Neighbours

By Uduak-Abasi Ekong

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He doesn’t know it but I can hear him singing along to Backstreet Boys’ ‘Everybody’ with his friends from work, their voices screeching like fingers on a blackboard. That’s my go-to karaoke song and my friend and I were once kicked out of a bar on Admiralty way because we threw up on the microphone mid-performance. That’s an anecdote I’d share if he ever invited me up. I’m sure he’d find it hilarious but I guess he’ll never know.

‘You know what time it is?’ I hear him say.The others mimic a drum roll on the railings and someone must be holding a spliff because ash falls on my face, right into my eyes. I cannot make a sound lest they look down and see me so I take a few steps back, rubbing my eyes.…

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The Lie That Made Me Believe in Art

By Ryan T. Pozzi

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The first time my aunt took me to a museum, she didn’t do the thing adults usually do with children, which is to pretend it’s fun until everybody gets tired and leaves. She moved slowly, as if the rooms called for a different pace. She leaned toward the placards and read them like they mattered.

I trailed behind her, copying her posture, trying to look like I belonged among the white walls and polite silence. I didn’t know what I was supposed to feel. I just knew she seemed fluent, and I wasn’t. She made art feel like a language you could learn, and if you learned it, you got to become a different kind of person. Someone worth noticing.

It wasn’t like that at home.…

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One Day You Will Grow Big as a Roosevelt Elk

By Christian Fuller

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We made something almost beautiful in that ugly squealing way life tends to compound and burst forth, our commingled bodies oven-baked from the shitty space heater in my Daddy’s trailer, your teaspoon-of-sugar skin gone rhubarb in cloudbursts of blush, and I coulda stared at your smile forever, slackened  in sweat, and I swear I said it, that baby girl I could never love like I loved you then, window panes rattling ice dams from the thin tin roof, and in those moments the world was wiped clean, no poor-as-dirt in a mobile home park of concrete at the edge of a putrefying carcass they called a city, no walls smokestained chartreuse aside from the blank white imprint where Momma’s crucifix fell, and when my tongue touched your teeth I was sure I could see it, that blitzing ephemera of our lives as one spreadeagle across the pleasure-blanked synapses of my brain: you, drunk giggling in the bathtub, and you pregnant, your belly like ripened cantaloupe and perhaps you drunk and pregnant but Momma always told me one or two couldn’t do all that much hurt and we’d have a little tract house on the prairie out west subsected into some newborn development of skinny plaster and stock windows and it would be simply Hallmark, and in those days you would smile all the time, at little things and nothing at all and maybe it would always smell of a leak from the gas stove and maybe the neighborhood would be built at the edge of man’s intended lands, little boxes pictographed onto the floor of a front range hung against the moon like broken bones but Christ how happy would we be, even with all of the hooves humming against the earth, herds in migration, and when I became Daddy I could have the privilege of knowing things and teaching them and I’d tell our son about the Roosevelt elk that once called our home their own, and I’d tell him to be so very careful because their daddys have antlers tall as avalanches and strong as redwoods, and Christ how happy would we be, my Daddy and Momma tucked away in the soft earth where they could talk to their God all they wanted, interred alongside all those ghosts of cousins and uncles they couldn’t stand and couldn’t stand to be apart from, and I whispered all of these small fictions to you from beneath the tent of my polyester bedsheets and we looked up through the cigarette burn holes in them and imagined the star-speckled sky we’d lie beneath in our new home and you kissed me with your vodka and spearmint tongue and as my hand navigated the swell of your compact tummy I swore I could feel his breath against my palm and
and and and
when a month later I followed the blood trail from the bathroom out to the snow, where you wailed and filled your mouth with ice to numb away the screams, I looked up but couldn’t find any stars, blotted out by wheeze of smokestacks and muffled by outpouring of light pollution and I wouldn’t believe it, no no no, what good would it do for us and I knew sometimes that stomachs just ache, sometimes stomachs ache so bad you can’t walk for days, and I’d tell you women used to walk across the broken land bridges barefoot to carry their futures forward and you’d ask what about their coward lovers, were they as utterly fucking useless as me and your agony screams rattled the vanity mirror crooked and the bathtub water went lukewarm and old rose red and
and and and
most days you wept for the child I was and the man our child would never get to be and most days I drank Daddy’s whiskey and watched nature documentaries and home remodeling shows on the teevee, red dogs in the morning and shattered drywall in the evening and when that night I woke on the couch and followed the blood trail, I promise I could see it clear as I saw your face that first bonfire where I met you, shadow shaped by the framing of a light so honest and alluring it felt indisputable, and I promise you each droplet was not a pilot light of loss but a hoof mark pressed into the soft of the snowdrifts, and as you wept for what would never be, I could see him there along the treeline at the edge of our gravel yard where the trailers thin out, and baby girl, if you looked up, if you could rub the raw and red from your eyes perhaps you’d see him too, tall as prefabricated home, our little Roosevelt elk with antlers sharp as the way our own bodies intersected and maybe we can love hard enough to burn holes in the sky for him that look like stars if you squint just right.…

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Croix de Guerre

By Jack Harvey

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Let me tell you
chiefs and chefs,
I don’t know,
haven’t the faintest idea,
how to accept all this honor;
how to show, without fraud
or display
my deep feeling,
my gross emotion,
and all in all
thanes, your gleaming
eyes bespeak an honor
not mine, but of all
those who died, pro patria;
gutted like perch,
their holy stink
ascends to Valhalla.
But on.
Let me say thanks;
my parts are here,
arms, legs, eyes;
the net has not been
cast over my
darling anatomy,
eagles, no thanks to you-
in the baldric my scars
start and end.…

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People Who Scream

By David Hutto

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Or Just a Little Regret

In a moment of intimacy in a downtown hotel, lying on a bed with covers pushed to the floor, Vadim said to Tara, “Do you swim?” He lifted his hand from her belly as he spoke, feeling his shoulder ache slightly. Why should a man who was only thirty-seven have shoulder pain?

“A little,” she said, taking his hand and laying it back on her belly. “But I’m afraid of the water.” She liked Vadim, with his thick wild hair and his thick wild accent, and she wanted him to continue lying beside her, softly stroking her body as he murmured in Russian. Milochka he said. Whatever that meant, it sounded nice.

After making love twice, they sat nude by the huge window on the twentieth floor, with glasses of wine, looking down at the lights of Atlanta scattered across the dark sea of night.…

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Death of a Patriarchy

By Danielle Crawford

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I scrubbed bits of egg off a fork from my father’s uneaten breakfast before mother found out he failed to rinse the utensil before placing it in the sink.  The sky outside the kitchen window was flat and gray, like a piece of spoiled meat.  The air inside was oppressive and stifling, much like the rasp of my father’s breathing.  His slippers shuffled against the carpet, and I heard the clank of a spoon against ceramic.  Before I could volunteer to get the bowl, it hit the floor with a thud.  Then his cough came on suddenly; violent and wet as though a tornado ripped through his lungs.  I watched him from the entrance to the living room, my toes breaching the marble room divider he installed when I was in middle school. …

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Almost 30 and Feeling It

By Rebecca Dietrich

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Blossom curls
on the couch

…………paws
over her head
…………head tilted right
back twisted left
…………tail dangling
……………………over
……………………the edge

not very ladylike

she’ll sleep like that
…………for hours

me?
jealous of her spine    

– Rebecca Dietrich

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