fall 2019
Table of Contents
Return to Home PageDear Jennifer, Bridget Gage-Dixon
Wife Lessons Jody Burke-Kaiser
Powered By English Y Pronounced EE Meredith Quartermain
Inherited Water View Looking at My Hand I See Her Robert Carr
Dark Night Full of Stars After Trout in Siskiyou County Bruce Robinson
Not really a father, John Sibley Williams
reflex 800possessedmoments Edward Wells
Cherry Orchard Isabelle Ortner
Border Song: Within the Paper Spiral of Wasps Janet Youngdahl
Invocation I hold your ashes in my hand Angeline Schellenberg
Ladybug, Ladybug Cristalle Smith
{steeple-chase} {grave-tending} {declining dessert} David Morgan O'Connor
Glory and the Neighbors Untidy Ending Lauren Camp
Concurrent Incidents I Flip a Coin and My Life Becomes Her Jaimie Gusman
Women of Trachis Savannah Pulfer
Now She's Going to Get It Marjorie Silverman
The ice was coming nicely Matthew Schmidt
Visionary Nebraska Katie Berger
Glory and the Neighbors
Outside this gathering, the cry of wind. Snow shoved
in ruffles; we were all snow and all shovels. Neighbors rustled
through the glass door past rabbit tracks. We needed
to unbundle the jagged fences
of our breathing, to stand by the heat blown from the linoleum.
Tom stayed weary and kneaded in his knitted cap
and blue veins, and mouthed only winter.
Linda kept lisping her desert accent, and argued
with her unlikely brother. The littlest, Glory, missing
two front teeth, held hands
with her mother. I heard them all, and the music of dirt
in our past—everyone bent on the empty
horizon. Sausage was served and people put cream
in their coffee. The tea cake marbled
on clear plastic platters. All the cold was suspended.
Neighbors remapped with their sagging
full plates. Scrambled eggs fell together
in damp yellow batches. I looked out at the void
and our dry undisciplined air, the sifted flakes piling,
climbing telephone poles and juniper trees, concealing
our homes, each sliver of road, and the vectoring basics
of this ancient village. People stood
and remembered, shouting excerpts of last year’s superlatives.
That was it. The year
starting with innocence. The other concluding
its muffins with endless opulent snow. I put on my coat and cold face
and entered the white, put the white back
inside me, its flurry, its near-silent singing.