It wasn't just the jewels; the couple
had all their own teeth, and arrived
by train with matching luggageher
glittering around the Capitol Hotel,
and him packing the picnic lunch.
They sat on the red velvet couch still
in the lobby, and no one knew his real
name, or that his family in Europe
kept zebras to pull their coachesnot
til later at the trial. The ants had found
the bullet hole in her head and circled
it like honey. A well-dressed corpse.
Though she was a prostitute, really
a dues-paying soiled dove. He was caught
in Cincinnati, convicted, acquitted. Shot
one eye out attempting suicide. A crime
unparalleled in the record of blood. Texas' first
big murder. Two days he waited to leave
Jefferson: wore her rings to breakfast,
with her sprawled there by the empty
basket. Maybe he wanted someone
to guess she wasn't really visiting friends
in the bayou. Or maybe he was hoping
she'd wake, rubbing her eyes at the light
that must look better than diamonds
if you've been dead for a little while.
-
Issue 54
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
-
Fiction
-
Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews Blue Rust
by Joseph Millar
- David Rigsbee reviews Blue Rust