‘s movement. The movie,<br />

V for Vendetta, is full of post-American anarchy, and with all the chaos and the violence and the<br />

waving screen they watch the flag of happy destruction, of zealous vengeance, of beating against the<br />

system.<br />

Well after three they finish the movie and make their way back to the dark, cramped room<br />

with Marshall snoring. Lissa and L lie on their respective bunks, and Jim suits up with a coat and his<br />

music. He tells the other two quietly he‘s going to fight the night for a while. Lissa kisses him<br />

goodbye, and he‘s gone.<br />

―Hey, Lissa‖<br />

―Marshall‘s asleep, L. What is it‖<br />

―Nothing, really. ‗Night.‖<br />

L lies in the dark, hearing Marshall beneath him, staring at the darkness of the close quarters,<br />

hearing each beat, breath, each motion of the other two. The room gets brighter and brighter, and L<br />

sees everything in the darkness, staring at the ceiling, staring and trying to close his eyes without<br />

success.<br />

―What is it‖ L can hear voices asking, different pitches and inflections, over and over.<br />

―What is it Fear, or laziness What is it for you‖<br />

―What is it‖<br />

―They don‘t like you…‖<br />

―What stops you‖<br />

―They never like you…‖<br />

―…Fear of harm, laziness in comfort, fear of loss, laziness in stability…‖<br />

89


The room gets brighter, and L sees everything in the darkness. He sees a napkin on the shelf<br />

beside his bunk, the table below. He sees the light switch, sees the lamp by his bunk, and turns it on.<br />

He steps down with the napkin in hand, and on the table he scribbles some words:<br />

I‟ve haywired my brain to be out when I‟m done<br />

when the day is all over, no more to be won<br />

I‟ve poisoned myself as much as I care<br />

so no thoughts will spill out, no more than I dare<br />

I‟ve programmed my life right down to the end<br />

so I have control, this mind shall not bend<br />

I‟ve stapled my soul up on that dark wall<br />

and shown it to none, and shown it to all<br />

I‟ve drank „til I‟m drunk & drank until dawn<br />

„til nothing is left, until I am gone.<br />

L dresses. He turns off the light, takes his key and several beers, and gently shuts the door.<br />

He walks through the ‗forbidden zones‘ like a ghost in the night, roaming the empty hallways,<br />

sensing others asleep in their rooms, confined to their quarters, closed away from any paradise of<br />

this fifteen-hour cruise, broken from happiness like some cruel, twisted joke. He passes the inner<br />

walls like a gust of wind until there‘s no place inside for Jim to hide, then L searches outside.<br />

The strength of the nighttime North Sea is stronger than in daylight, and black and black are<br />

sometimes broken by the white waves crashing and the lights in the distance, other boats that float<br />

in the nothingness. It‘s the outer darkness that L‘s Mormon mother warned him of, constantly<br />

pulling and pushing victims out, never to return. On the starboard side the sea pulls L down, and the<br />

wind intensifies and rips him up even harder. He firmly holds onto a line with both hands, clinging<br />

to his bag of beer, and at one point his feet start to slip from the ground. The winds are so strong, L<br />

starts to fear for his life, realizing just now he‘s no longer in his bunk. But after the strongest wind<br />

there‘s a calm that sits as L stretches his way from the cable to the helm of the deck.<br />

Jim is at the front of the boat, with a rainproof hood over his head. L is very close before<br />

Jim notices, and as Jim looks up there‘s a sight of terror without recognition in his face, but this<br />

quickly turns to a smile and L sits down. The two try to talk at first, but their words are swept out to<br />

sea quicker than can be heard, and they resort to silent contemplation. Occasionally they point out a<br />

distant light, or raise their hands above their heads, but mainly they allow the bumpy night to carry<br />

off their quiet conversation. They stand at the same time and together make their way through the<br />

high winds. Through the entrance door‘s window they see the back of a man somewhat lying down.<br />

He‘s clothed, but his pants are shoved past his hairy butt, two female legs springing from each side<br />

of him, and before turning away they both see him do a pumping motion. Jim and L move back<br />

several feet, not looking at each other.<br />

―I think that was,‖ Jim yells out, staring at the dark sea, ―that was the worst sight I‘ve ever<br />

seen.‖<br />

L doesn‘t respond.<br />

Minutes pass. They hold the rails and look out. Together they move back to the doorway,<br />

passing it without stopping, and look in to see the man and a girl sitting together, fully clothed. Jim<br />

and L step back and go inside.<br />

It‘s almost five in the morning when the last light is extinguished, and at seven a loud voice<br />

begins calling for people to gather their belongings and prepare to dock, as the ferryboat will be<br />

docking in the next two hours. This continues in four consecutive languages at fifteen-minute<br />

intervals for the full two hours, with a loud siren sounding thirty minutes before the ship docks.<br />

90


Nothing can be turned down, or silenced, and the cramped room smells of stale, sweaty socks, and<br />

Lissa begins to cry.<br />

This is their welcome to the mainland of Europe.<br />

91


Howard Pflanzer<br />

ARMORED VEHICLE<br />

Get an armored vehicle<br />

To protect your skin<br />

Will it keep you safe from the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune<br />

Will it save you from life‘s humiliations<br />

Will it save you from the torments of love<br />

Will it bullet-proof your heart and soul<br />

To make you impervious to the disasters of the world<br />

If not, why not<br />

You know what you can do<br />

You can shove that armored vehicle right up your ass.<br />

92


GEESE NO MORE<br />

They killed the geese in Prospect Park<br />

One day they were there<br />

And the next day they were gone.<br />

They were a danger to human life<br />

Sucked into a jet engine<br />

They could cause a crash<br />

They were euthanized to protect all of us would-be travelers<br />

From sudden accidental death.<br />

Well, if someone has to go<br />

It might as well be the geese<br />

Not us.<br />

93


Leslie Anne Rexach<br />

DEATH MAGAZINE<br />

They say hell is best for its company<br />

Who shall I interview for next month‘s piece<br />

Pages left alone<br />

No words to fill the void<br />

What stories shall I tell<br />

Should I write about this drink<br />

Dripping in sin<br />

Raising questions about a religion that does not exist<br />

I‘d much rather be in hell<br />

Burn the pages of my death magazine<br />

Sin into cinders<br />

Never to look back to the interviews I did with myself<br />

Even if I lose my job<br />

I continue to do as I wish until my subscription expires<br />

94


Beatriz Alzate Rodriguez<br />

A STORY OF A LIFE SAVED<br />

That place had a name, but I couldn‘t pronounce it at the time, and now I can‘t remember what it<br />

sounded like. I know a few facts. Such as, it was on the Pacific Coast of Colombia, about five miles<br />

from the Ecuadorian border. I suppose I can Google it now, but I don‘t want to. I want to<br />

remember it as nameless place.<br />

It was the summer of 1975, which was the summer after my twelfth birthday, when my sister<br />

and I were in Cali, Colombia, my father‘s birthplace. It would be less than ten years before the world<br />

heard about the Cali Cartel and about five years before I knew what cocaine was. My father had<br />

taken us there to visit his family, my mother stayed behind in New York. He was happy, the<br />

happiest my sister, Rosa and I had ever seen him. It was the first time he had seen his family in<br />

twenty years. To two girls from New York, Cali was only what our father had told us it was -a<br />

beautiful city set in a tropical valley, a virtual paradise. As we were growing up, he told us stories of<br />

Cali. He told us how the city of Cali was a place where everyday was Christmas, just as his father<br />

must have told him that the streets of New York were paved with gold.<br />

We met aunts, uncles, and many cousins, who previously we had only known as faces in<br />

black and white photos in the family album. We were supposed to be especially excited to meet our<br />

uncle, the great doctor, who had been a visiting professor of Medicine at Oxford and soon to be at<br />

Harvard. It was him, who my father used as an example. Study hard so you can be a doctor like your uncle,<br />

my father would say. My uncle the great pride of the family the one for whom my father dropped<br />

out of elementary school to help support. He would hitch rides with truckers, who paid him to talk<br />

enough to keep them awake as they drove all night on treacherous mountain roads. When my father<br />

was old enough, or rather tall enough to reach the pedals he became a driver himself. He did this to<br />

pay for his brothers, and sisters, private school education so they could become members of<br />

Colombia‘s elite.<br />

We enjoyed our time in the city visiting the country club and seeing the colonial churches<br />

filled with their Spanish splendor. One day at the country club my father and his brother sat<br />

together drinking coffee at a poolside table, while we splashed around in the pool. They looked very<br />

much alike they shared the same long nose and black wavy hair, features my sister had as well. I<br />

resembled more my mother. It was some time that day, my father‘s brother, the great doctor, asked<br />

if he could take my sister and me along on his vacation. My father gave him permission.<br />

―Your uncle invited you to go with him to the beach.‖ My father said, before he left Cali to<br />

get back to work driving a truck in New York.<br />

―How far is the beach‖ I said.<br />

―Past the selva,‖ he said. I looked at my sister and her at me. Neither of us understood. My<br />

knowledge of Spanish was limited. I was able to follow most conversations if they weren‘t speaking<br />

fast. I understood everyday words in Spanish, but selva was not one of them.<br />

―What‘s that‖ I said.<br />

―The jungle,‖ he said. My father went on to explain that we would have to take a plane over<br />

the mountains to get there and when we return we would spend the rest of the summer with our<br />

aunts and cousins in Cali as originally planned.<br />

A couple of days later we left on a twin propeller plane. The plane rattled and shook all as<br />

we passed dangerously close to the top of several mountains. We were grateful when we finally<br />

landed on a dirt runaway on the edge of a town. They called it a town. I didn‘t know what it to call<br />

it. The entire place was nothing more than a few wooden buildings along side the dirt road. It was<br />

my first dirt road town, which was quite a shock to a young city kid like me. It was more of a shock<br />

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when my uncle added four or was it five more kids to our group. I can‘t remember now. He didn‘t<br />

mention them on the trip from the city; in fact, he hadn‘t said much of anything to us. My uncle‘s<br />

wife was with us as well as a friend of his who was a dentist. His wife‘s name I don‘t care to<br />

remember, and she didn‘t deserve to be called aunt and as for the dentist, I will call him Angelo, for<br />

he would be my angel.<br />

A short dark skinned man wearing cutoff shorts and a loose fitting t-shirt that at one time<br />

must have been white took us all to a short pier where several large motorboats were tied. He was<br />

scary to me at twelve, because his skin was so leathery and his expression blank. I stared at him and<br />

wondered what was out there to make him look that way. The humidity was intense. My clothes<br />

were stuck to me already, so if I got wet in the boat it wouldn‘t matter. In fact, I hoped that I would<br />

get wet. It would have been a relief from the heat. I was looking forward to the beach. The pier<br />

was at the edge of a river, which in city terms must have been at least three or four blocks wide.<br />

―Are we getting on those boats‖ My sister asked our uncle. She started to cry. She was<br />

afraid of boats, or was it the water<br />

―Yes, yes,‖ he said waving her to go get in, as he turned to supervise the loading of the<br />

boats. His wife went with him leaving us with Angelo. Angelo was about thirty something years old,<br />

he had fair skin with dark hair that he wore with slightly longer sideburns and a mustache. He<br />

wasn‘t that much taller than my sister who was five feet seven inches tall, but he was thinner than<br />

my uncle who had a few inches of a spare tire hanging over his waist. His wife was overweight as<br />

well.<br />

―I help you,‖ Angelo said.<br />

―It‘s not that she can‘t get in, she‘s afraid.‖ I said and stepped down into the boat.<br />

―Oh, no worry, Safe- good boat,‖ Angelo said in his broken English attempting to soothe<br />

her nerves.<br />

―You gotta get in, you can‘t stay here. Who you gonna stay with.‖ I said.<br />

With a little bit more coaxing, plus the fact that there was no staying behind, she got in and<br />

sat next to me. Our group filled two boats, the cutoff shorts man got in with us and another similar<br />

looking man wearing similar looking clothes climbed into the other boat to drive. Angelo and a<br />

couple of the children sat at the other end of the boat we were in. The river was the most beautiful<br />

thing I had seen up until that day. I had never seen so many trees or smelled air so fresh-full of the<br />

scent of the grasses, leaves and the river water. We had left cars and their exhaust far behind. There<br />

was nothing but trees of enormous height and width lining the banks of the river. Occasionally<br />

other boats, some smaller, would pass us. The people on board stared at us city people with our<br />

brightly colored clothes and our suitcases and supplies packed up high in the boats. My suitcase<br />

especially must have been a curiosity I had a pink plastic suitcase, which was suited for a twelve year<br />

old, but not for the jungle. As we continued on the river, it began to narrow. Our boats passed<br />

several small shacks built on stilts directly on the waters edge. There were naked children swimming<br />

and women wearing what only looked like nightgowns or housedresses looking out at them and at<br />

us.<br />

I don‘t know how long we were out on the river; no one kept track of the time. I heard the<br />

boatman talking to my uncle again. He said we would be stopping soon. We had started to see<br />

many more shacks built closer together. The boatmen pulled the boats up to a few wooden planks<br />

sticking out of the riverbank next to a house. Where‘s the beach Maybe my uncle didn‘t tell my<br />

father the truth. Maybe we weren‘t going to the beach at all.<br />

In this village, we would spend the night I heard them say. My uncle didn‘t mention this,<br />

either. We could all have been led to our deaths in this dark and putrid place. We had no clue to<br />

what was going on. My uncle and his wife offered us no consolation, no explanation as to where we<br />

were actually going or why we had stopped.<br />

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Thankfully, the house we stayed in was on solid land behind a row of shack houses. We<br />

were shown to some mattress thrown on the wooden floor, where my uncle told us we had to sleep.<br />

He didn‘t speak to us, but to the group of children. We were treated like deaf mutes because we<br />

didn‘t speak Spanish. We could have tried, but didn‘t. In Cali, we had no reason to everyone spoke<br />

English to us. I suppose now that they were having a good time practicing their English. My uncle<br />

spoke near perfect English with a thick accent, but when he spoke to us, he usually spoke to us in<br />

Spanish, expecting us to understand. Most of what was said we were able to understand. That‘s<br />

how I overheard a dusty looking man-wearing cast off clothing and no shoes telling my uncle that<br />

we had to wait for high tide. The men from the boat stayed outside, they must have slept in the<br />

boats. Our suitcases were still on the boat. We had to sleep in our clothes and we had no<br />

toothbrushes. It‘s funny what you remember, toothbrushes seemed important. My mother would<br />

have cursed them all out. It was very important to her that we slept on clean sheets and brushed our<br />

teeth. There were no sheets at all and no bathroom to brush our teeth in even if we had our<br />

toothbrushes. There was only a toilet bowl, which didn‘t flush. Everything went straight down into<br />

the ground or maybe the river I wasn‘t sure. We didn‘t like it. My sister complained to me and me<br />

to her, but what could we do. We were too young, tired and afraid to say anything even if they<br />

understood our English or tried to speak Spanish. The other kids around us were having a great time<br />

playing on the mattresses. From what I could hear, they had been here before.<br />

I think I slept that night. My sister didn‘t. She was afraid of the bugs. So, was I, but I hid it<br />

well. My uncle and his wife woke us up while it was still dark outside. We were rushed outside and<br />

back onto the boats. Some women gave us a few bananas, mangos and some other fruit that I still<br />

can‘t identify. My uncle and the others started putting on long sleeve shirts. Rosa and I didn‘t have<br />

any. We didn‘t bring long sleeves on summer vacation. My uncle‘s wife passed us a can of insect<br />

repellent. This would be the only time she offered us insect repellent during the trip. I guess I<br />

should have been grateful to her for even thinking to share her supply with us. Once everyone<br />

settled in the boats, we left. I looked up at the sky and what I saw took the title of the most<br />

beautiful sight that I have ever seen. The only place where I have seen a night sky like that again<br />

was at the Hayden Planetarium. The stars were so bright we didn‘t need lights on the boat. I sat<br />

there in silence trying to remember it forever ignoring the mosquitoes pinching my arms. I think I<br />

succeeded in remembering it forever because I still not only see it as clear as if it was in high<br />

definition but I can feel the humidity and smell the air, which reeked with the dank wet smell of the<br />

jungle around us.<br />

As we continued, it became darker as the canopy of trees closed in on us and the river<br />

became only a few feet wide on either side of us. The roots of the trees scraped the sides of the<br />

boat. It became so dark we couldn‘t see the other boat. The boatmen finally turned on flashlights<br />

to light the way. We heard a splashing sound ahead of us. My uncle said it was a snake falling in the<br />

water. The other kids started laughing. Rosa was going to cry but just sat there huddled up. We<br />

continued then suddenly something fell on our feet. Rosa screamed and I jumped back on the boat<br />

bench. Everyone including my uncle laughed hysterically.<br />

―It‘s not real.‖ I said as the boatman picked it up laughing. Angelo had laughed, but stopped<br />

when he saw we didn‘t enjoy the joke.<br />

One of those nasty kids my uncle seemed to like so much threw a rubber snake at us, and it<br />

appeared he was in on it. I was afraid as well, but I remembered what my father had taught us about<br />

dogs. Once they smell fear they attack, and Rosa had shown fear when she cried getting on the<br />

boat. This would be the first of many torments we suffered at the hands of those other children<br />

over the next fourteen days. After the laughter settled down it was quiet except for the sound of the<br />

clicking and humming of insects coming out of the jungle, which blended into the sound of the<br />

boat‘s motor.<br />

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We stopped; the boats would go no more. The boatmen started to talk too fast I couldn‘t<br />

understand them. The next thing I knew they were getting out of the boats and into the water.<br />

They started to push the boats. They boats wouldn‘t move, next my uncle and the dentist got out to<br />

help them push. Still the boats wouldn‘t move they were too heavy. The water was only a foot or<br />

so deep. Now we all had to get out. I didn‘t want to step in that dark muddy water but I didn‘t<br />

have a choice. Rosa didn‘t cry, but froze up. One of the boatmen attempted to pick her up but he<br />

was slightly smaller than she was. The dentist gave her his hand.<br />

―Come, please, no snakes-no snakes.‖ Angelo said and she stepped out under her own<br />

power. Our uncle offered her no help at all.<br />

The water was slimy and the bottom was muddy. I thought I would sink. We all had to<br />

push the boats about six feet or so. The boats had been stuck on a tree root. We got back in, the<br />

boatmen started to row. The river gradually widened again and the yellowish glow of daylight broke<br />

through the treetops as the canopy spread. Then the trees and the riverbanks disappeared<br />

altogether. We were out in open water. I know now that it was the Pacific Ocean. I was scared the<br />

boat was too small and we seemed to be going out further. There was no one to look to for<br />

reassurance that we weren‘t going be lost out there.<br />

―Where‘s the land‖ I said looking at Rosa.<br />

She didn‘t say anything. Suddenly we changed direction. I could see palm trees, and then a<br />

beach finally appeared. The beach stretched out for maybe a mile or two dotted with palm trees.<br />

Waves were rocking the boats now. The boatmen turned the boats into the direction of the waves<br />

and let the waves bring the boats onto the beach. When we were near enough, they jumped out and<br />

pushed the boats firmly into the sand.<br />

We gathered our stuff as the boatmen were leaving us on the beach. My sister and I each<br />

picked up our one suitcase and followed them. My uncle still hadn‘t spoken more than a few words<br />

to us. It was Angelo, who started a conversation with us in English.<br />

―I make some work on the teeth for the people here.‖ He said. ―You girls can help me, if<br />

you like.‖<br />

―We like,‖ Rosa said and I nodded.<br />

As we approached the house we would stay in we passed a few smaller structures all high on<br />

stilts constructed of unpainted wood and some tin roofing materials. Our house for the next two<br />

weeks was clearly the best in the village. It was all wood and at least twice as wide as the other<br />

houses with a wrap around porch.<br />

Once inside we were shown a room with two sets of bunk beds and a single bed, no other<br />

furniture. The beds were nothing more than a mattress over wooden slats in a rectangular frame. I<br />

claimed the single bed. My sister took the lower bunk next to me. Two of the other children that<br />

had joined us on the river were also girls. We figured out later that they were also sisters, took the<br />

other bunk.<br />

Everybody went to the beach. The other girls were both olive skinned, dark haired, thin,<br />

and obviously younger than Rosa was. The shorter one was probably closer to my age but she wore<br />

a bra and I didn‘t. I was fair skinned and chubby. I remember what I wore very well- a two-piece<br />

navy blue polka dotted bathing suit my mother had picked out for me. The top was more of a<br />

blouse in a baby doll cut. The two girls were pointing and laughing at me. My sister didn‘t notice.<br />

She was too busy snapping pictures of palm trees with her Kodak 110 instamatic camera. I played<br />

the deaf mute and walked into the water. Coney <strong>Island</strong> was the only beach that I had been to up<br />

until then. The water was nothing like Coney <strong>Island</strong>‘s dark green dirty water. It was clean and clear.<br />

The waves were high, at least twice my height. They probably seemed taller than they really were,<br />

because I didn‘t know how to swim and was afraid of them.<br />

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We were all in the water now. I was trying to play with my sister the games we played at our<br />

neighborhood public pool, but the waves were just too high and they were coming one right after<br />

another. I managed to hold my breath and let the waves pass over me. But one caught me off guard<br />

and knocked me down. I felt the sand with my hands as the wave rolled me under the water. I<br />

struggled to my feet and carefully waded out of the water before the next wave could reach me. I sat<br />

and watched the others have a good time. As I sat, I thought of my mother sitting out on our<br />

apartment buildings stoop talking to neighbors or reading a book completely unaware of where we<br />

were or what could happen to us out here. My uncle‘s wife, who was really too fat for her bikini<br />

came out of the water laughing with my uncle running right behind her. They paused as she<br />

adjusted her bikini then they passed right by me and said nothing as if I wasn‘t there.<br />

I knew then that I hated her. Later that year in the fall, I would overhear my parents talking.<br />

I knew my aunts didn‘t like my uncle‘s wife but I didn‘t know why. My father told my mother that<br />

she took my uncle out dancing, while his mother, my grandmother who I never met was dying from<br />

cancer. Gold-digger, social climber was what the called her. As a result, neither of my father‘s sisters<br />

spoke to either of them. I wouldn‘t fully understand what type of man would leave the side of his<br />

dying mother for a woman for many years. But on that beach, I blamed her, for all the hardships my<br />

sister and I endured so far, but didn‘t know there were more to come.<br />

That evening in the house, we had dinner of fresh fish. The fish were served whole with<br />

their heads still on. I can‘t remember if my sister ate it but I didn‘t, and still wouldn‘t, not with its<br />

head still on and the eyes looking up at me. I must have eaten some rice or fruit and vegetables,<br />

because after dinner we took our plates out to the back porch, which was part of the kitchen. There<br />

my uncle‘s wife and the village woman who had cooked the meal were sitting. The woman was<br />

washing dishes in a bucket. My uncle‘s wife watched us as Rosa and I tried to put our plates in the<br />

bucket.<br />

―Tomorrow night, you two will wash all the dishes.‖ She said.<br />

―Why‖ My sister said boldly.<br />

―If you eat, you wash the dishes.‖ My uncle‘s wife said.<br />

I played deaf mute again and didn‘t look at her. I looked at Rosa and her at me. We never<br />

washed dishes at home, and I wouldn‘t wash dishes until I was sixteen at my college dormitory. And<br />

my sister, well she‘s fifty now and uses paper plates whenever she can. We didn‘t cry. Rosa didn‘t<br />

because she had already cried enough, and me I don‘t know why, perhaps I was too dehydrated<br />

from the heat of the day or too dried up from all the saltwater still on my skin to have any tears. I<br />

didn‘t eat any more dinners and I lost almost twenty pounds in those fourteen days.<br />

The rest of the night was just as bad if not worse. It wasn‘t bad enough that we were<br />

expected to work for food and there was no electricity and no running water. We were allowed only<br />

enough rainwater from the collection barrels to rinse the sand off our hair and feet when we came in<br />

from the beach. Frustrated and for the lack of anything else to do I had gone to bed early. As I lay<br />

on the hard bumpy bed, I became aware that there were birds flying around the wood rafters.<br />

Where my sister was at that moment, I fail to recollect. I do remember the other children were all<br />

together in the boy‘s room playing some games that they had brought with them and we weren‘t<br />

invited to. I ran to the front porch where the adults were drinking enjoying the evening breeze.<br />

―Ah, there are birds or something flying around in the room.‖ I said.<br />

They laughed and he and Angelo went to the room with me.<br />

―They are murciélagos.‖ My uncle said. I didn‘t understand the word in Spanish and they<br />

didn‘t know the word in English. By then I had seen for myself that they weren‘t birds, but bats<br />

when I saw one hanging from its feet. I stood there shocked with my mouth open.<br />

―They‘re bats.‖ I said. ―Do they bite‖<br />

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My uncle laughed. ―No, they are harmless. They are more scared of you, than you are of<br />

them. It‘s nothing.‖ He said and returned to the porch.<br />

―You‘re not gonna kill them.‖ I said, but he had already left.<br />

Angelo stayed back realizing that I was afraid to go to bed with them flying around.<br />

―Can you chase them out or something‖ I said turning to Angelo for help, because my<br />

uncle didn‘t.<br />

―They will go soon, they not like people. Come, when they go, you go sleep.‖ He said<br />

offering me comfort. Something my own uncle didn‘t stop to do for my sister or me on any<br />

occasion so far on this trip.<br />

We went back out to the porch where they were taking shots of Aguadiente, the Colombian<br />

drink of choice. My sister was there. She had just heard about the bats and wasn‘t going in either.<br />

―Drink," my uncle said holding out a glass with a shots worth of liquor in it. ―Drink and you<br />

will not have a problem sleeping tonight.‖<br />

Angelo old him no, my uncle‘s wife didn‘t say a thing. I had drunk beer at my Holy<br />

Communion party and snuck a few shots of Johnny Walker Red from the bottle given to my father<br />

from his company as his Christmas bonus. So, I took a shot and it surprised them when I didn‘t<br />

choke or spit it out. We slept that night and every one of the fourteen nights with the sheets<br />

wrapped around us as if we were mummies.<br />

The next day we woke up and ate some breakfast of bananas and coconut water. I think<br />

there was something else, but didn‘t want to dirty a dish. My uncle had laid out a couple of pills for<br />

each of us. I asked him what they were for, and he said malaria and yellow fever. We had been<br />

vaccinated before we left New York, but for what for I wasn‘t sure. He was a doctor so we took<br />

them. He gave us more pills throughout the trip, but I don‘t remember how many or how often.<br />

However many we took the great doctor must have miscalculated on my dosage because that winter<br />

I came down with malaria in the middle of December. My father knew what I had when I broke out<br />

in fever, extreme chills and shakes that felt as if my heart was shaking out of my chest, but he had to<br />

convince the New York City doctors to prescribe Quinine for me. My father also said that I was<br />

lucky that the insects didn‘t lay eggs under my skin. I burned with fever and my teeth chattered from<br />

the chills. As my mother covered me with every blanket in the house and then with every winter<br />

coat to try to keep me warm, she cursed out the great doctor with curses so wild and descriptions so<br />

vivid that even the best linguists at Harvard would be hard pressed to define them<br />

Angelo came out of his room and asked us again if we would help him. We agreed and<br />

accompanied him over to the next house a hundred or so yards away. It had a large front porch but<br />

was just one large room in the inside. Even at twelve, I was able to guess that it had been some type<br />

of medical office at one point because of the cabinets and cots that were there. There were a several<br />

large windows holes. They were holes because there were no glass windows anywhere in this village.<br />

These windows had shutters, as did the ones in the house we were staying, but many of the houses<br />

had none. There were people sitting and squatting already on the porch and in front of the house.<br />

They wore western cast off clothes, most too big with faded colors and out of place slogans. Some<br />

wore sandals but most were barefoot. They shared a common look, they all had skin tanned in a<br />

perfect Coppertone hue with reddish straight hair, years later I would realize that, that hair color was<br />

the result of sun bleaching. The people all greeted us with blessing and waves.<br />

Angelo set up on a large table. He spread out his stainless steel medical tools and produced<br />

several jars of rubbing alcohol and little liquid filled plastic cartridges he placed near some large<br />

dental syringes. He moved an ordinary wood chair by the window and called the first patient in.<br />

The man sat in the chair, Angelo told my sister to stand behind him while he examined his<br />

mouth. Angelo asked him his age and if he could get to town for more dental work. The man said<br />

yes and Angelo proceeded to fill several cavities with temporary fillings, as Rosa held the man‘s head<br />

100


steady with both her hands and her elbows pressed against her stomach. My job was to wash the<br />

dental tools. I did this by holding them out over the window ledge and pouring rainwater on them.<br />

Then I immersed the tools in a bucket of alcohol for a minute making them ready for the next<br />

patient. Whenever I would get a chance, I would wipe some alcohol on the insect bites on my arms<br />

and legs.<br />

This went on patient after patient. The only difference was that if the patient said no, that<br />

they would not be able to go to town for more dental treatment, Angelo would pull out the damaged<br />

teeth. This is when Rosa and I learned to insert the plastic cartridge containing Novocain into a<br />

syringe. We took turns holding the patients heads and I remember one man who was very happy to<br />

lose his four upper front teeth.<br />

This was a charity Angelo did for the people of the village, strange my uncle, the great<br />

doctor, did none. He spent all day hidden away with his wife in some place at the beach.<br />

The people brought food and even glass bottles of hot Coca-Cola. For this my sister and I<br />

were grateful because we got first pick and were able to eat just enough that we weren‘t hungry and<br />

didn‘t have to eat at the house. We helped every day Angelo opened up. He kept working even after<br />

he ran out of Novocain cartridges. The people didn‘t mind having their teeth pulled with no<br />

anesthetic. It‘s funny. I don‘t remember hearing any of the patients screaming out from the pain.<br />

Every day after work Rosa and I went to the beach. It was the only way we could really wash<br />

all the blood from our hands and sometimes our t –shirts and besides we didn‘t have anything else<br />

to do. Rosa took pictures, saving her film for only the very special shots. In two years she became<br />

the photographer for her high school yearbook using a Leica camera my father‘s other older brother<br />

the merchant marine, sent us. He sent us gifts from all over the world- musical dolls from Japan<br />

dressed in kimonos and binoculars from Germany were among the best. Its funny our uncle, the<br />

doctor being as rich as he was never sent us a thing, not even a Christmas card. On the beach, I<br />

collected exotic tropical seashells in an empty Novocain cartridge box I kept. Later that summer, in<br />

Cali my aunt helped me properly wash the sand from them and she gave me pretty wooden cigar<br />

boxes to keep them.<br />

It was on one such afternoon that we were on the beach. We were in the water, Rosa left to<br />

go back to the house. I don‘t remember why. Since the first day, we never really went down to the<br />

beach with any of the others. The beach was long and the shore curved at many places creating<br />

several different places they could go. We always went in a basic straight line from the house down<br />

to the water. I never stayed out by myself. I didn‘t want to be alone, not that I was afraid, but I just<br />

didn‘t want to be alone. Ever since that first day I stayed away from going in too far when the<br />

waves were high, but that day there were no large waves. I waded in until the water reached my<br />

armpits. I splashed around a bit wetting my hair as I gradually felt the pull of the water trying to<br />

drag me in deeper. I tried to walk. The water pulled me back. I took a couple of steps. The water<br />

pulled me back again. The force of the water made it impossible for me to move. My feet were<br />

sinking into the sand. I was stuck. I was afraid to lift one leg to take a step for fear that I would lose<br />

my balance and be dragged out into the water. So, there I stood with my feet about ankle deep in<br />

the sand. I didn‘t scream. Who would hear me The crabs on the sand or maybe the cow over on<br />

the horizon I panicked on the inside. I froze on the outside. I had remembered a scene from an<br />

old Tarzan movie in which some dumb woman is trapped in quick sand and Tarzan tells her not to<br />

struggle because struggling only makes a person sink and die faster.<br />

The water was very strong and the effort to hold myself up was making me tired. I was<br />

about to give up and try to move when I saw Angelo walking down towards the water. I thought I<br />

was hallucinating, had I prayed in my desperation. I can‘t remember, but I probably did. He did<br />

appear Christ like with his seventies long hair and his mustache and beard that had grown out on<br />

this vacation. I had doubts that it was really him.<br />

101


―Angelo,‖ I called out. ―I‘m stuck; I can‘t move the water is pulling me in.‖<br />

He carefully waded in the water and very easily grabbed both my hands and pulled me out.<br />

When I reached the dry sand, I cried. I don‘t think I was strong enough to get out of the water by<br />

myself. To this day, I am convinced that I would have drowned if he hadn‘t come to the beach when<br />

he did.<br />

During the remaining days of our trip to the beach, Rosa and I survived the sun, the insect<br />

bites and the other children putting three-inch dead beetles under our pillows.<br />

Once back in Cali our aunts saw us, they were horrified to see our burnt and peeling skin<br />

and all the weight I had lost. We had been out in the sun for fourteen days without any sunscreen at<br />

all. That night when I showered for the first time in fourteen days and put on a proper nightgown<br />

on to sleep my aunt saw my legs, which were covered in bug bites, some old and scabbed over and<br />

some fresh still bleeding from where I had scratched. The bite marks were of different sizes and<br />

colors, red to purplish black. I remember that on my right leg I counted twenty-seven in a line as if<br />

the mosquitoes had a dinner party in which I was the main course. She hurriedly called my other<br />

aunt. I doubted that they called my father in New York, because in 1975 my family only made an<br />

international phone call if someone had died. My other aunt came over and they cleaned them and<br />

covered the worst ones with band aides. My sister hadn‘t been bitten as much as I had been, but<br />

they checked<br />

Later that fall my uncle and his wife sent my father a nasty letter telling them how lazy and<br />

sloppy we were. I guess they were talking about the fact that we didn‘t wash dishes and then refused<br />

to take a rainwater shower on the back porch the day we were leaving to return to the city. What<br />

was the point We weren‘t allowed to shower for fourteen days. What was one more day and we<br />

weren‘t about to go naked in the back of the house. The other children had played enough pranks<br />

on us we weren‘t going to take any chances. On the other hand, maybe they were talking about all<br />

the blood spots my mosquito bites left on their sheets. My mother cursed them out and my father<br />

too for leaving us with him.<br />

I was angry, hurt and embarrassed, so started to write a letter to my uncle to tell him what a<br />

bad uncle he was and maybe use some of my mother‘s curses, as well. I was going to ask, why did<br />

he take two city kids out to the jungle, not watch us, tell us about riptides or make sure we ate and<br />

had protection from the bugs and the sun. My hand was shaking as I wrote the first few angry words<br />

on the page.<br />

102


Lisa Rogal<br />

SO MANY THINGS<br />

―You ever heard of Necrotizing Fasciitis‖ Kat asked me over the Coke-bottle bong. I hadn‘t.<br />

―That's flesh eating bacteria. It literally eats your flesh, eats you alive. I mean, that's some<br />

science fiction shit. But it's real. I heard about this girl our age, had a cut on her foot and caught it<br />

dancing barefoot in the grass at a wedding.‖<br />

I ran my finger along the rim of my water glass and began to tune her out.<br />

―– had to remove the whole leg. She didn‘t even have time to call her parents. And she was<br />

one of the lucky ones. Get that shit on your face or stomach and you‘re screwed.‖<br />

―What‘s it called‖<br />

―Necrotizing Fasciitis. God, just the name. And, I mean, that‘s a rare one, but just that it‘s out<br />

there.‖ She let out a smoky breath. ―Just talking about it.‖<br />

―Terrible.‖<br />

―My heart feels funny. Do you ever get that, those heart pains I get worried I‘m having a<br />

heart attack.‖<br />

―You won‘t, you‘re way too young for that. I mean, people our age don‘t really get heart<br />

attacks.‖<br />

―I guess not,‖ she said, croaking to hold the smoke inside. ―But it‘s possible. There are just<br />

so many things. I‘m always shocked something doesn‘t happen.‖ The cloud poured from her lips,<br />

settling between us like fog.<br />

―When I was in college,‖ I said, taking the bong from her, ―the end of my senior year, I<br />

started to get these arm pains.‖<br />

―What kind of arm pains‖<br />

―It was like electricity running down my arm.‖ I listened to the bubbles breaking in the<br />

reservoir as I sucked.<br />

―Yeah‖<br />

―Sometimes I would have to stop what I was doing and just concentrate on breathing until<br />

they went away. Everyone was getting fed up with me always panicking that I was having a stroke or<br />

something. So, I went to the doctor and she did a whole exam and told me I was fine.‖<br />

―Oh.‖ She gestured for me to pass.<br />

―But of course I wasn‘t convinced. I was sure she had missed something. So I went to<br />

another doctor to get a second opinion. My boyfriend thought I was crazy. He told me he thought I<br />

wasn‘t that kind of girl.‖<br />

―My friend‘s boyfriend broke up with her when she thought she had breast cancer. She<br />

wouldn‘t go to the doctor because she was too afraid of the diagnosis and he got sick of trying to<br />

make her go so he left. Then it turned out she actually did have a lump. A benign lump. But she had<br />

to have it removed and he came to visit her and all he could say was ‗I told you you didn‘t have<br />

cancer.‘ Can you believe that‖<br />

―No. I mean, no, he didn‘t break up with me. I think he was kind of relieved actually –that I<br />

was that kind of girl. It was all very amusing to him.‖<br />

―Huh, yea,‖ she said without exhaling.<br />

―So, I got the second opinion and this time I had her do a full neurological work up and<br />

everything. She said I could even order cat scans if I wanted but I thought maybe that was taking it<br />

too far.‖<br />

―Oh, I would‘ve had the cat scans. The x-rays, EKGs, anything they could think of.‖ Kat<br />

took the empty lighter into the kitchen alcove.<br />

103


―You know what she said it was Stress pains.‖<br />

―Well, of course you‘re stressed,‖ she yelled from behind a cabinet. ―You‘re having a stroke<br />

for God‘s sake!‖<br />

―The muscles in my neck were so tight from stress that they were pinching my ulnar nerve<br />

and that was the pain in my arms. Nerve pain. It‘s really a terrible pain, I don‘t know how these<br />

Lupus people live with it.‖<br />

―Oh, I know. Lupus is horrible.‖ She sat down and lit up. ―They say it can come on at any<br />

age, a flare up, like Crohn‘s Disease. Jesus, don‘t even get me started on Crohn‘s!‖<br />

―Or schizophrenia,‖ I added. ―That doesn‘t start till your twenties, and then just like that.<br />

Like a switch in your brain. One minute you‘re normal –‖<br />

―You‘d tell me if I was crazy right Because they say crazy people never know they‘re crazy.‖<br />

―Of course I‘d tell you.‖ I buried my face in a tube of smoke.<br />

―Good. I would tell you too.‖<br />

_ _ _<br />

Once the bong was kicked I slipped into the hallway and bumped into Kat‘s neighbor who<br />

smiled at me from behind his wire-rimmed glasses.<br />

―I‘m Joe,‖ he said in the elevator, but I already knew his name. Kat had told me about him.<br />

―I know,‖ I said.<br />

He smiled like he‘d missed the joke.<br />

We said goodbye at the door but then we both turned right. I sped up to create some<br />

distance. It was awkward for a few blocks until he ran up next to me.<br />

―Are you front following me‖ He asked.<br />

―What‖<br />

―You‘re front following me. It‘s when you follow someone who‘s behind you so it doesn‘t<br />

look suspicious.‖<br />

―How do you follow someone who‘s behind you‖<br />

―You just sense where they are, body heat and motion and stuff.‖<br />

―What if they turn‖<br />

―A good front follower can anticipate a turn.‖<br />

―Is this something you do on a regular basis‖<br />

―I don‘t do it. I just know about it. You were the one doing it.‖<br />

―Well, I‘ve never heard of it so I doubt I was doing it. I didn‘t even know you were behind<br />

me,‖ I lied.<br />

He laughed a bit too hard.―Where are you headed this evening‖<br />

―The grocery store,‖ I admitted.<br />

―Me too.‖<br />

―So, you‘re a liar‖<br />

He laughed again. His throat exposed looked like a dancer‘s spine.<br />

We walked down the aisles together in silence. I felt like I should be making conversation<br />

but I was buzzed and wanted to concentrate on my grocery list. I could hear a florescent bulb<br />

flickering and I started to wish Joe hadn‘t come.<br />

―Yum pickles,‖ he said. He was examining everything I put in my cart. It was weird.<br />

―I prefer Oreos,‖ he said when he saw me considering a package of Chips Ahoy. He didn‘t<br />

seem to be doing much shopping.<br />

―You don‘t seem to be doing much shopping,‖ I said.<br />

―No, just had to pick up a couple of things.‖ He reached for a pack of Charmin and grinned.<br />

In the cereal aisle I read the nutrition facts on a box of Smart Start. He came up behind me<br />

and read over my shoulder. I wished he would just grab my tits or something but he had his hands<br />

104


ehind his back like a school teacher.<br />

―Pan-to-then-ate. Hmm. Riboflavin. That sounds good.‖ He opened a box of Lucky Charms<br />

and began eating the marshmallows.<br />

―What are you doing‖<br />

―What‖ His mouth was full of blue moons.<br />

―You haven‘t bought those yet. You opened them.‖<br />

―So I‘m gonna buy them. They‘re as good as bought.‖<br />

―What if you change your mind‖<br />

―Well.‖ He swallowed. ―I no longer have that option, do I‖<br />

We rang up our groceries in different lines. When he caught up with me at the door he took<br />

my bags. Once we got outside it looked like he was struggling, so I took one back.<br />

―Now what‖ He asked.<br />

―I need to get these groceries home.‖<br />

―Okay, mine can wait.‖<br />

We stood there for a minute staring at each other.<br />

―Come on,‖ I said finally and he followed me home.<br />

In the kitchen I put away the milk and other perishables. He could practically touch me from<br />

where he stood in the doorway. His hand kept brushing mine, but I continued with my task.<br />

Eventually he squeezed himself in behind me. He massaged my hips. His breath was on my neck. I<br />

was trying to decide what to do so I just stared at the cup of yogurt in my hand. His arms tightened<br />

around me.<br />

―This is back hugging,‖ he said. I turned around and kissed him so he‘d shut up. He lifted<br />

my shirt off but gave up on my bra. My back was cold from the open refrigerator.<br />

―The bedroom‖ He asked turning and walking me backwards.<br />

―First door.‖ He smiled against my mouth.<br />

We didn‘t go for very long but I came so it was okay. Afterwards we lay on my comforter<br />

with most of our clothes still on. I looked over at his bare stomach. He was pale and skinny, but in a<br />

good way. He slipped his arm out from under my back and pulled off the condom.<br />

―You got any toilet paper or tissues‖ he yelled from the bathroom.<br />

―In the grocery bags, in the kitchen.‖ He hobbled out from the bathroom with his jeans<br />

around his ankles. He was smiling and panting, hopping back and forth on his feet until he reached<br />

the bedroom door. I was still laughing when he came back with the toilet paper and cleaned himself<br />

off.<br />

It was four in the morning when I woke up. Joe was sleeping face down on the mattress, one<br />

arm hooked over my throat. I couldn‘t breathe. I sat up. My chest hurt. I tried to breathe but it was<br />

too shallow. I sounded like I was about to sneeze but the sneeze wouldn‘t come out. I held my<br />

breath. I told myself I was going to breathe in slowly. The air would come. I inhaled carefully<br />

through my nostrils. My heart beat felt funny though. I went to the computer and typed in ―funny<br />

heart beat + shallow breathing.‖ 10,000 hits all mentioning heart arrhythmia.<br />

―Fuck.‖<br />

―Again‖ I heard from the darkness of the bed. ―What are you doing over there‖<br />

―Just checking something.‖<br />

―What‖<br />

―Nothing. Just something.‖<br />

―What could you possibly need to check at four in the morning with a half-naked man in<br />

your bed‖<br />

I heard him jump off the bed and hobble towards me. Then I saw his blue body in the light<br />

of the computer screen. I clicked away from the heart attack page.<br />

105


―Aw, come on. I wanna know. What was it Were you checking how many convicted<br />

pedophiles live in your neighborhood‖<br />

―What‖<br />

―That‘s what I do when I can‘t sleep.‖<br />

―Well, that‘s strange.‖<br />

―Okay, so you were looking at porn. It‘s okay, I can take it.‖<br />

―It wasn‘t porn.‖<br />

―It was something really freaky wasn‘t it‖<br />

―What No, it was nothing like that.‖ I was short of breath again.<br />

―Nothing to be embarrassed about. I like freaks. What was it Bondage Erotic<br />

asphyxiation Come on tell me. I promise you won‘t surprise me. Old men fucking teenage girls<br />

MILFs Gang-bangs‖<br />

I really couldn‘t breathe now. ―Joe. Stop it.‖ He kept listing things. ―I can‘t. Breathe.‖<br />

―What‘s wrong‖<br />

―I can‘t. Breathe.‖<br />

―Um…just breathe.‖<br />

―I can‘t!‖ I sucked in a ragged breath.<br />

―There you go. You‘re alright.‖ He patted my back.<br />

―No, I‘m not. I think. I‘m having a heart attack.‖<br />

I was beginning to hate his laugh.<br />

―I‘m serious!‖<br />

―Okay, you aren‘t having a heart attack. Just relax.‖<br />

―I can‘t! Don‘t you understand‖<br />

―Just calm down. You‘re fine.‖ He lowered his voice. ―Come back to bed.‖<br />

―I‘m having a heart attack and you. Want to have sex You should be. Calling an ambulance.<br />

Or something.‖<br />

―If you have the energy to fight with me then you aren‘t having a heart attack.‖<br />

―Man, are you. Gonna feel bad. At my funeral.‖<br />

Laughter.<br />

―Forget it, okay Just go back to bed, Joe.‖<br />

He slid on the mattress and bunched my pillow under his head. I waited for him to fall<br />

asleep before turning back to the computer screen. Then, knowing she‘d be awake, I ―G-chatted‖<br />

Kat:<br />

Me: I think I‟m having a heart attack.<br />

Kat: What are your symptoms<br />

Me: Short of breath, chest pain, etc<br />

Kat: Left arm pain<br />

Me: Not yet.<br />

Kat: Time frame<br />

Me: 15mins may b<br />

Kat: Any progression of symptoms<br />

Me: I don‟t know. don‟t think so. The chest pain has been pretty constant. Breathing was bad for awhile but<br />

seems more normal now.<br />

I was careful not to mention Joe.<br />

Kat: Let‟s see. Could be an arrhythmia. Maybe you have a murmur, or Mitro-valve Prolapse.<br />

Me: Don‟t think so. I was thinking heart attack.<br />

106


Kat: Maybe you should go 2 ER<br />

Me: I dunno. I might just be freaking myself out.<br />

Kat: Up to you.<br />

Might not wanna risk it tho.<br />

Me: Yea, I think I‟m okay now. Chest feels better.<br />

Kat: k<br />

Me: May b I‟ll feel better if I lie down<br />

Kat: Could b<br />

What if something happens while you‟re sleeping<br />

Me: Yea, I dunno. Don‟t wanna go 2 ER so late.<br />

Kat: up to you. Just worry about you being alone.<br />

Me: I‟m ok. Thanks. Gonna try to sleep. Call u soon.<br />

I shut my computer and got back in bed. When I turned on my side, Joe pressed his boner<br />

into the small of my back.<br />

―Feelin‘ better‖<br />

―I‘m alright. Kind of tired though.‖<br />

―No more heart attack‖ He was kissing my neck.<br />

―Nope. All over now. It was something though: sirens, doctors, they hit me with those<br />

shock paddles. You slept through it.‖<br />

―I‘m a heavy sleeper.‖ He was pulling my shorts down with one hand. I was on the verge of<br />

pushing him away but instead I lifted my hips.<br />

107


WILD GIRLS<br />

Julie, Ben and Sarah are playing Wild Girls for the last time with their cousin Catherine. Since they<br />

don‘t know it‘s the last time, they play it as always, with no beginning or end.<br />

Wild Girls are girls without parents who live apart from society, swing on a large rope across<br />

a swamp (a dog leash tied to the monkey bars) in order to escape lion attacks, and eat mostly pine<br />

cones stewed in water.<br />

Julie, being the oldest, is the leader of the Wild Girls. She calls herself Lakota and her job is<br />

lookout and leading expeditions. During lookout, while the other girls do chores or make food, Julie<br />

sits in the top of the oak trees and spies on approaching enemies. Catherine, Fraggle, is responsible<br />

for scavenging for food and cooking. She is the head chef and tells Ben and Sarah what to add to the<br />

stew.<br />

Ben makes everyone call him Connie. Though his father tells him that he might as well move<br />

to Vegas and wear leopard-print leggings, he insists on the name. He is usually not allowed to play<br />

because Wild Girls live apart from men and their influences. But when Catherine needs an extra hand<br />

she hires him as a dishwasher in exchange for letting him swing on the rope. Sarah, known in the<br />

tree house as Billy, finds this particularly frustrating. ―Wild Girls are not supposed to help men.<br />

When have men ever helped Wild Girls‖<br />

―It‘s okay,‖ Julie calls from her perch. ―Ben is Connie today. He‘s gonna give us a hand and<br />

then go back to his people. And anyway if they mount an attack we can always use him as a<br />

bargaining chip.‖<br />

Julie jumps down from her lookout to get a drink of water. She doesn‘t notice Catherine<br />

running after her.<br />

She finds Aunt Norah in the kitchen and asks for a glass. Then she watches her aunt as she<br />

attempts to pour the water. Her fingers seem too soft and Julie is not surprised when she drops the<br />

glass. Bending down to pick up the pieces, Aunt Norah slices her finger open. Julie slides from her<br />

bar stool to help her clean up. Norah grabs her niece by the wrist forcefully. "Do not touch this!" she<br />

shouts. Her breath stings and Julie has to hold back the tears forming at the corners of her eyes.<br />

Catherine is sitting at the table with a coloring book.<br />

Aunt Norah stands up and steadies herself against the breakfast bar. She holds her bloody<br />

finger in the air like she‘s going to say something profound. A red drop falls onto the counter.<br />

Catherine does not look up from her book. She is making a dark blue dog and has colored it in so<br />

precisely that it looks like paint. "Catherine," Julie whispers, but her cousin doesn‘t respond. Julie<br />

stares at the red dot on the counter, afraid to move her eyes.<br />

―You girls go outside," Aunt Norah says to the ceiling. She is swaying slightly as Julie looks<br />

up at her. Neither of the girls moves. Aunt Norah starts for the kitchen door and without looking<br />

back says, "Now!" Catherine jumps up from her chair, taking the blue crayon with her into the yard.<br />

Julie stands there staring at the blood soaking into the countertop as the screen door and the<br />

bedroom door above her slam shut. She can't find a napkin so she wipes the red dot away with the<br />

edge of a paper plate. Outside she finds Catherine in the tree house, writing her name in blue on the<br />

far wall.<br />

"Wild Girls don't have crayons," Julie says and Catherine immediately throws the crayon away<br />

and begins stirring the pot of soggy pine cones. "I caught a baby mountain cat today," says<br />

Catherine. "So we'll have meat tonight too.‖<br />

"A baby" says Julie and squints at Catherine.<br />

"Normally I wouldn't kill a baby, but we have to get our protein. And besides, it looked like<br />

the mother abandoned it. It wouldn't have survived alone."<br />

"Might have to close the shutters tonight." Julie says, looking out the tree house window.<br />

108


Then she hears the crash: a sound like glass shattering followed by a deep noise that reminds her of<br />

her father at Grandpa Mac‘s funeral. Catherine looks up and then flicks something off the edge of<br />

the tree house. Ben and Sarah continue picking strawberries.<br />

―Did you hear that‖ Julie says. Catherine doesn‘t answer. Julie climbs down the ladder<br />

which is almost entirely missing except for two rungs. ―What about dinner‖ Catherine yells after<br />

her, but she is already at the screen door.<br />

When she reaches the top of the stairs she hesitates. She holds her breath, afraid to make a<br />

noise. For a moment, Julie looks at her hand on the banister and lets her vision blur. She wishes she<br />

had glasses made of kaleidoscopes, so things could look hazy forever.<br />

Aunt Norah is on the bathmat, sobbing, holding a bloody hand in the air. The shards of<br />

glass from the mirror surround her like small, angular lakes.<br />

Julie dials nine-one-one and explains to the operator that her aunt has had an accident with<br />

the bathroom mirror. After replacing the receiver, she steps behind the curtains and watches the<br />

yard. Catherine is burying something in the dirt as Ben and Sarah dance behind her. After patting<br />

down the mound, Catherine remains on her knees and bows her head for a moment before<br />

returning to the game.<br />

109


Desiree Rucker<br />

TEN TO LIFE<br />

The sun slipped through the bars of his window, across the room and over Jamel‘s bed, burning<br />

through the veil of sleep. Jamel opened his eyes, He couldn‘t believe it—he was finally ten. He<br />

threw off his covers and sat up in bed. His sister Dawn slept in the twin bed next to his. She<br />

turned, and he thought she was awake, perhaps ready to start the celebration. But she was still<br />

asleep, her thumb stuck between her upturned lips, a trickle of dried spit on each side of her mouth.<br />

He thought about waking her up but decided against it. He needed this time to think about his day<br />

and the plans for his life. He sat for a moment and decided he should get up and face the world—<br />

like a man. It was already 9:00 AM, and he heard his mother in the kitchen.<br />

―Happy birthday, J,‖ his mother said without turning around from the stove. She was in her<br />

housedress, which meant she was tired or had lady issues. If she was in a good mood, she would<br />

have on shorts that were a little too tight if you asked him, but she looked good. Worry kept her<br />

thin.<br />

―You remembered. Thank you,‖ he said, pulling the wrapping paper off an action figure that<br />

sat at his place at the table.<br />

―Do I remember I was there. You want some pancakes and bacon for your birthday‖<br />

―Yeah, and some Lucky Charms, too,‖ Jamel said, making the action figure dance.<br />

―Oh, Mike ate them last night. I‘m sorry, Baby.‖<br />

Did she say Mike ate his Lucky Charms ―The whole damn box‖<br />

―Watch your mouth. You only ten, not a hundred. That is when you can curse in my<br />

house.‖<br />

Add that to the list of items he was going to kick Mike‗s ass about in another year or two.<br />

Ugly, big, stink feet, taking my Mamma money, sleeping on my couch when I come home from<br />

school so we can‘t play Nintendo; need to get the fuck out of my house, Mike.<br />

His mother placed in front of him a plate with two strips of crispy bacon, next to two<br />

banana pancakes drowned in syrup and a glass of Mountain Dew. Jamel got up and hugged her at<br />

the stove. ―Thanks for keeping me. Thanks for my birthday breakfast.‖<br />

―What you know about me keeping you Just eat,‖ she said, patting him on his head.<br />

He knew from his mother‘s sister, Alma, that his mother had made an important decision last<br />

year, one that involved crying for days before and after. Alma had come to stay with them the week<br />

of the decision and had confided to Jamel, which had made him feel like the man of the house.<br />

For a while his mamma spent more time with Jamel and Dawn when they came home from<br />

school, making special dinners and not going to play cards or across the avenue to the bar. Jamel<br />

liked that Mike wasn‘t there pretending to be in charge. Jamel didn‘t understand the whole story<br />

until his friend Ray told him that he heard that Jamel‘s mother had got rid of the baby, and Jamel<br />

asked, ―Like giving it up for adoption‖ and Ray called him stupid and said, ―No, she killed it. But<br />

it really wasn‘t a real baby, not really.‖ Jamel still didn‘t understand how it could be a baby but not a<br />

real baby, but he knew she stopped throwing up and was her old self again a few weeks later. Ray<br />

said a couple of girls he messed with had done it, but Jamel knew he was lying. Ray lied about so<br />

much stuff.<br />

Dawn shuffled out to the kitchen and plopped into a chair. She was two years younger than<br />

Jamel, but he knew he would have to tell her what day today was, and she still wouldn‘t understand<br />

the importance of this day. She would like the cake, though. His mother made the best cakes; her<br />

secret was she used two cans of frosting. The social worker had explained to him that Dawn was<br />

110


developmentally delayed. The neighborhood kids called her Retardo, and his grandmother called<br />

her a crack baby.<br />

He had been counting down to this day for 365 days, marking off a calendar his mother got<br />

from the dry cleaner that featured Asian women. His mother had yelled at him when he took it out<br />

the trash.<br />

―What you want to look at those Chinese women all year for<br />

―I just want the calendar,‖ he had said, retrieving it from the trash like it was buried treasure.<br />

It was last year, on this date, August 11, when he saw his Uncle Kev and his crew in the<br />

playground. Kev was his dead father‘s youngest brother. He was with a group of guys all wearing<br />

the same uniform—white wife beaters and baggy jeans. From a distance, as they loped across the<br />

playground, pants in various stages of gravity-defying freefall, they looked like a gang of toddlers in<br />

too-big outfits, The pavement seemed to exhale heat, and the wind held its breath, and everything<br />

seemed tense, tight, and about to combust.<br />

Jamel ran over to the gang. Breathing heavily, he fell in step with his uncle‘s clique. He<br />

walked with them a good while before they realized they had a stowaway.<br />

―Yo, little man thinks he down with us,‖ a short, tatted guy said, circling Jamel.<br />

―That there‘s my nephew. Jamel, what you want‖ Kev asked, appearing in a parting of the<br />

guys.<br />

―Nuthin‘. I‘m just hanging with you,‖ he said, trying to strike a determined pose.<br />

―I see that, but where you s‘posed to be‖ Kev asked, anger rising in his voice.<br />

―Come on, Uncle Kev. It‘s my birthday.‖<br />

―Happy Birthday. How old are you‖<br />

―I‘m nine.‖<br />

―Tell you what; come back when you‘re ten.‖ Kev‘s friends fell out laughing.<br />

Jamel felt the anger rise inside his head, and for a moment the world went all red. Then he<br />

felt a pounding in his head, not rhythmic like the neighbor‘s salsa music but a four-one-three-fivetwo<br />

syncopation that made him feel wobbly and confused. It was a minute that seemed longer to<br />

him, but when the air began to fill his concave chest again, and he opened his eyes, his uncle was<br />

standing there holding a twenty-dollar bill.<br />

―You want it or not Go get some candy or something.‖<br />

Jamel grabbed the bill and stuffed it in his pocket. ―Thanks,‖ he said, whirling around and at<br />

the same time running to catch the red light right before it blinked green. Jamel dashed in front of a<br />

car, causing the driver to brake suddenly and swear out the window, but Jamel was already running<br />

toward his friends on the basketball court. He would not tell them about his money; he did not<br />

want to end up buying everyone something, nor did he want them to think that he had it like that.<br />

There would be a fight. Someone‘s feelings were always hurt, and there was always a fight. Jamal<br />

put his hand in this pocket and held the money in his fist.<br />

He felt proud of his uncle and the fact that he had money and friends and respect in the<br />

neighborhood. That was a year ago. Since then Jamel had made a point of running into Kev as much<br />

as possible. Kev would give him a little money or send him to the store and reward him, so it didn‘t<br />

seem like he was begging. He reminded Kev last week that today was his birthday, and Kev<br />

promised to take him shopping today. Now that he was ten, he would have to start taking life more<br />

seriously. He had to make sure his mother and Dawn were taken care of. He needed to talk to Kev<br />

about a job after school or something like that. He heard the knocking at the door when he slipped<br />

his polo shirt over his head. As his head emerged from the dark softness of the well-worn cotton,<br />

he heard his Uncle Kev‘s voice. He ran out into the living room and forgot himself when he<br />

111


wrapped his arms around Kev‘s torso and hugged him. He loved how Uncle Kev smelled. He<br />

smelled like he looked—expensive and strong.<br />

―You remembered,‖ Jamel said, his voice cracking a little.<br />

Kev pushed him off. ―Of course, I remembered.‖<br />

Dawn ambled over, smiling, dragging a wild haired doll. ―Hi, Cutie,‖ Kev said, patting her<br />

head.<br />

―Where you taking him‖ Jamel‘s mother asked, smoothing her housedress.<br />

―I got a big day planned. We getting some gear at the mall, then over to my mom‘s house in<br />

Jersey. Couple of girls is going to bring my kids to the crib. We gonna barbecue. Can J stay over‖<br />

Jamel was jumping up and down with excitement.<br />

―Sure, if he wants to,‖ Jamel‘s mother said.<br />

―Yeah, I want to,‖ Jamel said nodding his head vigorously. Jamel ran out of the room and<br />

came back with his new action figure, his toothbrush and a clean T-shirt and briefs. He put them all<br />

in a plastic Key Food bag.<br />

―Jamel, you look so much like Jason, Man. Don‘t he‖ Kev asked, pulling Jamel into a<br />

headlock and turning his face up for his mother to inspect.<br />

―Spittin‘ image. Didn‘t need to go on Maury about him,‖ Jamel‘s mother laughed, smiling<br />

down at Dawn, who was twisting her housedress. ―I just want him to grow up and be a good man.<br />

No jail, no drugs. No disrespect, but you know what I mean‖<br />

―I feel you. I‘m not gonna let these streets get J,‖ Kevin said.<br />

―Can we go I have been waiting for like, forever,‖ Jamel said, turning the knob, opening<br />

the door.<br />

―Don‘t I get a kiss goodbye‖ Jamel‘s mother asked, now holding Dawn in her arms. He<br />

kissed his mother and Dawn.<br />

Before going out the door, Jamel turned. ―Don‘t worry, Mamma. I‘ll remember to bring<br />

you some barbecue.‖<br />

112


P. J. Salber<br />

COIN FOR CS<br />

You be yourself and I‘ll be me,<br />

although like heads and tails in silver we<br />

share one coin: love‘s perfect circled currency.<br />

Let‘s spend ourselves while others count<br />

and hoard some counterfeited love,<br />

who, seeing our expenses mount<br />

tell us, in common sense, to save.<br />

Our newly-minted love instead<br />

grows greater in its being spent.<br />

And if this gentle commerce should deface<br />

our high relief to drabbest commonplace,<br />

we‘ll keep a private value and a grace<br />

and know that our two hearts<br />

like two sides of a coin can never be apart.<br />

113


Two Sonnets: Epithalamia for August First<br />

Morning brings a wind shift.<br />

Adrift, the long ship hulls an open sea<br />

run out between the gull-white cliffs.<br />

You waken from a girlhood reverie and<br />

pale; the moon has filled and fallen<br />

beyond cold arcs of ocean.<br />

In oaken planks, the salt spume carves<br />

runes to Freya‘s honor.<br />

Kinfolk, waving, line the black wharves<br />

even as the sail fills, boasting<br />

loudly the bridegroom‘s name.<br />

Amidships, turn your Viking eyes away:<br />

nothing in the fair wind or following sea<br />

distracts you from the happiness to be.<br />

***<br />

Merchants bright with foreign treasure<br />

implore the saints protect their venture<br />

coursing the Atlantic run.<br />

Hope is a warehouse in the Spanish sun.<br />

A hurricane impossible to measure<br />

engulfs the fragile arts of men;<br />

loud prayers are offered up again.<br />

So, different prayers are answered to the same effect;<br />

a splice-bent sailor‘s plea to save his neck<br />

leaves less to God‘s discretion than the gold<br />

caulked within this galleon‘s hold.<br />

Echoes of the sea-swept cries<br />

dim the memory of her eyes,<br />

―O save me just to see them once again!‖<br />

114


Micah Savaglio<br />

A VACATION WITHOUT STRAWS<br />

A FIRE<br />

Ted C. was young. She was old. He had had to find a way to get rid of her. The flames reflected as<br />

tiny suns across his brow. He poked at the hardened dung with his fishing rod. He loved the<br />

wilderness, its majesty. He once spotted a coyote with a fish in its jaws, up to its neck in the brook.<br />

A FINAL ORDER<br />

The bodies were propped up to look like they were playing cards. He needed the appearance of<br />

company.<br />

THE CAMPER<br />

Three months prior, he had noticed a leak. The gas line connected to the adjacent Winnebago.<br />

MALFUNCTION<br />

Ted C. was a good and faithful writer. He documented ―the good parts‖ every day on his laptop:<br />

toothpick in his mouth, a pitcher of lemon water at hand. His X button, ever since he loaned the<br />

computer to his son, would stick.<br />

A FLICK OF A BLUNT<br />

Ted had a penchant for extravagance when showing lovers around the Big Apple. Helen R.<br />

supposed Ted to be richer than he was and married him, during his glory days, in a small Roman<br />

Catholic ceremony in Brooklyn. Picture him now, outside of the chapel.<br />

THE RELATIONSHIP<br />

Hot over heavy. A side of boredom and nonsense.<br />

THE WEDDING<br />

Charlie told him about the five acres up north. Ted was welcome to go alone or with his wife. The<br />

padlocked gate was a red herring for a gravel pathway half a mile up. Ted did not hunt, nor had he<br />

ever fired a gun.<br />

EX<br />

Smoke orbited the circumference of Ted‘s head. He opened his laptop and set to writing. He paused<br />

to watch a series of X‘s skate across the screen.<br />

115


DOVES AND MARTYRS<br />

Cast of characters<br />

FRITZ KINZELMAN: A heavy-set Caucasian male in his mid-fifties. He wears a worn plaid shirt<br />

and rubber boots.<br />

DR. EMAMI ABED: A fit Indian male in his mid-fifties. He wears a long white coat. His hair is<br />

feathered back.<br />

LYDIA: A multiracial female in her mid-twenties. She wears khaki pants and a Chelsea soccer jersey.<br />

Doctor’s office. The Present. Albany, New York. Spring.<br />

Morning.<br />

The room has a cozy, homestyle vibe. Pictures of the doctor‟s daughters adorn the far wall.<br />

Lights come up on FRITZ KINZELMAN, who sits on one of those beds with the paper sheets, fully dressed.<br />

DR. EMAMI ABED enters the room. Unlike the archetypal doctor, he does not hold a clipboard. Instead, he<br />

carries a stuffed bear holding a big red heart. Upon seeing FRITZ, he turns his back.<br />

Emami.<br />

FRITZ<br />

Pause<br />

EMAMI<br />

We need to talk about something very important. Okay I want you to put on your big listening ears.<br />

This is what I‘ve been worried about since your seizure.<br />

Pause. EMAMI faces FRITZ.<br />

You do have cancer.<br />

Pause. EMAMI hands FRITZ the bear. FRITZ gazes at it.<br />

It‘s in the back of your head. Now, we can‘t take it out safely since the tumor‘s pushing on the<br />

surrounding tissue. So we‘re not left with many options. We‘re starting you on radiation on Monday.<br />

Pause<br />

I wish this were a dream.<br />

Pause<br />

116


Cancer.<br />

FRITZ<br />

Pause. FRITZ sets the bear on the bed.<br />

I won‘t do radiation.<br />

Yes, you will do radiation.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

I went through it once with my dad, and never again.<br />

How long have I known you<br />

Don‘t.<br />

I won‘t steer you wrong.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

How nice. When‘s the last time you brought the girls abroad<br />

Pause<br />

I say when‘s the last time you brought the girls abroad<br />

I suppose it‘s been years.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

Mm. You know I took the kids for our little tour this summer. They were in heaven. I‘ve been<br />

talking about it long enough.<br />

Fritz.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

France. We spent most the time in Bourges. It was picturesque. They‘ve got this big, looming gothic<br />

cathedral with these beautifully towering biblical scenes made of stained glass.<br />

Mm.<br />

Exactly. You and Cyn been to Bourges<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

117


Mm.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

And without question, the most breathtaking scene is called ―The Good and the Damned.‖<br />

EMAMI<br />

Listen to me. We‘re going to figure this all out.<br />

FRITZ<br />

Just at the top, you see the souls being weighed at the gates of Heaven by St. Peter. And in the<br />

middle you see a good soul sitting on God‘s lap. And on the right you see the bad souls being driven<br />

into the stomach of the beast.<br />

The Last Judgment.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

We‘re all given a small window of time. God only knows. Obviously, what matters is what we do<br />

with it.<br />

EMAMI<br />

I won‘t stand for it. Not for you. I‘ve seen patients add on ten years, twelve years. There‘s no telling<br />

how far it can get you.<br />

FRITZ grasps EMAMI by the arm, almost violently. He looks EMAMI straight in the eyes.<br />

I won‘t.<br />

FRITZ<br />

They continue to stare at each other. EMAMI releases himself and backs away.<br />

EMAMI<br />

Alright, Mr. Kinzelman. Now‘s the time to get in contact with the people you love. And anyone with<br />

whom you have unfinished business.<br />

Pause<br />

Didn‘t think you‘d give up so easy.<br />

Are you toying with me<br />

Me I‘m afraid you don‘t understand, frankly.<br />

FRITZ<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

118


Well, level with me. I don‘t understand.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

I know the score. You get sick, you vomit, you lose hair. One, two, three. So yeah, I could choose to<br />

go through with it. I might get through the suffering, the depression, the fatigue, the scarring. Fuck,<br />

the potential leukemia from the radiation. And I might come out the other side. It might be the only<br />

reasonable choice in the world and it might buy me some real time. But if you‘re asking me, I‘d<br />

rather die with hair.<br />

Hair Are you trying to get--<br />

What if I am<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

EMAMI<br />

Then you‘re a moron for pride. Sam and Manny.<br />

FRITZ<br />

This is my decision. I don‘t want them taking care of me.<br />

EMAMI laughs.<br />

How can you favor death<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

Sam and I have the same birthday. Did I tell you what that felt like<br />

EMAMI<br />

You said the world opened up and gave you its gift.<br />

FRITZ<br />

Everything changed when I had kids. You stop thinking about what feels good and you start<br />

thinking about how you‘re going to make their world better. Like dolphins. And when you look into<br />

their eyes you don‘t feel anxious about the future. You just feel… peaceful.<br />

You are a stubborn son of a bitch.<br />

EMAMI<br />

Pause.<br />

You know, when Lydia was a kid she was obsessed with Ancient Rome. She liked Nero, the<br />

Caesars—All of it.<br />

EMAMI laughs.<br />

119


She was so consumed she made a model of Rome out of wood and salt cubes. And I mean, with<br />

everything—the Colosseum, the Forum, the House of the Vestal Virgins—and she‘d follow the days<br />

of Ancient Roman history. So she was sitting on the floor of her room with her little gladiators and a<br />

military.<br />

LYDIA enters. She lights a match and gives the Roman salute. EMAMI mimics LYDIA.<br />

She burned Rome. She burned down the top floor of our house.<br />

FRITZ laughs.<br />

FRITZ<br />

I‘ve got a Rome story from the eighties. It ends with me and three other gladiators cramped inside<br />

this little shit Fiat, passing a joint.<br />

I love you.<br />

Emami.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

Pause<br />

A fucking bear<br />

FRITZ puts on his coat.<br />

What are we seeing<br />

The Ghost Writer.<br />

What‘s that<br />

It‘s the new Polanski.<br />

I feel like you two would get along.<br />

I don‘t know.<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

EMAMI<br />

FRITZ<br />

FRITZ and EMAMI exit. The bear is left on the bed.<br />

120


THE PARENTS OF AABB1<br />

The parents of AABB1 were growing old. It had been twenty years since they had been impregnated<br />

by the D3DD. In their weekdays, they would tend to the house—that is, AAAA4 would read the<br />

hundreds of papers available, and BBBB3 would bake or pray. On the weekends, they would attend<br />

meetings of religious and business organizations and (on Sundays) host the Board Of Care. Their<br />

members were religious, some, others not. The issues at stake pertained to the war and the war‘s<br />

combatants. Difficult decisions were made. Like how one could keep foremost the safety of their<br />

soldier children and oppose the war. There were financial issues. But in the past five months a new<br />

agenda had been creeping its way into the hearts of the noble members. It went something like this.<br />

―If we continue to support the war with our money and with our attention, I believe we will be<br />

destined for a bombing. I assure you, with my heavy heart, that our children will understand that if<br />

we continue to recognize the existence of combat, through our money and our prayers, the war will<br />

absolutely go on.‖ This was exactly the seed that was growing in their hearts. And so the newspapers<br />

stopped printing evidence of a war and the Board was disbanded. It was done. The parents of<br />

AABB1 did not pray for him anymore. BBBB3 tried new recipes in the kitchen, and they were all<br />

very good. AAAA4 continued to read the papers, without fear of rhetoric creeping in. All was calm<br />

for the time being. BBBB3 with her gingerbread and pecan-coconut desserts. AAAA4 with his<br />

sports sections and business news. He read voraciously. He even picked up a novel from a discount<br />

novelty stand. And he set to reading it. The novel, whose jacket had been ripped off, gave AAAA4 a<br />

familiar feeling. It told of a young man‘s experience on a fishing ship, catching lobsters and<br />

swordfish. The young man lived on deck for years, which weathered his face and hands. At the end<br />

of the third chapter, there was a storm. At the beginning of the fourth, the young man is<br />

shipwrecked, but has found a wife in his new place. The couple is in love, and soon desire their<br />

baby. They each memorize verses of their D3DD‘s manifesto, and begin approaching him, the way<br />

that one does, casually visiting the cafes and religious corners where he might be found. After many<br />

months, the young man builds the courage to ask the D3DD for his counseling (which means only<br />

one thing). The young man is very persuasive. The D3DD is happy to accept such a handsome<br />

couple, and they are soon granted seed for the fertilization. And what do you think happened to the<br />

happy family War came to their town, killing their D3DD, destroying the religious corners; it was<br />

the undoing of their home. The young man and his beautiful wife and their newborn chose to<br />

emigrate by ship, the only mode with which the young man felt confident. In the book, their ship<br />

did not sink, but their family was ruined by the jealousy and pride of their son. AAAA4 could not sit<br />

still anymore. It was a sign. He couldn‘t help but think of his own son. This book was about his son<br />

and he could not allow himself to read newspapers any longer. Bombs were in the air, any way he<br />

looked at it.<br />

121


Michael Sohn<br />

BRIEF POEMS<br />


under-<br />


wear<br />


sunders<br />


rare<br />


rear<br />

(thunder)<br />

122


hair<br />

on a g-<br />

string<br />

sing<br />

123


ox or<br />

or<br />

brief<br />

briar fire<br />

124


unmentionable<br />

slink<br />

ambles able<br />

(sable!)<br />

125


fly lie<br />

by leaf lie<br />

by life wry<br />

but label<br />

126


serious<br />

cloth<br />

loath to<br />

fold to<br />

how<br />

fodder<br />

higher<br />

lyre<br />

127


sheathed<br />

heath<br />

heat<br />

eat<br />

she<br />

he<br />

the<br />

(he)<br />

she<br />

d<br />

128


Jean Verthein<br />

CONTINUE<br />

Eve disappears<br />

beyond the sawed off elm,<br />

which canopied<br />

my drive at its height,<br />

and yet still moons over this<br />

longtime calm realm.<br />

And flies the night white<br />

on snow-whisker pines,<br />

kindling an alpenglow.<br />

Now by these brass andirons, where<br />

last coals glow, I weary<br />

from my qualms. Out here dawn<br />

leery will unroll the horizon,<br />

bursting Psalms, while con-<br />

flict leaves peace in this lounge, as I yearn<br />

to flee beyond these wilds,<br />

sown from homing. Why from<br />

this airy lair, do I adjourn<br />

Nightfall is to the whippoor<br />

will whippoorwill,<br />

as day rise is the heron<br />

that stands still.<br />

On a lawn strewn with wild violets,<br />

dawns later I awaken<br />

held by moss. In the river‘s<br />

shallows, the white egrets<br />

swoop, glance, poise, lance<br />

waves and arch across.<br />

Their high I see from our ground<br />

foam. Its green-red muffs<br />

strum me like a mandolin<br />

in spring with lupine<br />

from loam.<br />

Before I lunge,<br />

I am flung from the trampoline<br />

above the cardinal flowers, birch, silo,<br />

prairie grass, reeds, willow<br />

by Wild Cat Beach.<br />

Down over Koshkonong.<br />

I search high, low,<br />

129


eyond Michigan, Huron,<br />

Erie. I reach towers of eyes,<br />

a-wink, whose dreams I haunt<br />

at night; a wild-scape<br />

by day I daunt!<br />

For kin-ghost, back on the midland,<br />

I mourn, then, moor<br />

on the isle with Shorackappock.<br />

130


Sarah Wallen<br />

OPOSSOMOON<br />

—an excerpt<br />

Cut dad out from the beginning—<br />

lizard tails like worms in a bucket<br />

wooden golf clubs<br />

war costumes and being forced to smoke<br />

cartons of Pall Mall Lights<br />

half-empty all over the enclosed porch<br />

sun allergies<br />

metallic wallpaper<br />

the yellow, ceramic cats.<br />

Don't wonder where they are now.<br />

Delete<br />

Big Rock Candy Mountains<br />

medication for high cholesterol<br />

the Seaquarium<br />

prayers in a language you can read but not translate<br />

aviator sunglasses<br />

lobsters on the kitchen floor<br />

pets.<br />

Leave them where they are;<br />

don't touch them again.<br />

Go to the orchard.<br />

Strip branches of their leaves with one hand<br />

as you run past.<br />

The turkeys over the hill smell terrible<br />

don‘t breathe in through your nose.<br />

Hide with the dog in the ivy<br />

where the rats crawl<br />

where you're not supposed to go<br />

and don't let him eat the poison<br />

near the cellar.<br />

Watch for snakes with flat heads.<br />

Remember<br />

cobras are more afraid of you<br />

131


and they don't like being cornered.<br />

Pile into the family van<br />

so cramped you have to put your feet on your bag.<br />

Press your head against the window the whole<br />

long drive.<br />

Think about everything.<br />

Go to the creek.<br />

Want to die there<br />

running over stones.<br />

Catch fish for dinner<br />

but paint them first<br />

the colors you like<br />

and press them to your t-shirt<br />

before you skin them<br />

all by yourself<br />

and cook them<br />

skewered on sticks like marshmallows.<br />

Flip every rock along the shore<br />

looking for salamanders.<br />

Be careful not to crush them with your giant hands.<br />

They are fragile<br />

and sad to look at as they die.<br />

Go to the ocean.<br />

Watch the sand breathe.<br />

Make castles<br />

old before they‘re finished.<br />

Lose yourself in the current<br />

you will be saved.<br />

Dream of sand crabs<br />

the size of your hand.<br />

Sting-rays caught on fishing lines.<br />

Being the last human left.<br />

It is illegal to pick the long grasses on the dunes.<br />

The lifeguard will yell at you.<br />

Do it anyway.<br />

Pretend they are magic wands<br />

or oversized pens<br />

132


or spears.<br />

Everywhere<br />

there are roots piercing the edges<br />

glass all over the road<br />

plastic gathering in the water<br />

tar in the sand<br />

apples<br />

poison because they aren't yours.<br />

Don't look.<br />

Turkeys are mesmerized by rainfall<br />

and they drown<br />

staring at the sky.<br />

133


PROSE POEMS FROM BLINKING, BENDING BONE<br />

TABLE (SCRAPS)<br />

corn cobs crowded (dead) on counter-top (found) gn-awed to<br />

(rotting) pulp for throwing (once mom and dad are gone);<br />

toothache agitated by a (pointed) finger stirs (up) rage (at<br />

crime) scenes; i am (a lot) of things; i am (not) a liar; i (need<br />

to) floss (still); fairy says (she wants) your pretty (yellowed)<br />

teeth (for money) so precious; (this) god made (earth for) man<br />

to (mine) love; welcome to my (farm) house (watch for shit)<br />

DAY<br />

To bicycle across town. To see patterns in the grass. And the laughing. And the hammock. How my<br />

chest is full and empty. How you tease. And the sun. And the strawberries. How we water the<br />

garden. How food is served. To hide and sleep. To dig holes. And the drive. To get home. How I<br />

can hear your heart beat. How my heart beats. And the bird calls.<br />

EXODUS<br />

Get some parsley even though it makes our daughters sick. Parsley is good on eggs fried in garlic<br />

and butter. Your pores will open. Try to hydrate every two hours. Gargle hot salt-water for a sore<br />

throat. This road floods, so keep candles under the sink in case of blackouts, and just say you have<br />

chains on your tires—they won't check.<br />

MONSTERS<br />

Child is afraid of shadows in the corner of his bedroom. Fed up, Mom and Dad say just be brave.<br />

They find him the next day sitting up in bed facing the corner, eyes and mouth wide open.<br />

TALL TALE<br />

Walk into the woods, think, I'll never leave again. Shred clothes. Tear leaves from trees. Chew on them.<br />

Sky is lavender (which makes me welt-up and itch)—think, I'm allergic to this time of day. Stomach<br />

growls. Follow rabbits on tiptoe. Freezing when detected. Think, I need better shoes for this. Later, have<br />

meat for dinner. Smiling at myself.<br />

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PESTILENCE<br />

On a swing at the park. Wood chips falling out of my pockets. Girl runs up, calls, Do you love Jesus<br />

Yes or no. Her mother won't look at me. He made the tomatoes and the butterflies and even you and me. Yes or<br />

no. Swinging pretty high now. Little girl, you know how there can be lots of names for the same<br />

thing Yes or no.<br />

IN A CELL<br />

I am in a cell (I am not in a cell). The cell is made of concrete (I am not in a cell). There is a locked<br />

door to the cell (I am not in a cell). It is cold in the cell (I am not in a cell). There is a hole in the<br />

floor of the cell (I am not in a cell). I am naked in the cell (I am not in a cell). I am a number in the<br />

cell (I am not in a cell). I starve in the cell (I am not in a cell). The cell is loud with noise from other<br />

cells (I am not in a cell). There are people guarding my cell (I am not in a cell). I imagine my love<br />

outside the cell (I am not in a cell). No windows in the cell (I am not in a cell). No light.<br />

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Lewis Warsh<br />

ELEVEN O’CLOCK NEWS<br />

1<br />

Deluded thoughts arise<br />

from mental afflictions.<br />

It could be that I said something<br />

once and half-meant it, or not.<br />

It could be that I washed my hands of it,<br />

in the literal sense,<br />

but that the smell still lingered<br />

on the tips of my fingers,<br />

like mint.<br />

2<br />

As the sky turns red and pink the guys on<br />

surfboards paddle out to the horizon<br />

and I can see them now, the guys on surfboards<br />

paddling out to the horizon as the sun goes down<br />

one more time<br />

it was like the sun was going down over the ocean<br />

and the guys on surfboards were floating in the wake<br />

I can see them now the guys on surfboards paddling<br />

out to the horizon<br />

one more time<br />

3<br />

Get into an elevator and everyone is breathless<br />

in the proximity of a stranger‘s body, the smell of<br />

perfume or sweat.<br />

A rainy afternon when I think to myself: ―I don‘t<br />

have to go anywhere.‖<br />

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And somewhere a building is going up in an empty<br />

lot and the construction workers are crouched on<br />

the sidewalk smoking cigarettes and eating<br />

sandwiches.<br />

And somewhere people are buying tickets to a movie<br />

that opened the day before. (A long line stretches<br />

around the block.)<br />

4<br />

Someone is cursing and someone else is babbling to himself and someone is frightened and stares at<br />

her feet. The older people are falling asleep in their beach chairs as the sun goes down over the<br />

horizon and I‘m drinking a pina colada and my left leg won‘t move. The boat is at the dock and<br />

people are waving. The women wearing long dresses with elaborate hems. Every day three people<br />

cross the street. A, B, and R are not their names. The sirens on the rocks are singing to the men in<br />

the boats. Smiling like an idiot when the lights come on.<br />

5<br />

A couple in Afghanistan<br />

was stoned to death<br />

by the Taliban<br />

An explosion killed 7<br />

and injured 14<br />

in Xingjiang<br />

Roger Clemens lied<br />

to Congress about<br />

taking steroids<br />

Former Governor Blagojevich<br />

was convicted<br />

on one count<br />

6<br />

(Law & Order)<br />

All she has to show for it is a dog<br />

with three legs<br />

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All she has to show for it is a Japanese<br />

kimono that her husband bought<br />

during the war<br />

All she has to show for it is<br />

a mild case of temporary insanity<br />

when she takes out the trash<br />

All she has to show for it--a tire<br />

with no treads<br />

7<br />

Walk downhill and you get<br />

to the river. Stay in one place<br />

and you can have it both ways.<br />

The shadow of the hand<br />

that reaches out for--a<br />

leaf The disbelief on her face<br />

as I bite her hand.<br />

8<br />

Sometimes you learn something you don‘t want to know. It was 1970 and we were driving up the<br />

coast to Point Reyes. My mind floats out the window like smoke in the breeze. A little shimmer of<br />

heat, bourbon and water, a granite lion. It was you all along, waiting in the parking lot after<br />

midnight. It seemed at any moment, if there was a lapse of attention, a wave might break over the<br />

rooftops and inundate the cobblestone streets where on a typical summer night you could see<br />

people walking arm in arm, canvasing the small shops or eating dinner in an outdoor cafe. It takes all<br />

my energy to appease my hunger. Put your money on a number and close your eyes as the wheel<br />

spins.<br />

9<br />

Someone calls truce from the outhouse window<br />

The same old wine in the same old bottle<br />

The habits of a lifetime can be changed over night<br />

138


According to the weather lady<br />

The chance of rain is less than zero<br />

I stand in the shadows and stare at her building<br />

Muffled sound of the orchestra warming up<br />

There‘s a rod in rodent and a hum in human<br />

Put on your blinders, one more time, and step outside.<br />

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Tejan Green Waszak<br />

TENDERING<br />

This bridge crumbles behind me<br />

as I race swiftly to the other side<br />

no time to look back<br />

though in my haste<br />

I dare to look down at the water<br />

and imagine a more honorable battle<br />

ending in the belly of a mammal<br />

whose respect I‘ve gained<br />

for my tireless effort<br />

though tragically<br />

this will<br />

in the body<br />

of one with more might<br />

may have a different<br />

outcome<br />

Obviously<br />

I am no match for you<br />

or this rat<br />

In this complicated game<br />

there is no end<br />

and you are receding<br />

Further and further<br />

some force pushes you out<br />

into the dark<br />

night on night skin<br />

the air<br />

intensifies<br />

filled<br />

with<br />

salty suffocation<br />

Mouth agape<br />

requesting answers<br />

there are none<br />

You never dare ask<br />

rejection is looming<br />

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You are slipping away<br />

In the silence<br />

your face shines brilliantly<br />

for a moment<br />

there is pleasure<br />

a chance<br />

to study you<br />

In another city we could be strangers<br />

pretend<br />

we are innocent<br />

Your noble face<br />

could go quite far<br />

in another place<br />

This potential can encourage<br />

forgiveness<br />

bringing you forward<br />

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TUMBLED DOWN<br />

Put my records on<br />

and ushered in<br />

a moment of clarity<br />

in this wired world<br />

It must be Wednesday<br />

or I‘ve had too much wine<br />

For 3 hours I thought of you today<br />

and now the cinnamon candle<br />

has left our season<br />

to linger in the air<br />

of the small room inside a big house<br />

won‘t let me forget<br />

clenched fists holding pieces of memory<br />

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io notes<br />

Ana Almurani is an alumna (<strong>2011</strong>) of the English Department‘s undergraduate major program<br />

(concentration: Creative Writing). / Rudy Baron earned his master‘s degree in English/Creative<br />

Writing at the Brooklyn Campus & then taught in the English Department for many years as an<br />

adjunct professor. He is a co-founder & former editor of Downtown Brooklyn. / Alicia Berbenick is<br />

working toward her MFA in the English Department‘s graduate creative writing program. / Wayne<br />

Berninger is an alumnus (MA, 1992) of the Brooklyn Campus English Department, where he now<br />

works as an administrator. He manages the Department‘s website & blog, serves as Registration<br />

Advisor for all undergraduate English majors, & teaches freshman writing & sophomore literature<br />

courses. With Barbara Henning & Rudy Baron, he co-founded Downtown Brooklyn in 1992 & has<br />

served as Editor since 1999. / An alumnus (B.A., English) of Florida Atlantic <strong>University</strong>, John<br />

Casquarelli is pursuing his MFA in the English Department‘s graduate creative writing program.<br />

Prior to attending LIU, he was employed by Health Communications, Inc., where he did editorial<br />

work in their book & magazine departments. He received the Esther Hyneman Award in 2010 for<br />

poetry. / Alane Celeste is an alumna (2010) of the English Department‘s undergraduate program<br />

in Creative Writing. Her thesis was a collection of poetry & fiction entitled When the Dust Settles. She<br />

is currently a graduate student in <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>‘s School of Business, working toward her<br />

master‘s degree in Public Administration with an Advanced Certificate in Nonprofit Management. /<br />

Nik Conklin is working toward his undergraduate degree with a double major in English & Media<br />

Arts. / Cynthia Maris Dantzic has been teaching in the Art Department at the Brooklyn Campus<br />

for many years. She was recently among the first group to be promoted to the <strong>University</strong>‘s newlycreated<br />

faculty rank of Senior Professor. Her most recent book is Alphabet City: Signs of New York.<br />

Following the successes of 100 New York Photographers & 100 New York Painters, she is now<br />

completing 100 New York Calligraphers for Schiffer Publishers. She is also at work on a textbook<br />

entitled Seeing Color, which will present the classic Josef Albers color studies to the current generation<br />

of art students. / Julián del Casal (1863-1893) was a Cuban poet whose early romanticism yielded<br />

to the influence of prevailing French aesthetics. He died young of tuberculosis, having published<br />

only two collections in his lifetime, Hojas al viento (1890) & Nieve (1892). Bustos y rimas (1893)<br />

appeared posthumously. / Wendy Eng is working toward her master‘s degree in the School of<br />

Education‘s Department of Teaching & Learning. / Christine Francavilla is an alumna (MA,<br />

Liberal Studies) of New York <strong>University</strong> & is currently pursuing a second master‘s degree in the<br />

Brooklyn Campus English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program. Her work has appeared<br />

in The Tablet, Here‟s Brooklyn, BQE Magazine & Downtown Brooklyn. / An alumna (MFA, 2010) of the<br />

Brooklyn Campus English Department‘s Creative Writing program, Stephanie Gray is a poet & an<br />

experimental filmmaker whose Super-8 films have screened internationally, including at the Black<br />

Maria, Ann Arbor, Oberhausen, Chicago Underground, & Viennale fests. Her first poetry collection,<br />

Heart Stoner Bingo, was published by Straw Gate Books in 2007. Her poems have appeared in<br />

several publications, including Aufgabe, Sentence, The Brooklyn Rail, EOAGH, 2ndAvenuePoetry, Boog City<br />

Reader, & The Recluse. She‘s read her work with films in NYC at the Projections, Segue,<br />

Lungful!@Zinc, & Poetry Project Friday series. / Mary Kennan Herbert teaches literature &<br />

writing in the English Department at the Brooklyn Campus of <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>, where she is<br />

an adjunct professor in the English Department. She is a widely published poet & serves as an<br />

Editorial Advisor for Downtown Brooklyn. / Aimee Herman is working toward her graduate degree<br />

in the English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program. A performance poet, she has been<br />

featured at various poetry festivals, salons, & on radio. Her work can be found in Cliterature Journal,<br />

Pregnant Moon Review, InStereo Press, and/or journal, & Uphook Press‘s latest poetry anthology, hell strung<br />

and crooked. She currently works as sections editor of erotica for Oysters & Chocolate. / Katherine<br />

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Hogan holds a Ph.D. in English from St. John‘s <strong>University</strong>, Queens & teaches as an adjunct<br />

professor in the Brooklyn Campus English Department. Her poems, stories & plays have enjoyed<br />

many prizes, performances & publications, including Lunch with the Muse, Scribes of Ozymandias, Mad<br />

Poets Review & Downtown Brooklyn. / Daphne Horton is working toward her bachelor‘s degree<br />

(Literature) in the English Department. She works as the secretary for both the Department of<br />

Foreign Languages & Literatures & the Department of Communications Studies, Performance<br />

Studies, & Theatre. / Tony Iantosca is working toward his MFA in Creative Writing in the<br />

Brooklyn Campus English Department. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Talisman,<br />

EOAGH, Zen Monster, Brooklyn Paramount, & Downtown Brooklyn. Tony also helps to edit the poetry<br />

journal Sun‟s Skeleton (http://www.sunsskeleton.com/). / An alumnus (BA, 2010) of the English<br />

Department‘s undergraduate English major program (Creative Writing), Giuseppe Infante is now<br />

working toward his graduate degree in the English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program.<br />

He is a co-editor of By the Overpass: A Journal of Writing and Art. / Gülay Işık is working toward her<br />

graduate degree in the English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program. / An alumna (2005)<br />

of the English Department‘s undergraduate major program, Belynda Jones currently performs with<br />

the soul/funk band Soul Understated. / Jamey Jones lives in Pensacola, Fl., where he teaches<br />

Creative Writing, Language Arts, & Intensive Reading. He earned an MFA in Creative Writing from<br />

<strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong> in <strong>2011</strong>. His most recent chapbooks are the notebook troubled the sleep door<br />

(brown boke press, 2008), & Twelve Windows (brown boke press, 2009). His first full-length book,<br />

Blue Rain Morning (Farfalla, McMillan and Parrish) appeared in <strong>2011</strong>. His poems have recently<br />

appeared in Fell Swoop, The Mundane Egg, Big Bridge, Eaogh, With + Stand, The Tsatsawassins, The Portable<br />

Boog Reader #5, & Zen Monster. / Kate is the pseudonym of a Brooklyn Campus undergraduate. /<br />

Anna Lindwasser is working toward her MSED in Adolescent English Education at the Brooklyn<br />

Campus. / Formerly a fabric designer, Montessori preschool teacher, ESL teacher, & choral singer,<br />

Elspeth Woodcock Macdonald is working toward her graduate degree in the Brooklyn Campus<br />

English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program. / Brady Nash works as an Academic<br />

Advisor for Sophomore Programs in the Brooklyn Campus Office of Student Development &<br />

Retention. In addition to advising & helping to develop program materials, he works with the<br />

Scholarship Assistance Program, helping students research, identify & apply for outside<br />

scholarships. He is working toward a master‘s degree in media theory & aesthetics in the Brooklyn<br />

Campus Media Arts Department. / Uche Nduka is working toward his graduate degree in the<br />

English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program at the Brooklyn Campus. / Steve Newton<br />

taught from 1992 to 1999 as Assistant Professor in the English Department at the Brooklyn Campus<br />

of <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>, where he also served as the Director of the Writing Center. He currently<br />

teaches English as an Associate Professor at William Paterson <strong>University</strong>, where he directs the<br />

Writing Center. / Jon L. Peacock is a Brooklyn based artist, with a current focus on prose writing<br />

& theatrical acting. He earned his bachelor's degree in Theatre Studies, with an Acting<br />

concentration, from Arizona State <strong>University</strong>, studying under Marshall W. Mason, co-founder of<br />

off-Broadway's Circle Repertory Theater. He is an alumnus (2010) of the Creative Writing MFA<br />

program at the Brooklyn Campus English Department, where he worked as a Writing Center tutor,<br />

a Graduate Teaching Fellow, Research Assistant (under several different professors), & Adjunct<br />

Assistant Professor (Fall 2010). His master‘s thesis (a novel-in-progress) was entitled Wayward. /<br />

Formerly an Adjunct Professor in the English Department, Howard Pflanzer is a playwright,<br />

lyricist, & poet. On the Border, his play about Walter Benjamin, winner of the 2007 Jump-Start<br />

competition, had its world premiere at Medicine Show Theatre, in November 2007. Medicine Show<br />

presented his play Living With History: Camus Sartre De Beauvoir in the spring of <strong>2011</strong>. The Terrorist was<br />

presented (US premiere: 2006) by the Unofficial New York Yale Cabaret (UNYYC) at the Laurie<br />

Beechman Theatre, NYC. He was a Fulbright Scholar in theatre (spring 2003) in India where he<br />

144


directed the world premiere of The Terrorist at the National Center for the Performing Arts (NCPA)<br />

in Mumbai where he also lectured & conducted a playwrights‘ workshop. In June 2009 he lectured<br />

on Jerzy Grotowski, Judith Malina & the Living Theatre & Alternative Theatre in the US under the<br />

auspices of the Theatre of the Eighth Day at the Malta International Theatre Festival in Poznan,<br />

Poland. He was invited to reprise the lecture in January <strong>2011</strong> as well as collaborate on a theatre<br />

project about climate change & an alien invasion with Teatr Palmera Eldritcha in Poznan. He has an<br />

MFA from the Yale School of Drama in Playwriting & Dramatic Literature. He was the winner of<br />

a Play Commission in Jewish Theatre from NFJC (for Jersey Nights at Medicine Show), a NYFA<br />

Playwriting Fellowship, two ASCAP Awards, a Puffin Foundation grant & co-winner of an NEA<br />

Media Arts grant for the opera Dream Beach (with Michael Sahl). His plays & musicals have been<br />

performed & read at La MaMa ETC., (The House of Nancy Dunn with Steve Weisberg & Andy Craft),<br />

Playwrights Horizons, Symphony Space, Medicine Show (Poetry Class With Serial Killer), Kraine<br />

Theater (Cocaine Dreams) & The Living Theatre, & broadcast over WNYC & WBAI FM.<br />

Playwriting Residencies include Fundacion Valparaiso, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts<br />

(VCCA), & the Ragdale Foundation. His work has appeared in The Quarterly, The Drama Review, slavic<br />

and east european performance, New York Theater Review (anthology), theater2k.com (online), Cultural<br />

Logic, Socialism and Democracy, Cover, And Then, Home Planet News, & Downtown Brooklyn, & in the poetry<br />

anthologies, Off the Cuffs & <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> Sounds. / G. J. Racz is Associate Professor of Foreign<br />

Languages & Literature at the Brooklyn Campus, Vice-President of the American Literary<br />

Translators Association (ALTA), & review editor for Translation Review. He won the 2010 Alicia<br />

Gordon Award for Word Artistry in Translation from the American Translators Association (ATA).<br />

/ Leslie Anne Rexach is working toward her bachelor‘s degree with a major in English at the<br />

Brooklyn Campus. / Beatriz Alzate Rodriguez completed her BS at Columbia <strong>University</strong> School<br />

of Engineering & her MS at New York Institute of Technology. Formerly an engineer at Unisys<br />

Corporation, she now teaches math & art at Cobble Hill High School in Brooklyn. She is pursuing a<br />

second master‘s degree in the Brooklyn Campus English Department‘s Creative Writing MFA<br />

program. / Lisa Rogal is working toward her graduate degree in the Brooklyn Campus English<br />

Department‘s Creative Writing MFA program. / Desiree Rucker is working toward her MFA in<br />

Creative Writing at the Brooklyn Campus. / P. J. Salber is an Associate Professor & the<br />

Coordinator of User Services in the Salena Library at the Brooklyn Campus. His work has appeared<br />

in a number of little magazines including Downtown Brooklyn. / Micah Savaglio is an alumnus (B.A.,<br />

2006) of the <strong>University</strong> of Milwaukee Wisconsin & is now working toward his MFA in Creative<br />

Writing at the Brooklyn Campus. He is coeditor of By the Overpass: A Journal of Writing and Art. /<br />

Michael Sohn has been teaching in the Brooklyn Campus English Department since 1997. He is a<br />

full-time Instructor, Mentor & Faculty Development Coordinator in the English Department‘s<br />

Writing Program. His poems have appeared in Downtown Brooklyn & Zen Monster. A critical article,<br />

―An Incoherent Collection André du Bouchet's L'Incohérence‖ appeared in Curious Collectors, Collected<br />

Curiosities: An Interdisciplinary Study (Nhora Lucia Serrano & Janelle A. Schwartz, eds.; Cambridge<br />

Scholars Press; 2010). / Jean Verthein works in the Brooklyn Campus Office of Student Support<br />

Services as a counselor specializing in students with disabilities. / Sarah Wallen is working toward<br />

her MFA in Creative Writing at the Brooklyn Campus. / Lewis Warsh is the author of numerous<br />

books of poetry, fiction, & autobiography, most recently Inseparable: Poems 1995-2005 (2008) & A<br />

Place in the Sun (2010). Professor in the Brooklyn Campus English Department, he is Director of the<br />

Creative Writing MFA program. He is also editor & publisher of United Artists Books<br />

(unitedartistsbooks.com). / An alumna (MFA, 2010) of the English Department‘s graduate creative<br />

writing program, Tejan Green Waszak tutors in the Writing Center & teaches as an adjunct<br />

professor in the English Department. / Constance Woo teaches undergraduate courses at the<br />

Brooklyn Campus & graduate courses at NYU in the joint master‘s program of The Palmer School<br />

145


of Library & Information Science (LIU-C.W. Post) & New York <strong>University</strong>. Her B.A., M.A., C.Phil.,<br />

& Ph.D. degrees in English Literature are from the <strong>University</strong> of California at Los Angeles. Her<br />

M.S.L.S. & Certificate of Archives Management are from LIU‘s C.W. Post Campus. In addition, she<br />

has a B.F.A. & training in bookbinding, artists‘ books production, collage & mixed media, printing,<br />

& jewelry design. She has produced over thirty artist‘s books, primarily one-of-a-kind works, &<br />

several limited editions. Her works are in the collections of Wesleyan <strong>University</strong>, Wellesley College,<br />

The Mata & Arthur Jaffe Collection of Artists‘ Books at Florida Atlantic <strong>University</strong>, the <strong>University</strong><br />

of California (Santa Cruz & Los Angeles), DePaul <strong>University</strong>, as well as private collections.<br />

146


downtown brooklyn<br />

a journal of writing<br />

submission guidelines<br />

Downtown Brooklyn: a Journal of Writing is the literary magazine of the English Department at the<br />

Brooklyn Campus of <strong>Long</strong> <strong>Island</strong> <strong>University</strong>. A new issue appears each fall semester. The editorial<br />

staff reads new submissions from September 1 until February 1.<br />

We accept submissions only from students, faculty & staff at the Brooklyn Campus. This includes<br />

alumni, as well as persons formerly employed in any capacity at the Brooklyn Campus. Submissions<br />

are also welcome from Visiting Writers who teach in the Creative Writing MFA program & from<br />

writers who come to campus as part of the English Department‘s Voices of the Rainbow Reading<br />

Series.<br />

We accept submissions of poetry &/or fiction &/or creative non-fiction.<br />

Save your submission as a single Word document & attach it to an e-mail that you send to wayne<br />

[dot] berninger [at] liu [dot] edu. The first page of your document should be a cover page with your<br />

phone & e-mail & a short bio statement.<br />

In your bio statement, describe how you are connected to the Brooklyn Campus. Are you a student<br />

Please indicate whether you are undergrad or grad, what your major or degree program is, & when<br />

you will graduate. If you are an alum, tell us what your major was & what degree you earned, as well<br />

as the year you graduated. Are you faculty or former faculty Tell us your department, what your<br />

title is or was & what you teach or taught. Are you a staff member or former staff member Tell us<br />

your title & what kind of work you do or did at the Brooklyn Campus. Everyone: If relevant, please<br />

include any recent publications, productions, or performances of your work.<br />

You will receive confirmation by e-mail that we have received your work. We will then notify as to<br />

acceptance on a rolling basis.<br />

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