While cicadas crackle in the piney woods
and raccoons skitter through bracken,
we in the cabin march from showers
through long rows of cots
smothered in army surplus blankets.
A ginger-haired girl sobs into her pillow.
I can still taste the blue milk
from the bottom of my breakfast cup.
On the bent-backed chair I fold
my shorts and tees into small prayers
place my scuffed Keds next
to my battered suitcase beneath my bunk.
As the black-bonnet nun sweeps by
like a great swell, I barely breathe.
Her long beads dangle from her leather belt, click.
In her wake, I tiptoe
to my cousin Kathleen's bunk starved
for the scent of home. I long to whiff
my mother's sage-scented hands
steaming from laundry. I slip my arm about her waist
and hold on.
-
Issue 60
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
- Dara Barnat
- Jason Barry
- Robin Chapman
- Geraldine Connolly
- Matt Daly
- Elizabeth Burke
- Liz Dolan
- Thomas Dooley
- Lisa Hiton
- John McKernan
- Dave Nielsen
- Sheila Joy Packa
- Jack Powers
- Brook J. Sadler
- Amy Small-McKinney
- Danez Smith
- Karen Steinmetz
- John Tangney
- Ryan Teitman
- Davide Trame
- G.C. Waldrep
- Sarah Wangler
- Charles Harper Webb
- Mary-Sherman Willis
-
Fiction