Month: April 2019

Rising Mist Ct.

The red kitchen,
Disney magnets covering the whole fridge with
“Pedro” on them
I remember mami’s spanish novelas blaring
Throughout the house
It was my personal alarm on school days
Gossip on father’s lips
God’s word resting on our shelves,
Made the house look
“Holy”
Dads golden cross of a past religion around his neck,
-Secret crossing of his heart-
Music filling our Hispanic souls
Sound of the vacuum early Saturday mornings
Never ending list of chores
Strong smell of Clorox after cleaning
Powerful sensation of love
Skin to skin contact all around
Papi and mami making it uncomfortable with their silly affection
Tears of laughter because its gross
Those are the days I remember
As I am in a town that lacks
My Culture
The overwhelming image of mother,
Touching the bible before leaving

73 Degrees

Midwinter,
When a Tennessee breeze
Brings a lull to our chilled
Misery,
I step outside.
73 degrees and dropping,
I am waiting
For memory to melt me
Dethaw the deep-freeze
Seeping
Inside my skin.
At 73 degrees and climbing,
I thought ice could never
Creep in through
Our fault lines. Abigail would walk
From Barrett Drive to meet me
As I walked Fairview
And we met awkwardly
And easily
In the middle.
73 degrees and steady,
I was a girl who felt
As strongly as any girl
Of sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen now and don’t know how it all
Turned
Cold.
My Honeysuckle changed to Henbit
Far too late
To fall out of love with its fake taste.
73 degrees and dropping now—
I’ve learned to wear a coat at last
Against our Tennessee breeze.
I slip my flip-flops from my feet
And surrender my skirts to warmer days.
I love the warmth I keep with me—
But tomorrow
I must protect it.
63 degrees,
53 degrees,
40, and dropping.

Honey Queen

it tasted like a bee hum in the mouth
brush of silk wings against tongue
stinger embedded in cheek lining.
that’s what happened when i swallowed
something that didn’t belong anymore
to my gluttonous stomach
the residual honey clinging to my teeth
a sour-sweet reminder of the sphere
where i was queen

Prepping Rocks

Hot pulse flow
under peeling, scratch cuticle
Dust under and over, scuffed, sanded into line ridges
Hands buried in solid
slippery cool water trickles
Throughout the clicks of pebbles bumping
and brushing and kissing
in my bathtub.

With icebox nails
I swallow slate.
Each pebble goes down a pill
digs into the gut and weighs.
Goes down a whole ice cube
pressing against the sides of the throat,
cold, wet, refreshing, heavy,

I swallow pebbles in my bathtub.
I lick the cliché of inevitability.
And I dance with thoughts of navy blue.

Appendectomy

Because my father always wanted
me to be a doctor, he’s brought me here
to the window of the operating room.
Fluorescent glare spot-lights a patient
swaddled in sheets, abdomen exposed.

Dr. Madigan swabs the belly with alcohol,
purple as burnt blood. I expect a 4-way cut,
the doctor peeling back flesh flaps
revealing the insides. But Madigan sticks
wide plastic tape over the patient’s belly,
slices into the tape and skin,
a single slit, six inches.

Madigan plunges his hand into
the belly up to his wrist, gazes up
into ceiling lights, feeling through
the mush of organs, mutters
as his knuckles bulge the belly
from within like ground swells.
There’s the spleen, yes, liver,
gall bladder, hup, there it is.
He pulls out a slimy jellied string.
Small intestine, my father whispers.

I’m fifteen, and I don’t want to look,
can’t believe that’s me inside.
The string gets longer and longer,
three feet, like a glistening
purple snake, slipping through his gloves.
He reads it like tickertape, stops
at a bulbous, reddish lump, holds it up
for me to see, winks at my father.
With a scalpel, he cuts off a knob
of bruised tissue. Bile rises in my throat.
My father slaps my back. A nurse
sucks up the blood with a nozzle and hose.

Elanor’s Photosynthesis

if, from a lightning bug light
you could summon from the sun
enough energy to pass through
these dusk shadowed days
no need would wither
your green silk
or hasten you to unfold
your compact buds
to bask in a lamp orb
or balance on the bow of a bent beam
of fluorescent flicker.
but since energy
can only be caught
from an unpolluted sun
cracked window blinds
are your truest friend
and the pale puff
from your bereaved breath
(if you had a way to breath)
on the sun tinted glass
would mark the only sign
of life within your wilted leaves.

NOVUS Literary and Arts Journal
Lebanon, TN