Engagements Corinne Rethwill (49-50) to Don- ald Tiegs, Henderson, Minnesota. ’ Dagny Quanbeck, ’50, to Luther Hegland, Roseau, Minnesota. Ruth Isaacson, ’49, to Rev. An- drew Cornell, ’44, Roseau, Minne- nota. Ruth Iesness, ’52, Morris, to Ken- neth Tweed, ’51, Tolna, N. 1). Dorothy Guldseth,... Show moreEngagements Corinne Rethwill (49-50) to Don- ald Tiegs, Henderson, Minnesota. ’ Dagny Quanbeck, ’50, to Luther Hegland, Roseau, Minnesota. Ruth Isaacson, ’49, to Rev. An- drew Cornell, ’44, Roseau, Minne- nota. Ruth Iesness, ’52, Morris, to Ken- neth Tweed, ’51, Tolna, N. 1). Dorothy Guldseth, Minneapolis, to LeRoy Annenson, ’52, Wallace, 5. D. Mabel Danielson, '54, Farmington, to lShut Quanbeck, ’53, McVille, N. . Freda Binder, ’51, Devils Lake, N. D., to Howard L. Helm, Minot, N. D. LaVonne Erickson, ’53, Minneapo- lis, to Lowell T. Nerge, Madison, Minn. .lean Swanson, ’52, Bemidji to Arne Markland, ’49, Menagha, Min- nesota. Montages Adeline A05, ’48, of Sioux Falls, 5. 1)., to Frederick Martichuski. Roland Erickson, ’54, to Darlyne Broin of Kenyon, Minn. Margaret Moe (46-47), Constance, .\1inn., to Albert Sannerude (46-50), Hazel Run, Minn. Berton Hushagen, ’53, Gonvik, to lda Goebel, North Hollywood, Calif., on March 21st. At home, 1300 Kelly Drive N., Golden Valley, Minn. Jeane Tiblce, ’48, to Ruben Vane, ‘1‘). At home, Fort Yates, N. D. Marvin Winquist, ’51, to Carolyn Younger, Duluth. At home, 2100 S. 7th St., Minneapolis. Patricia Dillree to Donald Bloom, '50. At home, 2200 S. 7% St., Minne- apolis. John Lingen, ’53, to Elaine Swig- gum, Utica, Minn.. on March 16, 1951. Robert Huge, ’52, to Donna Mae Petersen, Lamberton, Minn. At home, 4408 29th Ave. 5., Minneapolis. Dagne Morgan, (33-34), to T/S Robert Kraus, Minneapolis. At home, 3221 E. 51st St., Minneapolis. Kenneth Wetter, (49-50), Minne- apnlis, to Carols Kjalin. Class of ’68 Daughter, Lee Ann Naomi, born to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Henjum, ’49, (lrene Shelstad, 48-49). February 7, 1951. Son, David Allen, born to Mr. and Mrs. Harland Gabrielson (Borghild Rholl. 44-45), February 23, 1951. They live at Litchfield. Minn. Son, Allan Conrad, born to Rev. and Mrs. Conrad Iergenson, ’37. They are on a mission field in Central Africa. Daughter, born to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sanders, ’48, (Lorna Wilberg. '47). April 2, 1951. Son, Greggory Dean. born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bervig, '49, April 5, 1951. Daughter, Nancy, born to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Arnold, (45-48), April 5, 1951. Daughter, Barbara Joanne, born to Mr. and Mrs. Harold T. Lee, ’50, on February 24, 1951. In Memoriam Mrs. E. M. Hanson, wife of Rev. E. M. Hanson, ’93, Minneapolis. Mrs. A. R. Anderson, mother of Ernest Anderson, ’37, Minneapolis. Paul 0. Sotnack, ’15, Minneapolis. Rev. L. M. Halling, ’96, 1.05 An- geles, Calif. Rev. 0. Rossing, ’90, Bergen, N. D. Student Leaders Look Ahead (Continued from page 5) men who are interested in this phase of activity. Marvel Moe, Shirley Odencrans, and Russell Berg are a committee responsible for recruiting counsellors and for giving them in- structions in this work. They have planned to present their “training course” on April 24th and May lst. After counsellors are elected and in- formed of their responsibilities, they are assigned certain students who plan to enter Augsburg in the fall. This work is under the guidance of the Personnel Department who also sponsors the Student Leadership Re- treat at Camp Tipi-Waukan. On May 8th the Student Council of the past year meets with the newly-elected Stu- dent Council to discuss the experi- ences and problems which will pass from the one group to the other. They also lay plans for Freshman Days and Homecoming. Pro-Military Information Meetings - The young men enrolled at Augs- burg College who expect to enter mili- tary service sometime in the future are being given an opportunity to become oriented through a series of pre-military service information meet- ings sponsored by the Student Coun- cil under the advising of Mr. Marvin Troutwein and Mr. R. J. Hildreth of the Augsburg faculty. James Wal- ler. Chairman of the student commit- tee. reports that the interest is keen and that attendance has been good. The program consists of weekly meetings at which such topics as Wel~ fare Agencies and the problems they can solve, As ts of the Army Ca- reer, First it): Days, Deferment Policy, Veterans Administration, Rec- reational and Educational Opportu- nities, and Adjustment to Military Life are presented by authorities in each field. The discussions have been led by military personnel from the Twin City area. After presentation of the topic, the audience is permit- ted to ask questions thereby giving the boys an opportunity to clarify their thinking on many subjects. This type of orientation program is rather new for college campuses although the need was felt as soon as it became obvious that a large per- centage of college men Would have to report to service. Augsburg is one of the first colleges in this part of the country to make such information available. In addition to baseball. the Aug gies liave full schedules in Tennis. Track. and Golf. The track squad is going to sorely miss the consistent oint-getting of Gene .lesperson who lias been called up with the National Guard. Bill Kuross, defending state singles champ, will lead the netmen. while the golfers will be paced by Don Fladland and Leon Radde. A new twist to Augsburg baseball rivalry developed recently when Kelly “Smiley” Roth accepted the baseball coaching job at Macalester College. The inimitable Roth, who starred in baseball and football at Augsburg under Edor Nelson, will find himself facing his former coach on May 4 at Macalester. The “"0 teams meet only once. this season. Show less
BASEBALL PROSPECTS FOR 1951 Finding ways to stretch the base- ball season has been an ever-present problem for as long as the sport has been play ed on a college level in the frozen inidwest. Coach Edor Nelson has not been able to squeeze more than sixty minutes out of an hour drill and his... Show moreBASEBALL PROSPECTS FOR 1951 Finding ways to stretch the base- ball season has been an ever-present problem for as long as the sport has been play ed on a college level in the frozen inidwest. Coach Edor Nelson has not been able to squeeze more than sixty minutes out of an hour drill and his efiorts to alter the calen- dar have all failed. Lately. however. we have noticed changes of a quali- tative nature in his approach to the problem. Nelson, who is working his boys out in the gymnasium. begins each practice session by singing “it Might as Well Be Spring". This lends a psychological advantage to the drills which is certain to pay dividends on the diamond. Reluctant to divulge the source of his new musical ap- proach. Nelson's only comment is that he "picked the idea up while working on a progressive dairy farm." Working with a core of ten letter- men. mostly sophomores and juniors. Nelson is non-committal about pros- pects for his squad. “They have lots of hustle.” he said. “and are the kind of team you like to watch. They are kids who like to play ball and will make up in hustle what they lack in experience." The word has been get- ting around. however. that the like- able and jovial mentor has a better squad than last year’s and may even be secretly plotting an upper bracket finish. The returning lettermen include two seniors, Jerry Davis. who will be seeing a lot of action as a pitcher. and Skippy Hanson, who will also perform on the mound. Other letter- men include: Bill Onischuk. pitcher; Robert Hage. catcher: Elwood Lar- son, catcher; Harvey Peterson, third base: Mark Raabe, second base; Arlo Dahlager. first base: Jack Schwartz. center field, and Don Eckhoft, first base. Some of the outstanding new pros- pects include: Don Reimer, catcher; lirling Huglen. pitcher, and Henry Sechler. outfielder. So far this sea- son about forty men have reported for drills. The Auggies will go out of the conference for only two games this season—a home-and~home series with the University of Minnesota. One of the encounters is the season’s opener and will be played April 17 under the lights at Delta Field. The other game will be played at 8 p.m. May 14-. in Nicollet Park. Most of the other home games will be played at Nokomis Field. 50th and Cedar. No admission will be charged for the games at Nokomis. What will be the won-lost record of the squad this season is. of neces-' sity. still in the realm of the un- known. In a recent interview, how- ever. Coach Nelson said, “You must take into consideration the fact that the art of striking a three-inch spher- oid and sending it over lengthy tra- jectories is fraught with a good many uncertainties which make it difficult, if not impossible, to forecast the out- ' come of any season. I wish to deny in advance any statement you may quote me as having made." Spring Sports Schedule BASEBALL April l7—Minnesota, there. April 21—Gustavus, here. April 24—St. Thomas, here. April 28—St. Mary’s, here. May l—St. Thomas, there. May 4—Macalester, there. May S—St. Olaf, here. May 8—St. John’s, there. May Dir—Minnesota, here. May lS—Hamline, here. May 17—St. John’s, here. May 19—St. Olaf, there. May 22—Gustavus, there, 8 p.m. TENNIS April 17—Hamline, there. April 28—St. Mary’s, here. May l—St. Thomas, here. May 4—Macalester, there. May 8—St. Olaf, here. May l2—St. Olaf, there. May lS—Hamline, here. May 18 and ISL—State meet at Mac. May 22—Gustavus, there. TRACK April l4———Macalester, there. April 21—Carlton Relays. April 28—Gustavus, there. May S—Viking or St. Thomas Re- lays. May ll—St. Olaf, there. May 19—State Meet. and a large crowd is anticipated. will be charged. VARSITY-ALUMNI BASEBALL GAME SCHEDULED There will be a Varsity-Alumni baseball game held at Nicollet Park on Saturday evening, May 19, at 8 p.m. It is the first time in history of Augsburg that a game of this type has been scheduled on such a large basis. lnterest among the Alumni is running high for this event The Alumni team has been chosen from the teams of 194-6 through 1950. Claire “Doc” Strommen, one of Augsburg’s all-time greats, will coach the team. “Doc” has received nation-wide attention for his pitch- ’ ing prowess. At the present time he is engaged in assisting Edor Nelson J in the coaching duties at Augsburg, mainly working with the pitchers. The Varsity team is the 1951 edition at Augsburg. A nominal fee 1 The Bulletin of WW WWW SW 8th St. and 213! Ave. S. MINNEAPOLIS 4. MINNESOTA Show less
1 890-1 920 Rev. and Mrs. Bernhard A. Hel- Iand, ’18, (Murial Nelson, ’25) and daughter Claire Elaine, arrived home from India on March 24th. They are living at 3231 Fremont South. Rev. Helland has resigned his position as superintendent of the Santal Mission in India. Oliver T. Swanson. ’17, of... Show more1 890-1 920 Rev. and Mrs. Bernhard A. Hel- Iand, ’18, (Murial Nelson, ’25) and daughter Claire Elaine, arrived home from India on March 24th. They are living at 3231 Fremont South. Rev. Helland has resigned his position as superintendent of the Santal Mission in India. Oliver T. Swanson. ’17, of Dawson Creek. British Columbia. Canada. spent a few weeks in Minneapolis re- cently. visiting his son Ronald. ’48. and his mother and other relatives. Mr. Swenson is operating a farm implement and automobile establish- ment. 1930-39 Rev. H. 0. Egertson, ‘31. of Los Angeles. California. has been called as an evangelist for the ELC. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Bolslad. '34-. and famin have returned from Tanganyika. East Africa. and are at present living at 1924- So. Prairie. Sioux Falls. South Dakota. Miss Constance Slennes. '39. was a visitor on the campus in March. She is a missionary to Bolivia but is home on furlough. While here. she spoke to various groups. including the Spanish classes. and also showed pictures of the work and life in Bo- livia. 1940-50 Rev. and Mrs. Paul Sonnack. ’42. (Evelyn Amundson. ’43} have moved to Chicago where Rev. Sonnack will continue his studies at the UniVersity of Chicago. They plan to return to Minneapolis in the fall. Their pres- ent address is 6731 S. Perry. Chicago 21. Illinois. Iohn Werkel. ’49. has again Won honors in the athletic field by being named the outstanding athlete of 1950 in Minneapolis. He earned the award through his feats in European skating events from 1948 to 1950. He has already been chosen on the United States 1952 Olympic team. Mr. Werket is now coaching the Bear- cat Legion Skating Club of Minne- apolis. Duane Addison. (49-50)). was elected president of the Lutheran Stu- dent Association on the University Campus for the coming year. He is a Junior in the College of Liberal Arts. AUGGIE FELLOWSHIP CIRCLE On the Campus On March 12th and 14th. Augs- burg College was host to the Minne- apolis Junior Chamber of Commerce and about 300 juniors from 10 Min- neapolis high schools. The event was a College Orientation Day sponsored by the J.C.’s for the purpose of ex- plaining to prospective college stu- dents such phases of college life as loans and scholarships. entrance re- quirements. and the military outlook. A movie on activities of a college, filmed at Princeton, was also shown. Mr. William Lee and Mr. Larry El- feldt of the Junior Chamber of Com- merce were co-chairmen of the event while the Public Relations depart- ment at Augsburg made the necessary arrangements on the campus. I I I The third annual Careers Confer- ence was held at Augsburg on April 4th with general arrangements made by student committees and the per- sonnel committee. Miss Leith Shackel, Director of Placement Services. Carleton College. and Dr. C. H. Beck- er. President of Wartburg College. gave the leading addresses. Miss Shackel spoke on “Careers Unlimit- ed" and Mr. Becker used “Serving God in Your Generation” as his theme. Following the general session in the chapel in the morning, the group devided into various interest groups such as mathematics, library science. physical education. and Christian service, each with a leader well qualified to give advice in his particular field. I I I Augsburg has again enjoyed “Sci- ence Night" sponsored by the Aristo- telian Society. This annual affair was held on March 3lst and was widely and colorfully advertised by balloons which were released from the campus during the day. To each balloon was attached a return postcard with the request that the finder return the card to the college. Cards have been re- turned from Gay's Mills. Wisconsin: Klemme, Iowa: Cresco. Iowa. and Goodhue and Waseca. Minnesota. The program consisted of a colored movie entitled “Realm of the Wild”, and open house in various science laboratories of the college. In each laboratory an experiment was being conducted. Approximately 225 peo- ple attended the program. I I I The A.W.S. (Associated Women Students) of Augsburg sponsored a spring tea on April 3rd to which the women on the faculty and staff were invited. After refreshments a very in- teresting style show was given. I l I The Mission Society centered their mission festival on April 5 to 8 around the theme, “Debtors to All”. This thought was carried out by their speakers, Rev. B. A. Helland, recently returned from India, Mrs. Kim of Korea, and Rev. C. E. Wal- stad. president of the Church of the Lutheran Brethren of America. The film. “I Am With You” was shown on Friday evening. I I I Spiritual Emphasis Week was held at Augsburg March 5-9 with Rev. C. E. Walstad, president of the Church of the Lutheran Brethren of Amer- ica, as guest speaker. The theme of the series of meetings was “God Has the Answer". This emphasis on the positive brought a challenge and an enrichment to the audience which packed the chapel every night—a challenge to find the answer in God through His Word, and an enrich- ment through confidence in a life for which there is an answer. I I I Friends and Alumni of Augsburg are sorry to know that Prof. Lars Lillehei, Professor of New Testament Creek, is ill from an heart ailment and has been unable to conduct his classes for several weeks. Latest re- ports are that he is better but that he will be away from the college for an indefinite period. I I I We wish to extend to Professor H. N. Hendrickson our congratula- tions on his 83rd birthday, and to wish him many more birthdays while he is still on the faculty at Augsburg. Willard C. McKinny, ’41. received the master of arts degree from the University of Minnesota at the com- mencement exercises on December 21. 1950. Show less
GOING TO JAPAN Yes. we are going to Japan! Most people congratulate us. Perhaps a few would discourage us. Undoubted- ly those who know us best question the wisdom of our going. Why are we going? Honest an- swers could vary from a materialis- tic. “Good opportunities over there.“ to a... Show moreGOING TO JAPAN Yes. we are going to Japan! Most people congratulate us. Perhaps a few would discourage us. Undoubted- ly those who know us best question the wisdom of our going. Why are we going? Honest an- swers could vary from a materialis- tic. “Good opportunities over there.“ to a spiritualized. “The Lord has led". Actually. our decision to go to Japan is the fruit of convictions concern- ing the need of the Church at home as much as in Japan. A glimpse of our congregational life and a hasty scrutiny of the life of the Church reveals a glaring con- trast. “even to one who runs while reading". What is the reason for the coldness. inertia. and lack of vitality in the Church? It is partly this: we have tended to make Christianity a religio-cultural process. It has been presented as an evolutionary process when it is a dynamic experience. The Church is where the Word of God is preached and believed. It is dy- namic—not institutional. On the for- eign mission field where the Gospel continually comes in contact with un- polished heathendom. there is less temptation to equate Christianity and culture. The Church at home needs a living fellowship with the "foreign" field to remind it of its nature. The home Church needs the mis- sion field to combat its own egoism. Personal pride. denominational big- otry. and intense nationalism are all too evident. Our opinion of an indi- vidual soars if he joins our church. becomes of our theological persua- sion. or swears allegiance to our flag. But the Church of Christ is uni- versal. God says. “Become uni- versal in your love and labor.” Mis- sions serve as a corrective to see- tional and parochial attitudes. ln going to Japan we are not ob- livious to the needs at home. By going we are allowing the Church to exer- cise the only principle by which God can bless us. Our Lord Jesus said, MR. AND MRS. BERGH "Give and it shall be given to you again”. We are still serving a Master who feeds multitudes with a few loaves and fishes. But we must oper- ate on his principle of “Give and Matthew 11:1 embodies a principle which we believe is still valid. "And it came to pass when Jesus had finished commanding his twelve disciples. he departed then to teach and preach in their cities.” it we go in obedience to the Lord Jesus He shall not fail to minister in the places we have left. The LFC-ELC cooperative venture in Japan is itself a forward step in Christian unity. Details concerning our work there have been arranged in the greatest harmony between our joint boards. We are grateful for this fellowship with them in the further- ance of the Gospel. Our field in Japan includes eight million people. These are eager. liter- ate people in the industrial area from Tokyo to Nagoya. But more important than the prin- ciples and the vast multiudes, as ex- cellent and challenging as they may be. are the individuals there who may be led into fellowship with Jesus Christ. It is for them we go! OLIVER and JUDITH BERCH. AUGSBURG GOSPEL QUARTET TO TRAVEL Plans are being made once again for the Augsburg Gospel Quartet to travel extensively throughouot the United States. As is customary. the group. under the guidance and spon- sorship of the Augsburg College Mu- sic Department. will visit many of our churches that support Augsburg and a number of other communities of the Augustzma. ELC. and UELC s) nods. For many years the gospel quar- tets have traveled and have. met with outstanding success and response from the various communities. Augs- burg may well be proud of its young AUGGIES ON MISSION FIELDS IN JAPAN That Augsburg Alumni and for- mer students are taking an interest in the new mission project in Japan is evidenced by the number who have accepted a call to serve in that field. Besides Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Bergh, whose article appears elsewhere in this issue. Mr. and Mrs. Alton P. Knulson, of the Augsburg Seminary will be leaving for Japan after grad- uation in June. Rev. and Mrs. Paul Blikstad, ’ 7, and daughter Priscilla, left from Seattle February 19th for Sakata and Akita, Japan, where they will serve under the Church of the Lutheran Brethren of America. Miss Delna Coerntzen, ’49, of Mountain Lake is also planning to leave for Japan soon under an independent mission group. Rev. and Mrs. Gor- don Tang (Clean Bolslad, ’39-41) are already active on the ELC mis- sion field near Tokyo. Their address is 21 Maruyama Cho, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo. Japan. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Swanson IRth Weltzin, ’47) are also preparing for this field of mission work. Mr. Swanson is at present studying at the Augustana Seminary in Rock Island. Miss Carola Mosby. ~51. Blue Earth. is planning to leave for Tokyo in August as a nurse on the mission field. men that spend their summers in this manner. They present a message— the message of Christ. The personnel of the group will in- clude young men who have had many years’ experience singing in quartets. Howard Pearson will sing first tenor and his brother Daniel. second ten- or. Marlo Peterson, this past year soloist with the Augsburg College Choir. will sing first bass, and Rich- ard “Pete” Peterson, second bass. The men are salaried and the offer- ings taken at the programs will go directly to the Music Department and the College. Each evening during their presentation. one of the group will give a short meditation on the Word of God. This year the itinerary of the quar- tet will bring them into many states. Starting in Minnesota they will visit Iowa. South Dakota. North Dakota, Montana, Idaho. Washington, Ore- gon, and British Columbia, Canada. Show less
AUGSBURG YOUTH CARAVAN TO TRAVEL Six college upper classmen. plus an adult adviser, will travel among the parishes of our Rockford. Marin- ette, Duluth, and Northern Wiscon- sin districts. These youth have been selected by the Youth Director on the basis of musigianship. scholarship. persona ity,... Show moreAUGSBURG YOUTH CARAVAN TO TRAVEL Six college upper classmen. plus an adult adviser, will travel among the parishes of our Rockford. Marin- ette, Duluth, and Northern Wiscon- sin districts. These youth have been selected by the Youth Director on the basis of musigianship. scholarship. persona ity, an Christian seal. Four of the group form a brass quartet which will rank as outstand- ing among non-professional groups. They are as follows: Ruth Schmidt, Elkton, South Da- kota, French horn. (Won first in the National Contest.) Dorothy Strommen, Blanchardville. Wisconsin, Baritone. (Won first in Wisconsin State Contest.) James Christo herson, Valley City, North Dakota. rumpet. ( Has trav- eled two previous years with the Youth Caravan as trumpet soloist.) Douglas Augustine, Minneapolis. Minnesota. Trombone. ( Played in Air Corps Band. Voted most valuable player in Roosevelt High Band. Min- neapolis.) in addition to the brass quartet. the group presents a mixed quartet and a vocal duo. Comprising the vo- cal duo are Charlotte Kleven. Blan- chardville, Wisconsin, pianist and so- rano soloist. and Morris Johnson. cine, Wisconsin. speaker and tenor soloist. (sang first tenor last year (Continued on page 5) To STUDY IN NORWAY Miss Elizabeth Man er, a sopho- more at Augsburg, has n accepted as one of the 250 students from the United States to study at the Univer- sity of Oslo this summer. She plans to sail on June 12th and will spend six weeks at the University studying Norwegian music, art. literature. and government. Miss Manger has rela- tives living in Oslo and will have an opportunity to visit them as well as to travel for about a month. Students are chosen on the basis of scholar- ship and recommendations as well as a statement of their reasons for wanting to stud abroad. Miss Orlette iljelle. a junior. will also spend the summer visiting rela- tives in Gudbransdalen and Eidsvold. Norway, with her parents. They will be leaving on the Stavangerfjord on June 12th and will spend about two months abroad. NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HIGHER EDUCATION MARTIN qunascx The National Conference on High- er Education, each year the largest gathering of educators from colleges and universities, met in Chicago. April 2-4. While many problems of higher education were discussed, the relation of education to defense held the focus of attention. In the opening lectures, the contributions of various fields of study to defense were stressed. President Truman’s an- nouncement re arding the deferment of college students. either by acci- dent or by design, was made on the opening day of the Conference. This was the cause of some optimism on the part of those studying enrolment trends. Predictions were made that the drop in college enrolments from the fall of 1950 to the fall of 1951 would not exceed 10 or 12 per cent. with considerable variation between col- leges because of ROTC programs and other factors. C o l o n e I lr- win. speaking for General Hershey. explained the new draft deferment program at the last session. Much of the conference time was spent in smaller worsho . l had the privilege of working wit a group of about thirty-five interested in the question of how to get a program of general education under way in a small college. Under the chairman- ship of Dean Baller of Carthage Col- lege, with Dr. Walker of Goucher as recorder, Miss Holmquist of Moor- head State Teachers as analyst. and Dr. Furrow of Knox as consultant. the group made considerable prog- ress in identifying problems aml also found some suggestions for their so- lution. The efficiency of the staff respon- sible for mimeographing addresses, news and announcements. and group reports was marvelous to see. Ralph McDonald. secretary of the Higher Education Division of the N. E. A.. retained his reputation for effective- ness in organizin a conference. The only slip occurre in the final lunch’ eon meeting, where Dr. Henderson of the University of Michigan and Dr. Wardell of Oklahoma did a Inas- terful job of stalling while Dr. Hen- derson’s manuscript returned from the eager mimeographers, who were going to have it ready for distribu- AUGSBURG FOUNDATION The Augsburg Foundation is grow- ing! The responses that have come into the Alumni Office from our friends have been very gratifying and encouraging. However, much work will have to be done if we are to reach our goal of “every alumnus and former student a member". That goal can and will be reached—rvwheth- or it is today. tomorrow. or next year~Show less
STUDENT RECRUITMENT EMPHASIZED Student recruitment for 1951-52 has received new impetus with the ap intment of Paul l. Roth to the Pu lic Relations De artrnent. Mr. Roth, assistant in chemistry since 1949, is traveling as Field Represen- tative for Augsburg. and in that ca- pacity is visiting... Show moreSTUDENT RECRUITMENT EMPHASIZED Student recruitment for 1951-52 has received new impetus with the ap intment of Paul l. Roth to the Pu lic Relations De artrnent. Mr. Roth, assistant in chemistry since 1949, is traveling as Field Represen- tative for Augsburg. and in that ca- pacity is visiting high schools throughout the state. The recruitment program is off to a later start than usual because of personnel changes. Constant travel is going to be necessary in order to visit as many communities as pos- sible before the end of the school year. Correspondence with prospec- tive students continues at a high vol- ume. Maintenance of enrollment is a top priority for the years ahead. Now. as never before, a field stafl' made u of all Alumni is essential. and each of us can be of help in this area by: l. Recommending Augsburg to young people contemplating higher education. 2. Sending the names and ad- dresses of prospective students to the Office of Public Relations. 3. Arranging for “College Night" in your church. Films. slides. and oth- er material can be sent to you, and an alumnus in the area or a repre- sentative from the campus can be present to answer questions. 4. Encouraging prospective stu- dents to write to us for answers to their particular questions. ‘ With the addition of Science Hall. Augsburg has splendid facilities for all students, including pre-profession- al and science majors. We are grate- ful to many Alumni who have helped us in the recruitment program and who have helped their young friends to make important decisions about their future. Let’s not slack off! Our slogan for the immediate future is: “Full swing all spring—June’s soon." Student Leaders Look Ahead in order that maximum help and idance might be given new stu- dlelnts before and during fall registra- tion. the Student Council is again sponsoring a Student Counsellors Training Course for all upper class- (Continued on page 7) CONFERENCE ATTENDED BY PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT Miss Gerda Mortenson and Mr. Berner Dahlen attended the Council of Guidance and Personnel Associa- tions at Stevens Hotel. Chicago, March 25-29. The theme for the conference was “Personnel Resources for Improving Human Relations". While technical areas for personnel service and prac- tical applications for group dynamics were given their fair share in the discussions of the topic. the signifi- cance of spiritual. ethical. and moral \alues was given a greater emphasis than has been true in previous con- ferences on personnel services. Dr. Kenneth l. Brown. Executive Director of the Danforth Foundation. was one of the speakers who brought out the thought that religion plays a vital part in counselling. He emphasized the following values as being impor- tant for all: 1. Respect for truth and a deter- mination to find it at all costs. 2. A habit of faithfulness to as- signed tasks. 3. Possession of personal integrity. 4. A sense of life as an opportunity for service. He continued to say that it is of great importance that the counsellor have “a willingness to be of maxi- mum help to students. have endless patience, unmovable calmness. un- ruffled acceptance of itnerruptions. and a habitual vision of greatness". Cod and the Bible give validity to these values. CARAVAN with the l..R.l. quartet). As preludes there will be piano duets by Char~ lotte Kleven and Dorothy Strommen. both of whom are evcellent piano players. All of the six plan on professional scrv'icc in the church. four in our church body. They have been meet- ing regularly for prayer and rehears- als this semester in preparation for the tour. Four of the six are taking the Youth Work class. This group will be traveling under the sponsorship of Augsburg College and the Luther League Federation. They will be. spending two days in each parish. utilizing the time by giv- ing services each evening. and by making contacts with the youth of the (Continued from page 3“ AUGSBURG CHORAL GROUPS ENJOY SUCCESS The Augsburg Choir and Choral Club completed their concert tours this past season with great success. Although both groups experienced extremes in weather while in various parts of the states, they also experi- enced a heart-warming response to their message in song. While in llli- nois and lows. the Choir had five days of freezing rain which made the highways almost impassable, but it was not necessary to cancel any concert. The Choral Club drove (and sang) through several blizzards in North and South Dakota. It was nec- eesary to cancel two appearances on this tour. A group of Alumni in the Chicago area entertained the Choir after their concert in Christ Lutheran Church. The persons responsible for this fine gesture were: Marie Pierce. ‘37: Bel- ma Mikkelson. ’39: Thora Anderson. '29. and lrene Helland. '28. Mr. Joe Seto (43-47) was at the concert also. The Choral Club was treated to a fine lunch after its appearance at Mayville State Teachers College. Mayvillc. S. D.. by Mr. Orrie E. Lar- son. a member of the staff at the col- lege. He is active in the English and dramatics department there. Mr. Lar- son graduated from Augsburg in 1928. The Spring Concert of the Choir “as April 14th at Central Lutheran Church. while the Choral Club will present a concert on April 29th at Oak Grove Lutheran Church. Mr. Le- l'md l3. Sateren is directing both rzroum. parish through informal get-togethers as well as a formal banquet. Youth Caravans from Augsburg have traveled for two previous years and have met such an enthusiastic response from the pastors. that thc\ haw become a most welcome group. In preparation for the tour the group has been not only arranging music. rehearsing. and praying to- gether. but they lune also been giv- ing presentations at public gather- ings. On Saturday evening. April 7th. the group presented a service of mu. sic and witness before an assembled audience of approximately 600 youth from the area around l'irskine. Min- nesota. Tile brass quartet played sev~ crul original arrangements by Doug- las Augustine. one of the group. Show less
VOLUME xur NUMBER :‘ Published by Augsbu rg College and Theological Seminary. Minneapolis. Minnesota. A Lutheran BULLETIN MARCH 1951 A Letter from President Christensen to all Alumni Dear Augsburg Alumnus: Today, as is well known to most of us, the colleges of Our country are facing grave... Show moreVOLUME xur NUMBER :‘ Published by Augsbu rg College and Theological Seminary. Minneapolis. Minnesota. A Lutheran BULLETIN MARCH 1951 A Letter from President Christensen to all Alumni Dear Augsburg Alumnus: Today, as is well known to most of us, the colleges of Our country are facing grave difficulties, caused by the international situation. Reduced enrollments plus inflation have added to previous financial stringencies to produce a real "crisis in the colleges.” As a result, all the private and church colleges are appealing to their alumni and friends to come to their help in a special way at a critical time. As these lines are being written, the government has announced a new policy which will probably permit many more young men to remain in college next year. For this we are grateful. But for the present year, the situation remains unchanged; and almost everywhere there are dangerously unbalanced budgets. One educational leader has estimated that the Lutheran colleges will be short on an average of from $20,000 to $70,000 for the year’s operations. At Augsburg we shall need approximately $20,000 to $25,000. The Augsburg Foundation is our channel for alumni giving to current expenses. It is the work- ing arm of the Alumni Association. Regular memberships cost $10 per year,- but gifts are gladly received in any amount. And every gift is a real lift in this time of need. We deeply appreciate the efforts being put forth by many Alumni in this project, which will help carry Augsburg through another difficult period. The Church does its part year by year. It is an additional inspiration now again to sense the rallying support also of the alumni group. It is planned to begin soon regular Foundation meetings far united prayer and counsel among Augsburg friends for the purpose of solving Augsburg’s problems. All who can are cordially in- vited to participate. The first session will be announced at the Twin Cities Foundation Rally to be held in April. We need one another more than ever today. There is a great work to be done for Christ in Education at Augsburg. The times challenge each of us today as perhaps never before, to both deeper understanding and deeper commitment to the service of our country and of all mankind. Let us give of our best to the cause that unites us! Yours for Augsburg, (5mm MM BERNHARD CHRISTENSEN Show less
Institutional Chaplaincy Service ALEXANDER BORREVIK, Institutional Chaplain The work of the Chaplaincy Department of the Lutheran Welfare Society of Minnesota has become well known to the Lutherans of this aiea since its activities were accelerated by the appointment of Rev. Frederick Norstad to... Show moreInstitutional Chaplaincy Service ALEXANDER BORREVIK, Institutional Chaplain The work of the Chaplaincy Department of the Lutheran Welfare Society of Minnesota has become well known to the Lutherans of this aiea since its activities were accelerated by the appointment of Rev. Frederick Norstad to the directorship of the department in 1949. In addition to training Lutheran pastors to serve as hospital chaplains in larger urban areas of Minnesota, Mr. Narstad is also giving clinical training to others who Will be serving in the state hospitals for the mentally ill. Rev. Aleyander Borrevik, an alumnus of Augsburg College and Seminary, is one of the chaplains serving through Lutheran Wel— fare Society. His work consists in serving Lutherans in the hospitals, sanitariums, and correctional institutions of the Duluth area. In the article which follows, Mr. Borrevik gives an insight into the reason for the need of such service and the type of training required. —E. T. “General cure of souls seems at times about as eHective as putting drops into a patient‘s ey es from a third-story window . . . Unless we come to the ground floor with our 'drops“ and get new life into our personal cure of souls, it is very evident that the people at large will be left with- out our ministry." So writes E. G. Culien, Bishop of Tampere. Finland. What pastor hasn't felt his inadequacy in dealing with the people who have special needs? It may be an emotionally disturbed child in the parish. Often it is the family in which there is an inadequate r'llild. or it may be a mentally ill person. In every com- munity there are multitudes of alcoholics who need the friendship and constructive help of a counsellor. Occa- sionally an unwed mother finds herself desperately in need of counselling and sympathetic understanding. Then there is the delinquent youth, probably the fruit of a broken home, who needs help. In every congregation there are a number of repressed persons who find them- selves in deep water continually because of a fundamental lack of knowing and directing their own normal drives. These and many more people with special needs must be reached by the resources of the Gospel. And what Chris- tian worker hasn't felt his helplessness in being able to properly minister to his people? it has been stated. erroneously or otherwise. that many Christian ministers have been living so exclusively in the atmosphere of the church that they have failed to acquaint themselves with the realms of darkness and the depths of human depravity. Their feet are, so to speak. not on the ground. Their understanding of people-—their deeper motivations and difficulties. their strengths and weak- nesses is inadequate. Accordingly they fail to meet the deeper needs of troubled souls. A tremendous challenge has come to the church of late. Leading doctors and psychiatrists are recognizing the tre- mendous resources of religion and are asking that clin- ically trained men of God make their contribution to the rehabilitation of people ‘in physical or mental illnesses. The term "psychosomatic medicine". used freely of late. Rev. Alexander Borrevik means that man is not just chemistry. Man’s illness is not purely maladjusted chemicals. It may be that, but it very likely hinges on nialadjusted thinking or lack of faith and peace of soul. Often guilt feelings or terrific hostility in a patient bring about physical or mental illness. The doctor or psychiatrist working together with the chaplain or pastor minister to the total personality. Jesus said again and again. “Peace be unto you". This peace which is the fruit of being in tune with God is recognized as of great value by leading scientific men today. We are try- ing to meet this great challenge by adding to our semin- aries special courses in pastoral clinical training. Augs- burg. Luther. and Northwestern Theological seminaries are conducting such courses under the able and inspiring leadership of Chaplain Frederic Norstad, Chief of Chap- laincy Services of the Lutheran Welfare Society of Min- nesota. The Minnesota Mental Health Chaplaincy train- ing is also under his able direction. May the Lord bless us as we continue to bring the love and healing of Christ to our many brethren who have special needs. (- ’o’ooooo”o'ooo'oooo~~'m~"~'-~ Annual Alumni Banquet, Thurs., May 31, Nokomis Heights Lutheran Church i l l t t \ \ \ t t l t t t c "OnooomOOONON'W'mW AUGSBURG BULLETIN Published bi-monthly and one additional issue in April by Augsburg College and Theological Seminary at Minneapolis, Minnesota, tinteer as second-class matter March 21, 1947 at the post office .1! Minneapolis, Minnesota. Vol. Xll. No. 2 MARCH. 1951 Show less
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Ed... Show more
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Editor
Ryan Moore, Prose Editor
Gabriel Benson, Poetry Editor
Danny Polaschek, Poetry Editor
Cary Waterman, Advisor
2
WITH THANKS TO
Ivy Arts Copy and Print
Augsburg College Student Government
Augsburg College English Department
Augsburg College Art Department
The Echo
Augsburg Honors Program
QPA
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
What Type of Black Girl Are You? Nikkyra Whittaker ........................................................................... 8
Simul Justus et Peccator, Andy Anderson .......................................................................................... 11
Queer, Eve Taft ....................................................................................................................................... 12
Jesus in a Cracker, A.Tetzlaff ................................................................................................................ 14
Grey Cloud Island, David Baboila ......................................................................................................... 17
Saint Paul Airport, David Baboila .......................................................................................................... 18
White Bear Lake, David Baboila ............................................................................................................ 19
Zips Coliseum, David Baboila ............................................................................................................... 20
Bridge, Jacob J. Miller ............................................................................................................................ 21
50 Feet Tall, Emilie Tomas ...................................................................................................................... 25
Meow, Ashley Waalen ............................................................................................................................ 26
Mousetrap, Halle Chambers .................................................................................................................. 27
Faces, Constance Klippen ..................................................................................................................... 29
I Don’t Always Feel Colored, Diamonique Walker ............................................................................... 30
Where I am From, Hannah Schmit ......................................................................................................... 32
Who Am I?, Ashley Waalen .................................................................................................................... 34
2
Gratitude, D.E Green ..............................................................................................................................
CSBR, Gabriel Bergstrom ......................................................................................................................
The Fire, Elisabeth Beam ........................................................................................................................
Desert Drums, Abigail Carpenter ..........................................................................................................
Colors, Hannah Schmit ...........................................................................................................................
Urban Delight, Jazmin Crittenden .........................................................................................................
When Dad Wore Cologne, A. Tetzlaff ....................................................................................................
Shitty Christmas Trees, Elisabeth Beam ...............................................................................................
Summer Nights, Adam Ruff ...................................................................................................................
36
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
48
The People United, Adam Ruff .............................................................................................................. 49
After the Hike, Adam Ruff ..................................................................................................................... 50
Crumbs, Malena Larsen ......................................................................................................................... 51
Bloomed, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................................................... 55
Pruned, Audrey Campbell ...................................................................................................................... 56
Herman, Danny Polaschek ................................................................................................................... 57
El Barrio Suyo, Chad Berryman ............................................................................................................. 60
The Neighborhood, Chad Berryman ..................................................................................................... 61
Odyssey, Eve Taft .................................................................................................................................... 62
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 63
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 64
Counting Sheep, Danny Polaschek ...................................................................................................... 65
3
Sky Nights, Keeyonna Fox ...................................................................................................................... 67
Inner Self, Keeyonna Fox ....................................................................................................................... 68
Victory of the People, Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk ............................................................................. 69
An Open Letter to the Un-specials, Halle Chambers ...........................................................................76
Sorex Palustris, Emilie Tomas ................................................................................................................. 79
Woodsy Adam Ruff, Gabriel Bergstrom .................................................................................................. 80
Words, Malena Larsen ................................................................................................................................. 81
Malcom, Danny Polaschek ....................................................................................................................... 83
DRIVING AT ZERO ONE, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 85
DRIVING AT ZERO TWO, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 86
Placemakers, Diamonique Walker ........................................................................................................ 87
A Necessary Evil Thing Considered in any Light, Jacob J. Miller ....................................................... 88
1
WHAT TYPE OF BLACK GIRL ARE YOU?
Nikkyra Whittaker
On the spectrum of being black and female, we can
only be what we appear to be. Take this quiz to find
out what kind of black girl you really are!
1. You’re listening to the radio on the way to Target.
You’re playing…
a. Beyonce’s “****Flawless”
b. Taylor Swift’s “Fifteen” or “You Belong With
Me” or “Wildest Dreams”
c. Chris Brown’s “Loyal”
d. Keri Hilson’s “Pretty Girl Rock”
2. It’s your day off work. What will you be doing?
a. Blowing off steam on Facebook.
b. Watching old episodes of One Tree Hill
c. Out for drinks and scoping eye candy
d. Talking shit with the ladies while drinking Moscato!
3. What’s your dream home like?
a. Full of books on systemic oppression
b. Beverly Hills penthouse
c. Some big shot rapper’s mansion
d. Spacious New York Loft
8
4. Your favorite TV show is…
a. Docu-series on race
b. Sex in the City
c. Bad Girls Club
d. Love and Hip Hop
5. Finally, who’s your favorite female icon from this
list?
a. Angela Davis
b. Taylor Swift
c. New York from I Love New York
d. Nicki Minaj
Tally up how many of each letter you got and turn
the page to find out who you really are!
If you got mostly a’s...You’re an Angry Black Girl!
Congratulations, you loud-mouthed, anger filled
home-girl! I’m guessing there’s always some reason
to be mad at someone, isn’t there? Do you just spend
your days in a perpetual state of rage, angry at the
world for reasons they don’t find important? Do you
find yourself constantly snapping your fingers in
that z-formation, pursing your lips at anyone who
steps in your way? I bet people are telling you to
just be quiet, huh? I mean, what issues could you, a
black female, possibly have? Why should you care
that your high school English teacher gives you a
C+ on your essay because she thinks you copied
it from the white man online? Why does it matter
that your male co-worker at Target constantly teases
you about your nappy hair, calling it a “brillo pad,”
“cheeto puff,” or some other clever name? None of
this should anger you! Be aware, you sassy Sapphire,
in this world, your anger means nothing.
If you got mostly b’s...You’re an Oreo!
You grew up watching Lizzie McGuire and
listening to Aaron Carter. You straightened your
hair from the moment you were old enough to assert
yourself and cried when it wouldn’t lay flat. Your
friends were always shocked to see you bring collard
greens and jambalaya to lunch so you stopped eating
your favorite foods. They didn’t understand why
you couldn’t just brush your hair, wash your hair
everyday, why it suddenly grew or shrunk inches
overnight. I’m certain you’ve heard from many of
your friends how they just don’t see you as a black
girl. They erase your black skin because it doesn’t fit
the images of other black girls they see. You spend
most of your time edging away from the loud black
girls, the ghetto black girls who ate hot cheetos and
drank kool aid and had corn rows and long braids
and smelled like a mix of the jungle and your
ancestors pain and you wished, maybe for a just a
moment, but you did wish that you could be white.
But honey, you can never wash off that melanin! It’s
a permanent stain. Just because your friends can’t
see the black on you, it doesn’t mean the rest of the
world can’t.
9
If you got mostly c’s...You’re a Hip Hop Ho!
You sexual deviant you! Let me guess—big
breasts, small waist, and wide hips? You’ve got that
original Betty Boop to you, something in your eyes
that say yes to a question no one bothers to ask.
You’re the black girl that white guys use as a notch
in their belt. You are the exotic sexual being that
men love to hate and hate to love. You became a
sexual thing at a young age, when your breasts came
in at ten years old and became d-cups at fourteen.
They started looking at you differently, didn’t they?
Your eyes stopped existing. Your words didn’t matter.
Your body became the tool used to diminish your
worth. How often did you get yelled at in school to
put on something less revealing than your shorts?
Did you ever wonder why the skinny, flat-assed white
girls were never told the same thing? Honey, your
wide hips wrapped in chocolate skin were never
yours. You will never be yours.
10
If you got mostly d’s...You’re a Ghetto Fabulous Black Girl!
You make what little money you can working at
Walmart or doing nails. You make people waiting at
the bus stop with you uncomfortable with your loud
laughter and yellow and pink braids and long, bedazzled nails. You toss your weave around, remove
your earrings, and square up to anyone that says shit
about you. When you’re out, you are often told to
stop yelling, screaming, taking up space. You’ve got
baby daddy problems and you’re only 18. You grew
up playing double dutch in the middle of the street
with old rope. You accept your black, your ghetto,
your Ebonics. But you are not supposed to accept
yourself, honey! Don’t you see the fashion police
spreads in the magazines? You are on all the pages!
Don’t show your hips. Put on a shirt that conceals
your stomach. Put your breasts away. Don’t wear
bright lipstick. Stop standing out, being different.
Get smaller, quieter, lesser, as you are supposed to
be. You love your black too loudly and it makes
others uncomfortable. Your job is to make people
comfortable so do your best to limit the loudness of
your melanin.
simul justus et peccator
andy anderson
11
QUEER
Eve Taft
You think there isn’t a sign on my ribs that says
“stonewall inn”?
You think Matthew Shepard doesn’t tug at my hair
and warn me
as I walk the streets of my city?
You think I don’t choke on the smoke
from the hellfire you spit from your pulpits
with sparks that sear and heat branding
irons
which scar your names on me to mark me as
danger?
You think my veins don’t shiver
when they think
of the devastation
wracking the cities
that some called deliverance
while Reagan fiddled
as we burned
You think that the prisons
pink triangles
asylums
bullets spitting into a nightclub
don’t whisper in my head as I make my
way through the world?
12
You think that I don’t notice—
I kiss her
and kiss her
—the headline blowing by with a death toll
and I kiss her
the skyline splashing out behind us
the lights on the Washington Avenue bridge flicker
on and I kiss her
Putin criminalizes us, across the
world
I kiss her
Vigils held too late for young suicides
Corrupting, perverted, disgusting, an affront to
family values—
I kiss her
in the rain and the sleet of Minnesota
I kiss her, our lips tasting of chants from the protest
that shut down I-94
handed down from our grandmothers
hearts beating, eyes sparkling, alive
I kiss her
You think I forget the lists and the candles and the
deaths and the pain and
all that roars in my ears is a chorus
screaming over and over again
you were not able to kill us
I kiss her
and all is still
13
JESUS IN A CRACKER
A. Tetzlaff
Eucharist
I hugged my father’s black, pleated pants while
we waited for mass to start. He was beaming proudly and chatting with the rest of our family. I wore
the only dress I allowed to touch my body: by then
it was a year old and from my uncle’s wedding when
I walked down the aisle carrying a bouquet, looking
like a blonde deer caught in front of a semi truck.
It had a black velvet top connected to a white skirt.
All the girls wore white. My parents cut their losses.
All the boys, shirt and tie. Eight-year-olds taking
their first communion despite the fact that most of
us had no idea what was happening. Understanding the sacraments isn’t really necessary when you
grow up in a Catholic family. By the time you are
aware of your burden, it’s too late anyway. Religion
lived at Nativity of Our Lord Parish, in Green Bay,
Wisconsin. Between church and home, I lived in a
realm of contradiction. I came to visit religion, but
it never went home with me. On Sundays when the
game was in town, God would not judge you for
wearing your Packer jersey to church. Sinning was
bad, but you could tailgate and drink and carouse to
your heart’s content. We should have taken beer at
14
that first communion. We would have appreciated it
more than the wine. We took our places in the ritual
that had been performed again and again. The
time-worn ritual begins anew as I walk to the altar
with my hands folded in front of me. I must remember to raise my hands high enough so the rheumatic
priest doesn’t have to bend down. Right hand over
left. I’m a blonde deer again.
“The body of Christ.” This is the part where
I say, “Amen,” whether I mean it or not, then
put the communion wafer in my mouth. I must
cross myself (right hand touching head, then left
shoulder, then right shoulder) as I walk back up the
aisle and toward my family. They liked to sit in the
middle section, never too close to the altar. They
didn’t like making direct eye-contact with the priest
during his homily. To this day I skip the wine for
fear of communicable diseases. It stuck to the roof
of my mouth, this first communion wafer. It was
stale. There was no substance. Maybe the parched
flour and water, mixed with the lingering incense is
actually what Jesus tastes like. The absorbent clump
lasted into the next hymn. Saliva rushed into my
mouth and eventually the wafer, heavy with mois-
ture, fell from the roof of my mouth. I swallowed
without chewing.
Just go with it, I told myself. All these people
believe in this, so one day, you will too. But I wasn’t
sure. I didn’t get it. The power that kept me from
running back up the aisle wasn’t the love of God
gently pushing me along, but the ritual itself, and the
expectation of my parents and grandparents watching proud and probably dewy-eyed as I joined their
ranks. Hugs and smiles and congratulations as my
family comes out of the first communion Mass, but
I wasn’t sure what was such cause for celebration; I
hadn’t had a great epiphany about God, nor had I
felt any change at all. It was just like every Sunday
late in October.
head and tell me I was forgiven. “Sometimes, I’m
not very nice to my mom or my brother,” I told him.
Navitity didn’t own a confessional booth like the
ones in movies. In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever seen
a confessional booth at any Catholic church outside
the movies. We sat quietly in a tiny room. Being
small for my age, I circled the air below me with
my feet. I sat facing him directly. He crossed his legs
under the cassock he wore, clearly annoyed. After a
silence and a slow nod, the priest said, “Sometimes,
we hurt the people we love the most.” It was the
only part I heard or remember hearing; he started
talking about God’s forgiveness, I assume. I didn’t
pay attention, because I didn’t feel different after
admitting such a pitiful sin.
Marriage
I had no ill-feeling toward the physical place
of church. In fact, the ritual, the sounds, the smell
of incense, and the light that filtered through the
stained-glass windows from an Easterly rising sun
became familiar and comforting over the years. The
nave, filled with old pews, had witnessed my parents’
wedding and my grandparents’ weddings. The organ towered over the choir. The smell of old patrons
and Sunday cologne too liberally applied became a
sensory memory of that place. However, religion has
never been an inward practice; the practice and the
scene never joined together.
Anointing of the Sick
When times are bad, I’ve pulled the fragments
of ritual from my memory and recite the “Our
Father.” I did this in the winter of my eighteenth
year in days following my grandfather’s funeral. He
died of bladder cancer, worsened by a communicable bacterial infection called C.Difficile. I became
familiar with the ritual of funeral; I’d been to three
or four for close relatives. But this time, the ritual felt
different. Before, I was sad. My grandfather’s funeral
confirmed that the only sacred part of my world had
been ripped mercilessly from my arms.
Reconciliation
“Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.”As the
words come out of my mouth, they themselves felt
sinful. I hadn’t sinned, I was eleven. I barely knew
what sin was. I had to stop a moment to think of
a sin I had committed, so the priest could nod his
Baptism
I sat in the shower until the water hitting my
face was colder than I could stand, reciting
the “Our Father” over and over, sobbing.
Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy
name.
I hoped, over so many repetitions, that my view
15
of God and heaven would change. Yet, it confused
me more. Religion stopped looking like the patron
blind to reality and became a place where I didn’t
belong. Like I was missing out because I didn’t get
that epiphany, and didn’t have that same faith.
Confirmation
Religion was so stale, that when my Mother
would occasionally talk about faith, or God, or divine love at the dinner table I would blush with pity
and embarrassment. How can you believe this? I
thought, how can you be so blind to the real world?
Perhaps, I’m the blind one. I continue to live in
an intermediate space between faith and atheism. I
can’t commit to either. The fence between atheism
and faith is fraught with angst. Most days, I try to
laugh away my uncertainty. I tell jokes about my
Catholic past, chuckle when I hear of “recovering
Catholics,” and tell friends, “It smells like a Catholic
church in here,” whenever they burn incense. Religion is still stale to me. Religion has no nutritional
value. Stale religion has no holy orders.
16
grey cloud island
david baboila
17
saint paul airport
david baboila
18
white bear lake
david baboila
19
zips coliseum
david baboila
20
BRIDGE
Jacob J. Miller
This was not way back when, as my dad would have
you believe. It was more recent than that. If he can’t
flat out deny it, which he no longer can, he will at
least try to convince you that it was so long ago as to
suggest it might have been a different lifetime, and
he a different person. He has been, after all, Born
Again. Except he was not the only person involved,
and to carry along as if he was is an exercise in what
I’ve heard philosophers call solipsism. For him, his
transgression was between himself and the Holy
Ghost: accountable not to those he wronged, only to
an invisible spirit. But he doesn’t have sole authority
in determining the past’s relevance or irrelevance
to our lives today. My mother too pretends the past
is only what has happened at a particular point
in time, and not a factor in what determines what
has happened since then and what is happening
now. The slate wiper theory of forgiveness is what
allowed them to wear their veneer of innocence and
believe in its authenticity, and for that reason I resent their new-leaf turnover. My love for them may
not be emergent in my words, I know, but I do love
them, regardless of the fucked up traits they passed
on to their children, which will become evident as
this story unfolds
You might be wondering, if you care at all, what
could be so terrible. Well, it’s not so terrible, and
not even very uncommon, but it happened to me,
and my brothers and my sisters, and there was never
anything we could really do about it. We watched
it unfold almost every night to reveal its rotted pit.
What was scariest was not when a half-full beer bottle would be hurled in our direction for us being too
noisy, and then being held responsible for wasting
the beer, and getting punished even more for that.
What was scariest was when they fought with each
other, mom and dad, when they were both liquored
up. All of us children would be sitting in the living
room, on our knees, in a line, with our hands folded
and tucked inside our clenched thighs, having
hitherto been fulfilling our playful, childish duties
who couldn’t expect things to go so suddenly and
intensely wrong. They would fight about anything,
or nothing, for all we knew or cared. They would
yell, swear, slam their fists on various surfaces, throw
things across the room at each other as if rehearsed.
One time, I remember, and this is what I’m talking
about when I talk about how scary things got, my
21
dad had my mom pinned up against the refrigerator—after she threw three or four plates at him, one
that hit his arm, but would have hit his face if he
hadn’t been blocking, and cut it deep. He had the
sharp kitchen knife pressed firmly under her chin.
If she gulped too hard in fear, or if dad in his stupor
lost balance, she would have been bleeding all over
the family pictures held by magnets to the fridge.
As we grew older, my big brother and I began working under dad instead of merely living under
him. Our prospects in life weren’t substantial at that
point. Whatever potential we had, it had never been
encouraged, so entering into the family business, if it
can even be called that, was the only viable option.
I woke dad up most mornings from his typical
collapse into a face-down, fetal heap on the kitchen
floor, sometimes still wet, sometimes already crusted
over. I’d say, “it’s time for work, dad,” and he’d drive
me to the site where (drinking coffee with whiskey
in it on the way) heavy machinery was waiting to
be operated—even though we used hammers and
nails whenever we could. Stonehenge-sized slabs of
cement, wooden pillars, cinder blocks, and iron rods
littered the landscape. It was all so disorderly that if
a nomad wandered upon the scene, the indication
would be of destruction rather than pre-construction. There were no piles of allocated materials
or inventoried supply lists. It could have all been
salvaged from past demolitions or by thievery from
other project sites. We seemed to accrue it all without any kind of exchange or standard of accountability for use. Everything seemed to just show up
wherever and whenever we needed it. Who actually
made all this stuff? How did we move it from place
to place to use from job to job? Who permitted my
sodden father to oversee such potentially hazardous
22
projects? He was a self-made man outside the advent
of auditing. What did I care then? I was making my
way, fashioning for myself a future out of will power,
and holding my breath until I could extricate myself
from this grim farce.
First day on the job, my dad said to me, don’t
fuck up, or he’d make me test the bridge before
the support beams were all in place. I believed
him. That particular bridge wasn’t connecting two
sides over a raging river or anything; more of a
convenient pathway over a stream, but it was still a
threat coming from dad. Second day on the job, my
brother James tore partway through his leg with a
chainsaw. I heard him yell, but it sounded more out
of frustration than terror and pain. He sat down,
ripped his immediately blood-soaked pants from
where the initial tear was, delicately unlaced and removed his boot so as not to cause more pain, grunting as if he had done nothing more than step in dog
shit, and lifted the nearly severed part of his leg that
dangled lifelessly like a tube sock on a clothesline,
to close the wound, from which I saw steam rising
sacrificially to the wintery heavens. He reached
forward to grab the excess of sock which, although
bunched up at his toes, had a long, tortuous journey
before being completely removed. He screamed as
he stretched forward, more circumstantially appropriate this time, and this is when I dropped my—
whatever, the thing I was holding, I can’t remember
what, but I didn’t hear it land because I couldn’t
assimilate anything else that may have been transpiring around me. I almost seemed to float over to him,
not even aware of my legs propelling me forward. I
saw all the blood, but I wasn’t put off by it as much
as I thought I probably should have been, and I
thought that as I stared at it pooling out. I observed
it dispassionately, coldly, but I may not have been
breathing. At first sight, it was just an organic pipe
that sprung a leak. I think I asked if he was all right
but I meant it more like did he think he was going to
die. He said to go get dad and that’s when I became
afraid. I stood there for I don’t know how long, until
he repeated himself more urgently:
“Walt!” he said, “Go! Get! Dad!”
I listened that time, but I was still very afraid. I was
trembling and began feeling like I might faint, and
I almost hoped I wouldn’t find dad, that he’d be off
drinking somewhere, but he wasn’t. He was drinking
right there, over a small mound of dirt, holding a
big piece of wood sturdy for someone to do something with. I saw his breath bellow out into the cold
with a cough and evaporate as he took a swig from
a bottle before sliding it back into his coat pocket,
without so much as a pretense of inconspicuousness.The bottle neck stuck straight out and brushed
against his elbow, a cumbersome lump sinking
down and throwing off his equilibrium further than
the ethanol already had. I slowed my pace, tried to
regain some composure, and still hoped he wouldn’t
notice me. I could claim an attempt at getting his
attention, but he just couldn’t be bothered with me.
I tried, I’d tell James, but I’ll carry you. I was sure I
could have done that. Part of me still wished I could
have avoided involving my dad at all. It was selfish,
but I thought I might get slapped with the blame.
But I yelled, Dad! Come quick! Dad, I yelled again,
skidding on the gravel as I spun around, intent on
not letting my dad’s impatient glare lock on me,
and from that momentum, nearly ascending at a
perfectly horizontal angle in the air before I landed
face first on those same tiny rocks, a perfect reenactment of self-humiliation on the school playground
at recess. I felt all those multiple points of impact,
but wasted no time in catapulting myself back
up—no time for embarrassment just yet—clawed
off the pebbles that clung gently to the tiny dents
they bore into my face and palms, and sped back
to my brother who, when I reached the dirt-mound
summit again, I could see was lying flat, surrounded
by the thick, still-steaming purplish puddle which
had, since I left him, at least quadrupled in circumference. Not looking back at all during my return
sprint to see how far behind me dad was, or even if
he followed me at all, I turned from the sight of my
brother completely to see him, Dad, shuffling over
the mound, bogged down by beer bottles, which
could be heard clanging together in his pockets.
He was wheezing inhalations of frozen air. He saw
James right away, I know it, but he didn’t say anything until he got right up close to him, planting one
clumsy boot in the blood puddle with a squelchy,
meager splat, like an old-fashioned letter-sealing
stamp on melted wax. He leaned over with outward
turned elbows and hands on hips, looked at James’
face. James’ eyes were closed. Dad then scanned
down to the butchered leg, grimaced, scanned
back up to James’ face. James’ eyes were now open
again, frigid with shock, and dad said, “pull yourself
together, son,” erupting hysterically at his own clever
buffoonery.
James turned out to live, no real thanks to
our father. I ended up having to run to the nearest
phone anyway and call an ambulance. He didn’t
even lose his leg. He did require a blood transfusion
because he lost gallons of it, or at least it seemed
like it when I stood there staring at the mess, but his
gristly cheeks had their color restored right in front
of me, resupplying and, it almost seemed, re-inflat23
ing him to human shape at the coercion of some
stranger’s bodily elixir. It worked like sorcery, but far
more astonishing because it was methodologically
reliable. The warm fluid surged through his veins,
and he was ensconced for a moment in a prodigious glow of newfound vitality. Back then, my dad,
laughing, called him a lucky son-of-a-bitch, whereas
telling the story now, upon reflection and suspension of rational thought, my brother was “touched
by an angel.” Now, whenever this celestial creature
of mercy is mentioned, who conveniently remains
anonymous for humility’s sake I suppose, instead of
our dad drunkenly laughing and mocking the situation, James does. An example of an aforementioned
fucked up trait passed on in the family.
24
50 FEET TALL
Emilie Tomas
I was in 5th grade
When my class went
To see ‘The Human
Body’ and I watched
In childhood
Horror as
A 50 foot grin
Unfurled, loomed
Large enough
To pull me
Into orbit
Devoured
First a sandwich
And then my
Faith in humanity
With deafening
Smacks
Like thunder
If thunder
Was made
Of jelly and
Dismay and I
Knew it was a
Crime to allow a
Person to become
This
Inflated,
With every pore
Its own path to
Hell and I knew
I couldn’t trust
Anyone because
In our heads
We are all
50 feet tall.
25
meow you see
ashley waalen
26
MOUSETRAP
Halle Chambers
Minnie “Mousy” O’Mally knew she was
invisible up here on her fire escape. This was her
safeplace. With the ladder pulled up as it was now,
almost no one could reach her here. Plus, even if
someone did make it up here, she could easily get
away.
If she crawled rough the window, she’d be
securely locked in the apartment. There, it was
warm and dry and at least sometimes safe when her
daddy…no, excuse her, correction, “Father or Sir”
wasn’t home. He hated when she called him Daddy.
He wasn’t home now, out doing illegal God knows
what in the “family business,” but he would be back
soon. Hence why she was out here. So, no apartment, not right now.
If she dropped the ladder, she could slide down
to street level in seconds and be down the block
in under a minute. She knew, because she’d practiced and had timed herself. The only way to avoid
getting hit in the face was to be quick on your feet.
That was the first rule of fighting that Jase, her older
brother, had taught her. With the life they lived,
it was also a rule of survival. And they didn’t call
her “Mousy” for nothing: she was small and fast…
very fast. Jase could make a distraction, and Minnie
could run. But, Jase was working a job that “Father”
had given him out of town till this weekend, and
she’d surely get caught if she didn’t have her usual
head-start. So,“down” wouldn’t work either.
If she scaled up the ladder above her, she’d be
on the roof, where their oldest brother, Cobie, had
often taken her and Jase to stargaze. She hadn’t
known till six years into her still short life that he’d
done it to keep his precious baby brother and sister
away from their father’s sight when the man would
come home satellite high or plastered. She hadn’t
known till twelve years in that he’d take their father’s
hungover backhand on the mornings after, so she
and Jase didn’t. All she’d known as he’d taught her
each constellation was that Cobie was braver than
Orion and that she and her brothers were more
inseparable than the Gemini twins. But, her world
went as topsy-turvy as Cassiopeia when her father
had sent Cobie away, saying he would not have a
queer as a son. When Jase and Minnie hugged him,
Cobie swore he’d come back for them in a year or
so. Jase had given up when he’d been two years
gone. That was two years ago, and now even Minnie
27
was starting to doubt. No, she couldn’t go up to the
roo, not alone.
She shivered in the October chill as she reviewed her options: “in” would be facing her father’s
wrath, “down” would be facing being caught by
a cop or a stranger, and “up” would be facing a
reminder of the happiness, now heartbreak, brought
by a brother who was likely never coming home
again. So, maybe she couldn’t escape easily…or at
all. She shivered again, this time more in frantic
panic than from the frigid, near winter city wind.
For not the first time in her life, Mousy felt trapped.
28
faces
connie kilppen
29
*I DON’T ALWAYS FEEL COLORED
Diamonique Walker
Sometimes I find comfort in places I somehow know
I don’t belong
Never a full day, but hours will pass and I won’t
consider my brown skin or kinky hair
I’ll let the imminent fear of my black body being
made into an example fall back to the depths of my
mind
My daughter’s safety in mixed company won’t occur
to me
I won’t juxtapose my blackness with any other’s
identity
confidence
As if one chooses randomly from a pile of stock
black girl names when they look at me
He asks me if my hair is real
I tell him he can’t ask me that
He says oh it’s okay, my girlfriend is black
I’m a dirty smudge on freshly ironed white linens
Trying to blend in, trying to live my life
I breathe, momentarily
Suddenly, I’ll feel breathless, choked
Stabbed in the chest
Stung by a white hot micro aggressive slap in the
face
An unsolicited violation of my personal space
A pale hand gently pulls a lock of my hair in white
amazement
Or a thin pair of lips will say “what’s upppppp” to
me and not anyone else
I’ll get called a name like Jasmine with such utter
30
*Line borrowed from Claudia Rankine, Citizen
WHERE I AM FROM
Hannah Schmit
I am from the forest. From ruddy Maple and heady
Pine. I am from the sunlit dust that refracts the life
of the breeze. The rough wood of the trees are my
bones, roots firmly planted deep in the depths of the
cool black soil. Generations have taught me to live
in the sun, tan weathered hands, calloused and worn
cover small, break earth and sow seeds. Exhaling
with the unfurling of new leaves whose first stretch
welcomed life, I learned the importance of patience
and nurturing.
I am from dirt beneath my nails and gritty sand in
my teeth. Sap painted hands and hot tar feet, blackened from short dashes across burning pavement
that rippled with summer heat. Sandboxes were my
kingdom, the layers of silt and sand familiar to my
prodding hands. I climbed turreted towers of twisted
bark and branches to survey the world and breath
in time with the breeze. Twigs and leaves were my
crown and a rusty tractor my carriage. My people
were the songbirds and insistent cicadas whose songs
filtered lazily together through the woods. Sometimes I called back, matching note for note, melodies
and harmonies creating a canopy of familiarity.
I am from wildflowers who nodded their velvet, satin, and paintbrush heads as I passed by. From dried
grasses whose sweet scent rose from rolling waves
that undulated under horse-tail clouds above. The
gold-fringed top of the corn is my hair as it turns to
brown under the autumn sun.
I am from the passing of seasons, each marking the
time as brilliant red and orange gave way to pristine
white and serene gray. Freckles and sunburn traded
for pale skin cold kissed cheeks. My life can be
counted in scraped knees and bruises, and band-aids
and scars, each a story unique unto itself.
I am from the water. Clear and silted, still and rushing it surrounds me. The river courses through my
veins, its steady pulse my heartbeat. I am from the
muted silence of holding my breath. From letting
go in the soft pixelated light that swirls lazily in the
haze of a murky river. From the dew that rests in
early mists that lay as a blanket over a newly purified
earth, protecting the last of the dawn.
I am from music. Love-strung tunes of lullabies rock
31
my past to sleep and call forth dog-eared memories.
Treasured memories that float fragmented in my
mind,
I was waltzing with my darling…
Goodnight, Irene…
Then sings my soul…
Black Forest I have come to be in this place. Knit
sweaters and hand me downs weave the fabric of my
personality.
The black ink of the notes is stained on my fingers, the lyrics printed out as a map on my mind.
My body is movement, ‘full of grace’ as I danced
through recitals and music competitions. My history
is composed of the ivory keys of a piano board, the
metallic strings of a guitar, and the soft wheeze of a
musty accordion.
I am from survivors. From broken families and lives
I was given the opportunity to begin. Out of the
ashes of war and blood, death and pain I was taught
compassion. The scars remind me of my privilege.
A handful of ink-smeared letters, a fading tattoo,
and relentless nightmares that went unspoken.
Touched by shadows of heartbreak and longing I
have learned the fears of disease and pain, the cruelty of man and the destruction of illness.
I am from a legacy. Footsteps preceded my very first
and taught me how to stand tall—to walk courageously. When I was tired of walking and needed to
fly, strong hands lay behind me as I learned to test
my own strength.
I am from fading memories. From sweat and
ploughs, rough tools and run down sheds. My past is
a copper foundation of saved pennies stretched with
love and trust. The polished wood of a hunter’s gun
and tug of a taut fishing line tie me to
the land of a generation gone by.
I am from the creaking wood of a ship that ferried
dreams. From the fjords and
32
I am from strength. From weary hands that sought
to move forward. From songs crooned in different
tongues, prayers tucked away from missed lives.
I am from the sweet smell of tobacco. From a worn
brown pipe laid in the top overall pocket. From tales
of Shirley Temple and shiny black shoes. From the
canoe as it passes over reeds and the click of a cane
keeping time with shuffling shoes. From sterilized
rooms and flowers with similarly fated owners.
I am from loss and tears.
I am from the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, from
steam and coal. From concrete jungles and log cabins. I am a piece of the past, I am…
The rooms of my mind are wallpapered with
snapshots of a younger me. Sayings and phrases are
the soundtrack of my life. I carry them with me.
Tucked in locked and forgotten rooms they wait
patiently, longingly for me to recall.
future. I seek not where I am going only
exist here, as I am.
I am from the past. Shaped by the present I live for
the future. I am from wanderlust. An incorrigible
desire to explore that cannot be quelled with the
stillness between heartbeats. I am from the excitement that teeters on the brink of the inevitable.
I am pulled at by the gentle whisper of religions.
Called to the beauty of holiness in the world, I am
grounded in the church yet growing in the temple
and the mosque.
I am gentle hands that have learned to be useful—to
give back. Well-used fingers taught to survive and
protect. I am a collection of places and people that I
have encountered. In love with humanity, I exchange comfort for experience.
I am at home in the concrete jungles constructed
from heat-cracked pavement and in the mudpatched hut of the desert. The mountains and caves
call to me like the trees and fields of my youth. I am
at home in the grand expanse of a world that knows
no limits, understands no boundaries. A world that
exists, simply to exist. My feet itch to travel down
forgotten paths where the dust of ages can billow
out from under me and cloud the clarity of the
33
who am i?
ashley waalen
34
2
GRATITUDE: A POEM IN FOUR PARTS
D.E. Green
1. Le Chaim
2. In Praise of Delusion
Each day, my own sunrise, my own morning star:
your red head radiates strange aerial spikes.
When he walks down the sloping skyway from
Memorial
to the Music building on his way to a long evening
class, he sees his reflection in the large classroom
window at the base of the slope. He loves that mirror. In it, he is about a foot taller than his five-fiveand-a-half and twenty pounds lighter. He is younger
than his sixty years.
The silver hair is less telling. As he approaches, the
Other ways slightly, moves with the elegant gait of
an athlete or dancer. This, he imagines, is my Norwegian double—tall and slender and (at least from this distance)
good-looking.
Of course as man and image converge, his Other
shrinks into an eastern-European, Semitic, rather
compact, little old man.
Perhaps (he wonders) I have seen the inner image of myself.
Perhaps (he smiles) I am happy just to have illusions.
Our son’s beard and long Hasidic locks
on a head never bowed in prayer hover
over his guitar and, till he gets it just so,
a heavy-metal riff. The picture of Ollie, our old
pup,—
his face speaks love, love, love. Like the holiday meal
you’ll pretend to let me cook. Or when your hand
gently
strokes my heaving shoulder: I am sobbing silently
because the movie has ended well—a good death,
timely reconciliation, vows revived, a renewed
breath.
36
3. Thanksgiving
4: To My Son
This morning, as I drive
from Northfield to Hampton
past field after barren field,
three wild turkeys
foraging and gobbling
at the edge of the road—
their white-splashed wings,
black-feathered trunks,
It’s Friday, Z—, and (as always) time to say how
much I love you (and your mom too, since I don’t
say it often enough though I feel it every minute)
and how much I miss you and hope you can spend
a few hours with us and Grandma the first weekend
in November. We worry about you every day, ‘cuz
that’s our job, but we also have an abiding sense
of how strong you are: How much you have been
through, how far you’ve come, and how you face
each day with grit—and, I hope, love. The latter
is so hard to do: Over breakfast your mom and I
sometimes sit around and whine about our work,
about grading student papers. But a little later I’ll be
walking across campus and the light will be just right
and I’ll see a familiar face amid a group of young
people and—I don’t know why—I feel love. I think
that’s the word. And I felt it last time we picked you
up downtown and you were talking to some scruffy
stranger on the street. And the fact that you can still
be open to such encounters—isn’t that love too?—
filled me with wonder. It’s funny: Old people, among
whom I am about to number, have proverbially been
beyond wonder, such a romantic and old-fashioned
word. But I swear that I still feel it—and that you are
among the wonders of my world.
red combs poking
and pecking the gravel
and weeds—surprise me.
I flinch.
The car swerves.
I breathe.
They range unruffled.
37
work in progress
gabriel bergstrom
38
THE FIRE
Elisabeth Beam
I stood with my back to the crowd watching the
house go up in flames. It happened faster than I had
expected. It had taken less than a minute for the fire
to spread from the kitchen to the living room and
even less time for it to make its way upstairs and into
the bedrooms where Grandma and the twins had
been peacefully sleeping. Joel stood beside me; his
face was dark with ash, his mouth tilted upwards in
a sickeningly gleeful smile.
Momma had never liked Joel. She said he was a
troublemaker and I should do my best to stay away
from him. Joel hadn’t always been mean. When I
first met him he would bring me friends and make
me laugh. He gave me my grey tabby cat, Walter,
and my small white bunny, Snowy. We used to all
run around the garden and play and laugh. I didn’t
like it when Walter and Snowy played. Walter
always hurt Snowy. Joel loved it. Snowy’s pain filled
shrieks always brought a smile to his face.
Joel would play tricks on Momma. He’d move the
chair she was about to sit in and she’d tumble to the
floor with a crash and a scream. He would put dead
things in the twins’ crib for Momma to find. Once
he brought a live snake into the house and slipped
it into the shower when Momma was in it. She
screamed something awful and had locked me in
my room for a week. I always got blamed for Joel’s
wicked tricks.
Momma brought a lot of new friends to the house
after that. She brought in men wearing long white
coats who talked with me and asked questions about
Joel and Walter and Snowy. Joel would stand behind
them as they questioned me and make faces. I didn’t
understand why they didn’t just talk to Joel and grew
frustrated with their questions.
Once Momma brought home a man in a black suit.
He walked around the house mumbling in a strange
language, throwing water on the walls and waving
his cross around like a baton. I thought he was
crazy. I told Momma and she told me to hush and
sit down. The man stood in front of me yelling in his
strange way and holding his cross on my forehead.
It was cold and made me uncomfortable. Joel got
upset. He didn’t like the man and the way he was
39
shouting. The next thing I knew the man was on the
floor bleeding from a gash in his head and Joel was
laughing loudly in my ear. A bunch of police officers
showed up and Joel told me not to tell anyone what
he’d done. He said I should blame it on Momma
and she’d go away for a long time and stop bothering us. Momma shouted and cried and struggled as
the police dragged her away to the sound of Joel’s
gleeful laughter and the twins’ high pitched screams.
Grandma came after Momma. She was mean.
She locked me in my room and told me to stay
there until I learned my lesson. I watched him
stalk around the room at night mumbling darkly to
himself. Grandma made me to go church with her
every Sunday, she said I had to pray for my soul for
what I’d done to that man and to Momma. I didn’t
understand why everyone blamed me for Joel’s tricks
and was tired of being punished for all the naughty
things that he did.
One night at supper, Joel made scary faces at the
twins who started wailing. Grandma stood up and
yelled at me as she tried desperately to calm the
twins. She told me to go to my room. I said no. I
pointed at Joel and yelled at him with all my might.
This was all his fault. Grandma sent me to bed. Joel
told me they were going to send me away. They
would separate us and I would never be able to see
him again. I told him I was fine with that because he
was being horrible. That upset him. He got Walter and Snowy and made me watch as Walter ate
Snowy. I cried. He laughed.
Joel woke me up at midnight. He told me we could
stay together. Me, him, and Walter, but we had to do
40
something first. He smelt like gasoline. He led me to
the kitchen and pointed to the stove which was covered with a sticky, sweet smelling liquid. He told me
to open my hands. I did. He handed me a lighter.
I didn’t want to do it but Joel got angry when I tried
to say no. He yelled and told me to do it for all the
times Momma blamed me for something he did.
That if I did this everyone would finally realize it
was him doing all the bad things and not me. My
hands were shaking so bad it took me five tries to
get the lighter to ignite. When it did I froze and
stared at the small flame in my hands. It flickered
with every shuttering breath that came out of my
mouth. Joel grew impatient and slapped the lighter
out of my hand and onto the stove. There was a
large whooshing noise and a blast of orange light.
My arm hair stood on end and sweat trickled down
my face. I backed away. Joel stood in front of the
fire and laughed. He threw his arms out wide and
danced in tune with the flames. He was crazy but
his movements were so beautiful and fluid. It was
frightening. The fire advanced toward me. I didn’t
want to move. I wanted the fire to eat me like it was
going to eat Grandma and the twins. Joel grabbed
my hand and led me outside.
We stood to the side and watched as the fire slowly
ate up the house I had grown up in. The house that
the priest, the twins, and Grandma had all died in.
Sirens and smoke filled the night air. I looked to my
side for Joel, but he had disappeared.
DESERT DRUMS
Abigail Carpenter
When my London flatmate, Raoni, suggested
we travel to Northern Africa because he was missing
the heat of Brazil, we had no intention of visiting
the Sahara Desert and the Atlas Mountains. But we
quickly made friends with a generous and hospitable
Moroccan man, Raxido, who invited us to a local
drum circle at the edge of the Sahara Desert.
After traveling on camelback against an orange-rayed sunset, we found ourselves among the
sand dunes. We parked our camels single file near
our camp, and I realized a place that once only
existed in my dreams was now before me.
I had to close my eyes for a long while. I opened
them over and over again until I was sure of it. I
had to reach down and let the sand fall between my
fingers slowly. I had to breathe in the crisp, evening
air. And when I looked up, the stars speckled in the
sky like the summer freckles on my face, thousands
and thousands of them.
When the drum circle began, I let its music
fill me up. It started in my toes and moved higher,
tickled my fingers and sent goosebumps up my arms
and back. The drums vibrated within my chest and
when it reached my mouth, I screamed in laughter.
My laugh echoed farther and farther across the desert, not meeting any person or town or house until it
was miles and miles away.
I wrapped my blanket a little tighter and
watched my friends dance around the fire to the
beat of the drums. Their legs moved up and down
as their hands joined the ashes flying through the
night air.
For many hours, we sat around the fire, told
our stories and spoke aloud our dreams. We danced
and sang and took turns pounding the drums. We
slept under the stars among the silence of the desert
for only a few hours until the sun awoke us on the
horizon. And moving through the deep sand, the
sunrise at our backs, we rode our camels to the bus
to escape the desert heat before it swallowed us up
whole.
41
COLORS
Hannah Schmit
If I am a color call me red
The color of passion and love
Humanity worn on my sleeve
The color of my blood, beating heart.
Call me red.
If I am a season call me fall
With baited chilled breath I speak
My words on whirlwind breezes fall
An omen of changes to come
Call me fall.
If I am a sound call me silence.
The chaos and stillness of calm
My words lost yet encompassing
In anticipation of something
Call me silence
If I am a thought call me hope
The desire for something more
A yearning call deep within me
The need to breathe
Call me hope.
42
urban delight
jazmin crittenden
43
WHEN DAD WORE COLOGNE
A. Tetzlaff
“Did Grandpa Mike die?” My small voice
broke a quiet that Dad and I carry easily between
us. A radio frequency connecting our minds that
communicates silently, so we don’t have to. Even at
the age of three, I knew our sacred, noiseless space
well.
Dad took me to a park one day, nearby my
childhood home. We rarely visited this park unless
we intended to use its snowy slope for adrenaline
rushes in our bright plastic sleds in the winter time.
But it wasn’t wintertime now. My dad wore a blue
t-shirt he’d owned since high school. Summer or
spring, the season isn’t particularly distinct. The hills
rose nakedly as we quietly approached.
I’ve come back to the memory time and again;
the images are blurred, like a positive photograph
that didn’t come out of the darkroom correctly.
I can’t recall how my father responded to my
question, though I’m sure he patiently and painfully affirmed my query. In that moment I wasn’t
shocked. I wasn’t sad. Presently, I regret that I can’t
remember a man who loved me and was so dearly
loved by others. I don’t know how he looked aside
from the pictures I know. How he talked, laughed,
44
yelled, walked, I don’t recall. Did he wear cologne to
work like Dad?
When I was young, Dad wore cologne to work.
He woke up around five in the morning in order to
be at work five-thirty, and he still does, despite the
fact that no one expects him in the office till eight.
I’d hear his alarm from my bed and wait to smell
the mix of dewy summer grass and the spicy knives
of cologne in my nostrils. The smell lingered and
pulled me back to sleep as Dad left the house. On
the day at the park, Dad wasn’t wearing cologne.
Dad didn’t wear cologne that day because it was
either a weekend or he had the day off or had taken
time away to grieve.
I don’t remember the call to our corded
telephone late one night. It was the hospital telling
Mom and Dad that my grandfather died of a heart
attack while showering. I don’t know if he died
immediately or if the attack was slow, painful, cold,
and wet. I will never ask. The thought of breaking
the stitches grief so tenuously sewed incites trepidation. Was my young face one of his last images? I’m
vain enough to assume so––grandparents always
think of the grandbabies first. Was it a comfort? I
can only hope.
At my Grandfather’s funeral, I can’t remember
Mom’s grief. I can’t remember the funeral either.She
keeps the remnants of her love tended like a flower
garden and tells me of her father often. I have nothing but the cemented walkway leading to the park
that summer day deep in my mind.
Mom tells me that my grandfather lived as long
as he did because he was waiting for me. It was a
miracle I was even born, but that’s not my story to
tell. She calls me “the sparkle in his eye.”
Christopher, my younger and only brother,
inherited my grandfather’s bright, Anglo-blue irises.
He was born the year after my grandfather died.
Christopher joined the Army a few weeks ago; my
grandfather was a Marine in the 60s.
During his service in Asia, my grandfather collected each country’s currency. Grandma keeps the
collection in a red leather box in her bedroom closet.
I used to step onto a chair and carefully extract the
artifact from the top shelf and touch each coin and
each bill. Some of those tenders are much extinct
now.
The souvenirs of my grandfather’s life are far
less valuable to me than those of my travels––those,
at least, the mugs and the key chains, those have
memories attached of the real thing.
I’ve spent most of my life scouring photos and
objects, trying to resurrect an authentic memory
of my grandfather. Trying to find a sensation that
brings him back to me like the early morning scent
of Dad’s cologne because I only remember the
hills and my words and Dad. The solvents of time
washed away my grandfather.
45
SHITTY CHRISTMAS TREES AND SECONDHAND DOLLS
Elisabeth Beam
When I was a kid we didn’t have a lot of money.
But we managed to survive. Mom worked a lot at
the dingy looking Super 8 Motel just down the street
from the elementary school. You know, the kind
of motel that charges by the hour instead of night.
She hated it but it was close to school and paid just
enough. Around November she would start picking
up shifts at other hotels in town to save up more
money for Christmas. It was hard. The heat bill
always went up mid-October when the chill started
to set in and the snow began to fall. Presents were
always an issue. Getting stuff for just me and Sarah
was usually alright, but Mom came from a big family. Six brothers and sisters all of whom had kids. All
of whom would be needing presents. That’s a lot of
money. Money we just didn’t have.
One year there was a huge blizzard and they
canceled school for a week. Sarah was only six at
the time and she couldn’t be left alone to take care
of herself much less a five-year-old as well. So mom
had to stay home from work and look after us. She
tried to make it seem like she wasn’t stressed out
about the money, but I knew she was. She would
pace around the kitchen at night and mumble to
46
herself. She’d crouch over her checkbook and shake
her head. She tried to hide it from us, but I noticed.
I always noticed when she got like that. A week of
work missed meant we wouldn’t be able to afford the
gas to get to grandma’s house for Christmas. And a
week with everyone at home meant that the heat bill
was going to be rough. She was too proud to try and
get food stamps. So money that would normally go
towards presents went to buying our Christmas feast.
We didn’t go to my grandma’s house that
Christmas but it was probably the best Christmas of
my life. The day before school let out our landlord
took out all the carpet in the living room. He said it
was due to be replaced and that someone would be
over before the holiday to put down some new carpet. “Your feet will be so happy and thankful! That’s
the best Christmas present you could ask for!” he
had happily told us. No one came. The floor was
cold and there were nails and sharp staples sticking
up at weird angles. It hurt to step on them and small
red dots appeared throughout the house as we all
made the mistake of stepping in the living room
without socks.
Mom put down an old ratty green rug, one
that our cats liked to pee on. She bought a small
fake green tree from the thrift shop downtown. It
was the saddest looking tree. Most of the branches
were missing so it had random bald spots sporadically around its leaning trunk. A good number of
the ornaments that we put on it fell off because it
couldn’t support their weight. We made new ones
out of paper and glitter. Mom wrapped tinsel she’d
taken from work around it and Sarah and I sloppily
placed string lights. We put an old family picture at
the top of the tree because we were too scared that
our expensive Christmas angel would fall and break
if we tried to stick her up there.
Thinking back on it now it was a pretty shitty
looking tree, but back then I thought it was the best
thing I’d ever seen in my life. I remember sitting on
the floor amongst the nails and staples and looking
at it glittering and glistening and thinking that it was
a far better tree than anyone else could ever have. I
thought that even if we’d spend a million dollars on
a tree and all its dressings that it wouldn’t even be
able to come close to this masterpiece sitting before
me.
For Christmas Eve we blasted holiday music
and ran around the living room twirling and waving
our arms above our heads. Mom had somehow
found time to make new flannel pajamas for both
me and Sarah and we had immediately put them
on. She had also given us each a doll that she’d
found at a thrift store. They looked ratty and dirty
but I loved them both. Every bit of dust and matted
patch of hair was a story waiting to be told. The
dolls had character and I loved it.That shitty tree
and our thrift store dolls were great but they weren’t
what made that night so special. It was that we were
all together, making the most out of what we had
and not lamenting what we were missing. I think as
we grow up we lose the magic in secondhand dolls
and shitty Christmas trees.
47
summer nights
adam ruff
48
the people united
adam ruff
49
after the hike
adam ruff
50
CRUMBS
Malena Larsen
He’s looking for love
In the crevices of his couch
Like loose change.
I saw him lift up the cushions
And pull out crumbs
His mother’s earring
A quarter
The spoon he dropped last week
After eating ice cream out of the container.
It was chocolate cookie dough and he ate the whole thing.
I watched him put the quarter in his back pocket
and the spoon back in the cushions.
I told him I had been in love once
And he said
I like it when girls call me daddy.
I had a dream that night that he was dating somebody and my stomach hurt when I woke up.
I became a spoon in the couch cushion
Who said words like
Daddy
And
Fuck me
And
Hard.
At the end of every night I was put back with the
crumbs, and each day that he came to get me there
was more cat hair or lint stuck to me
I waited patiently
Dirty
For him to pick me up.
It was 77 degrees the late summer night he stopped
getting me from the cushions.
He told me that he found somebody to love and we
can’t be friends, because if I see you I’ll fuck you. I
asked him why he couldn’t control himself if he was
in love with somebody.
The inside of my ribcage
Was being scraped empty
51
Like the chocolate cookie dough ice cream container
And my stomach hurt
Like it did after the dream
Where he wasn’t mine
I can’t help it.
He told me.
I like it when girls call me daddy.
When we met he was wearing a suit and it looked
like he had spent a lot of time on his hair but I
didn’t think he was attractive until the weekend
when I was drunk.
Across the table
On the other side of red cups
And puddles of water
He stared at me
In a grey tank top.
His eyes
And arms
Were strong
52
And dark.
Making eye contact felt like sex
And he smelled like Fireball
And somebody I shouldn’t be alone with
And too much cologne.
We went swimming at 6 am at the neighbor’s lakefront when everyone else fell asleep.
He took off his shirt
I kept mine on.
The water fell off of him like it didn’t want to keep
his body covered for too long. He picked me up and
folded me over his right shoulder and threw me into
the 6 am summer sweet lake water.
He drove me home
At 7 am
Still drunk and
Smitten.
It was 88 degrees and my birthday the night I let
him kiss me in the back hallway of our friend’s frat.
I couldn’t wait anymore
He told me
In the house that smelled like
Liquor and dust
And damp wood.
The first time we
Fucked
Was in the front seat of his
White Pontiac Grand prix
At 11 pm on a Tuesday.
I saw him almost
As an animal.
His fists
Were clenched
And his eyebrows
Like shelves
Over his beetle eyes.
Do you like fucking daddy?
After that night I had to sneak him into my bedroom
because he couldn’t do all of the positions he wanted to in his car. He needed to prove to me that he
was the best fuck and that he could make me cum
and that I should call him
Daddy.
I had never called fucking, fucking before. Before I
was a dirty spoon it had only been called love.
His eyes started to remind me
Of Tiny
Round
Black beetles.
There’s nobody else anymore
We should just keep fucking.
And when we fucked
It was 66 degrees and almost fall when he came to
my house in his white Pontiac Grand Prix and told
me
I remembered then, the quarter he put in his pants
and how he used me to eat his ice cream and then
put me back with all the crumbs in the cushions of
53
his couch
Where he keeps looking for love
Like it’s the loose change
In his back pocket.
54
bloomed
audrey campbell
55
pruned
audrey campbell
56
HERMAN
Danny Polaschek
Grape juice dribbled down Herman’s chin and
landed in scattered droplets down the front of his
white T-shirt. He didn’t notice and, after setting
down his half-emptied glass, picked up his spoon
and started on his bowl of bran flakes. Sitting at the
kitchen table, there was nothing in front of Herman
—but a bare white wall. It seemed, however, that he
wasn’t looking at it, but rather through it like a child
looks through a window and, seeing nothing but
gray skies and rain, is overwhelmed by disappointment because they will not be outdoors playing that
day.
As Herman sat there facing the white wall and
chomping his cereal, his son entered the kitchen
and began his morning ritual. Herman heard the
coffee-maker start bubbling from somewhere behind
him in the kitchen along with the quick and efficient pitter-pattering of his son’s feet, who Herman
assumed had to be walking laps around the center
island as some sort of new, trendy morning workout.
Once the coffee maker’s burbling came to an end
the footsteps stopped as well.
Herman focused on the sound of the coffee being poured, the soft sound of liquid filling a ceramic
mug. The sound stopped as quickly as it had started
and Herman was further drawn from his relaxed,
monotonous state by the sound of his son’s voice.
“How are the flakes this morning, Dad?”
Herman didn’t turn around to face his son, but
continued with what he was doing, looking like a
cow chewing cud. “Five star quality,” he replied in
between spoonfuls. “Flaky as ever.”
Herman’s son chuckled a bit and looked up
from his fresh cup of coffee but the laugh died away
when he noticed that his father was still turned away
from him, eyes glued straight ahead. Taking another
sip, Herman’s son pondered whether he would keep
pursuing his father in conversation or not. He ultimately decided against it and left the kitchen, coffee
mug in hand.
A sigh escaped Herman’s throat as he set down
his spoon, finished with his mushed and soggy cereal. Ain’t this the life, he thought to himself sarcastically. Finally turning away from the wall, Herman
scooted himself back from the kitchen table and
slowly stood up. He gripped the side of the table for
balance and took a few deep breaths in an effort to
steady himself. Just a few weeks before, Herman had
57
missed a stair descending to the basement and found
himself tumbling clumsily down the rest of the way
until crashing to a stop on the last few steps.
Herman’s head still felt a bit shaky from time to
time, which caused a bit of a tremble in his legs. Instead of walking from place to place, he grew accustomed to maneuvering his way to each destination
by leaning on and grabbing anything he could for
support and then flinging himself to another sturdy
checkpoint, and so on and so forth until he reached
his goal. It was much like a monkey swinging from
vine to vine, but less precise and much less graceful.
With his feet finally under him, legs steady,
Herman pushed away from the kitchen table and
launched himself to the kitchen counter, which
caught him with cold indifference. Hunched over,
Herman caught his breath for a few seconds before
beginning to shuffle down the length of the marble
counter towards the coffeemaker at the other end.
“This better be a damn good cup of Joe,” he mumbled to himself, clearly exhausted.
Halfway down the counter, Herman stopped.
With a steady grip on the counter he reached up to
the cupboard above his head and swung it open. He
couldn’t see inside but he knew that what he was
looking for was in there: his old blue coffee mug—
one of the only things worth bringing with when he
moved into his son’s house the year before. Feeling
around the smooth, wooden interior, Herman
eventually got a hold of his mug which distinguished
itself by having only half of a handle still attached.
With the partial handle hooked onto his ring and
middle fingers, Herman pulled out his mug and
brought it shakily down over his head, setting it on
the counter with a soft “clink.”
Herman was beginning to feel dizzy at this
58
point, and wished for a moment that he had listened
to the doctor about getting a walker. “Mr. Huckley,”
the doctor said, “even if you don’t think you’ll use
it, take it anyways. Just in case.” Herman didn’t take
the walker, and wouldn’t even let anyone help to
walk him out of the hospital, not even his son. “I
don’t need your damn help,” he snorted each time
someone tried to take his arm to steady him. He was
always a stubborn man and old age wasn’t going to
change that.
Continuing down the counter, Herman felt this
same stubborn anger boiling in him. He was almost
seventy years old and yet he felt like a child who
was just learning to walk. He’d built his own home,
and a garage to go with it, and now he could hardly
make it to the opposite end of the room without
feeling fatigued.
Sweat was running hot from Herman’s forehead. He wiped it with a shaky hand and breathed
in deeply, closing his eyes as he did so. He only had
five or so more steps to go and he braced himself for
the final stretch, determined to get there even if it
killed him.
With a focused balance and patient, shuffling
steps Herman managed to get to the end of the
counter and the coffee pot. He exhaled in relief, and
a satisfied smile tugged the corners of his mouth up
ever so slightly. With his blue mug in one hand, Herman picked up the coffeepot in the other, intent on
pouring himself a well-deserved cup of coffee after
his tiresome journey. His satisfaction was immediately replaced with bitterness as he lifted the pot
and felt that it was nearly empty, only a few drops
remained rolling around in the bottom.
Herman’s minute smile had vanished and his
brow hardened, scrunching up his forehead in small,
tense knots. Setting the pot back on the counter,
Herman hissed repeatedly under his breath, cursing
his son for not leaving him any coffee. Herman’s
hands were visibly trembling and he was having
a difficult time keeping a grip on the edge of the
counter. He contemplated making more coffee but
dismissed the idea immediately, knowing that he
could not remain standing and moving around the
kitchen much longer.
Herman felt a hot flush come over his face and
could feel beads of sweat rolling down his temples
and his cheeks. In one swift motion he wound up
and threw his coffee mug across the room, where it
shattered against the windowless, white wall. Slivers
and shards of ceramic bounced all over the kitchen,
the blue pieces scattered like shattered glass.
Herman heard footsteps drumming down the
staircase before his son entered the room,stopping in
the doorway to avoid stepping on any of the pieces
of blue ceramic. “Dad!” he exclaimed, “What happened?
Herman was bent over, hunched with his hands
on his knees. He was struggling for breath now,
and sweat soaked through his shirt on his back. In
between wheezes, Herman said exasperated, “You
didn’t leave me any damn coffee, you son of a
bitch.”
His son stood there eyeing first his father and
then the indent in the wall where the mug had hit.
He shook his head in disbelief, which quickly turned
to anger. With a clenched jaw, he left the room and
returned a minute later with broom in hand. He
began quietly sweeping the blue bits of coffee mug
into a dustpan.
After Herman had caught his breath and recomposed himself, he pulled his body back
into a standing position, leaning against the counter. He glanced to his son, bent over and sweeping
under the kitchen table. “I heard you on the phone
last night,” he said.
Herman kept his eyes on his son as he stood
and turned to face him. His son raised an eyebrow
at him but gave no verbal reply. “I heard you,” Herman repeated.
His son bit his lip and continued sweeping, eyes
trained on the floor. “It’s just not working, dad.”
59
EL BARRIO SUYO
Chad Berryman
El viento le envolvió al hombre como una manta de hielo. Él andaba por el barrio suyo pero los
vecinos no lo saludaron. Caminaba delante de una
casa grande con flores y grandes ventanas, y por esas
ventanas podía oír una pelea entre dos padres y los
lamentos penosos de sus hijos.
Él seguía la acera que serpenteaba por un
parque lindo donde había un banco solitario. Él
Lo saludó con la cabeza. Recordaba unas noches
del verano cuando este banco no había ofrecido
insultos ni acusaciones, sino un lugar simpático para
descansar mientras él le regalaba un uso admirable.
Pero en el invierno el banco se congelaba como él, y
ambos eran incapaces de ayudarse el uno al otro.
Paseaba delante de una casa blanca de arquitectura maravillosa. Un coche altanero llegara
la entrada. Un padre sincero apareció mientras
acababa de contar los acontecimientos de su día. Su
hija miraba su celular, y el silencio suspiró por la expresión herida de la cara del padre. Ellos entraron a
la casa sin otra palabra.
El hombre nómada seguía caminando, y pronto
la nieve dentro de sus venas se derretía por una balada antigua que se tarareaba al ritmo de sus pasos.
60
No pido mucho, no vivo de prisa
canto los himnos con risa bendita
no tengo nada salvo alma amada
y sin despedida no hay la llegada
THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD
Chad Berryman
The frigid air wrapped around the man like a
blanket of ice. He was travelling through his own
neighborhood, but no neighbors acknowledged him.
As he walked in front of a large, picturesque house,
complete with flowers and giant windows, he could
make out the sound of two parents fighting accompanied by the upsetting cries of their children.
The sidewalk snaked its way through a park in
which there stood one solitary bench. With a nod
of his head, the man greeted it. Nights of summers
past filled his mind, nights in which the bench
had not offered insults or accusations but rather a
consoling place of rest while he presented it with the
gift of an honorable purpose. However, the bench
froze and shivered in the winter the same as he, and
neither could provide the other with any relief.
He passed by a white house of grand construction. There, a flashy car had just pulled into the
driveway. From it emerged an earnest father finishing the recounting of his day. His daughter, however, simply stared at her phone, and the wounded
expression on her father’s face betrayed an unsung
sigh. The two entered the house without another
word.
As the wandering man continued walking, the
snow in his veins began to melt due to an old tune
he commenced to hum in time with his steps.
I don’t ask for much, or live in a rush
in my blessed laughter the hymns come alive
there’s nothing I own save a soul that is loved
for without a farewell one could never arrive
61
ODYSSEY
Eve Taft
Thank you for the twisted pathways of your mind
Which led to the streets and alleyways of Dublin
James Joyce, do you understand that you opened floodgates?
Your avalanche of babbling sentences, sans punctuation
Buck Mulligan tossing form and style into the wind
Your catechism, you, Daedalus, gave us sacrament
Blood flow to wake up the numb limbs of literature
You spoke with your soul to our souls
Fearing not the noise in your skull but flinging it down in ink
I understand you, “life is many days”
I understand you, “god is a shout in the street”
I understand you, “I am another now and yet the same”
You understand me “everything speaks in its own way”
Soon I’ll visit your beloved homeland
Walking the streets of Dublin, writing and giving thanks to modernism
Now as free of rigid form
As Ireland of England
62
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
63
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
64
COUNTING SHEEP
Danny Polaschek
What can you do
when the world is asleep?
Go to sleep too?
I’ve counted all my sheep.
They jumped through the air
gliding for 5 or 6 feet
cleared the fence and then flew
with not even a bleat. I didn’t focus however
on these aerial sheep antics
because far away in the distance
was a sight oh so fantastic.
A blue house, with a single light on
in the window sat a girl
a beauty no pencil could ever have drawn.
I looked up at her
and she down at me
addicted to the eyesight
too distracted to count sheep.
65
3
sky nights
keeyonna fox
67
inner self
keeyonna fox
68
VICTORY OF THE PEOPLE
Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk
Your worship was my refuge, your clay heart my focal
point, your chelsea smile the apple of my eye. We were
sick. We poisoned ourselves with amphetamines and pills
until we didn’t recognize ourselves in the mirror. We
walked miles just to feel accomplished in our space, we
turned the cigarettes we shared into sentiments we thought
we shared. I must possess the wrong innocence.
Souls are fickle things that change when left to die in the
cold.
~
He was outrageously tall.
He towered over me like the Statue of Liberty and
he talked to me as though I was a boat in the harbor.
Standing five inches taller than six feet, he was an
image of Ukrainian beauty. He stood like someone
who knew things you didn’t know and this fascinated
me.
I was so naive, so optimistic. I saw the lust and want
in his eyes and I mistook it for passion.The curve of
his jaw and his long eyelashes crept into the screens
behind my eyelids and ignited a fire in me that I
didn’t know how to put out. I was the new girl in
town struggling to keep my loneliness at bay. He
was a gleaming light in that summer of darkness.
I had just moved to Minnesota months before. After
discovering drugs and promiscuous sex I became
nothing short of a hurricane. Amphetamines kept
me awake, cigarettes kept me skinny, and weed kept
me sane. My GPA reflected exactly what they don’t
tell you about functional depression: you can feel
like a blank page, but as long as you fill it with words
people will stop asking questions.
He was selling me drugs. He offered me a good
price. I had never met him but I figured what the
hell, I could stand to meet new people. It was dark,
long past sundown. We were meeting in a parking
lot by a lake a few blocks away from my house. I
was in my mom’s car. I waited and listened to Amy
Winehouse until I saw an orange car pull into a
parking spot a few yards away from me. The man
driving fit the picture I had seen of him before. We
69
made eye contact and he ushered me over to his car.
I took a deep breath, grabbed my sweater, and got
my money ready. He rolled down the passenger side
window.
“You Nikita?” I said.
He smiled at me. A smile that I would come to
know.
“You can call me Kita.”
~
He had really good drugs. I’m not sure that they
were pure, but at the time I didn’t care. Neither did
he. We just wanted to get high. We did his drugs
together, sitting in a playground by the lake, talking
about life and what we crave. He told me that he
was applying to a college in London. I didn’t think
anything of it.
Before long we saw each other every day. He was
a lifeguard who had to be on duty early in the
morning, so he would take me out for coffee at eight
in the morning. No makeup, sweatpants, my hair in
a messy bun. He didn’t care. We would talk about
things that we hadn’t shared with anyone else. He
told me he struggled with his relationship with his
father in Ukraine. I told him that I had struggled
with eating disorders since I was thirteen.
We would sneak out onto his back porch to smoke
cigarettes late at night. His mother hated that we
smoked.
70
“You need to quit smoking, love,” she’d tell me. “I
smoked for twenty-five years and it took two pregnancies to get me to stop.”
His mother loved me. She thought that I was
spunky, independent, had a mind of my own. She
did not like his last girlfriend. She made that very
clear. She, like Nikita, was very tall. She had long
curly black hair and eyes so intense that you would
lose your appetite. Her Russian accent was thick
and powerful. She had run away to the United
States when she was twenty-one and seven months
pregnant with her first son. Nikita.
“Does it mean anything?” I asked him. “Your
name.”
He smiled when he answered.
“My mom told me it means ‘victory of the people,’”
he said.
Oh Kita,
you have no victory.
You are the secret I keep from my mother
the hidden disease that projectile vomits
and digs with fingernails sharpened by teeth.
Your fields of sunflowers told me a secret,
your secrets so dark and beautiful
and I killed myself with your gargantuan sunflowers.
His mother was beautiful. She had been a professional figure skater that traveled the world, meeting
people as she went. She met Kita’s father in her
home country of Ukraine and according to the
story, he was immediately drawn to her exuberant
personality and her long legs. At twenty-one she
was well on her way to continue pursuing a successful skating career until she got pregnant. According
to Kita his father did not accompany her to her appointments.He did not send her flowers. He did not
ask if she was okay. Instead Kita’s mother made her
way to America to create a life of victory and hope.
He took me to meet his grandmother. She said hello
and came in and that was the last that I understood.
The entire time I was there she would ask me questions in Russian and Kita would translate for me.
He taught me how to say
Hello
(Privet)
Yes
(da)
No
(net)
And thank you, which I don’t remember. We spent
almost the entire time we were there trying to help
his grandmother set up a new movie streaming
program on her computer. I know nothing about
computers in English, let alone in Russian. I was
overwhelmed. The leather furniture just made my
nervous sweat more noticeable.
She told me about Ukraine a little bit. She said it
was beautiful but troubled. She offered me chocolate and cookies. I sat, sweating, trying my hardest
to pay attention. When I said anything to her, Kita
would translate for me. I wanted to leave.
After we left his grandmother’s house he told me
to wait in his car while he talked privately with his
grandmother. I thought it was strange but didn’t
question it. I played mindless games on my phone
while I waited for him. Some part of me knew that
they were talking about me, but I continued to deny
it. I was hungry, but I wasn’t planning on doing
anything about it too soon. I was hungry often then.
When he returned to the car I asked what they had
talked about and with no hesitation he said, “You.”
I paused, then asked him to elaborate.
“She likes you,” he said. And that was that.
How strange, I thought, to be liked by someone who
never explicitly spoke a word to me.
~
Andrevich was Kita’s middle name. Named after
his father.
Kita’s father was very handsome. In his forties with
tan skin and thick hair, he was a heartthrob that
would make you look twice. He lived in a nice,
expensive apartment in Kiev with his girlfriend who
was twenty years younger than him. Apparently
that was a theme.
Kita had only seen his father a handful of times
in his life. He had gone back to Ukraine to spend
some time with him as a young boy, but didn’t have
too much recollection of it. When he was sixteen he
went back to live with his father and his twenty-yearold girlfriend for a while. Kita has always been tall,
thin, and handsome. His father noticed this.
“So what happened?” I asked him one day.
71
Kita shrugged.
“He kicked me out and I came back to the states,”
he said without a flinch.
He said this as though it was a commonality.
“He thought that I fucked his girlfriend,” he said as
he lit a cigarette.
There was a very long, uncomfortable silence.
“Did you?” I asked.
He laughed out loud and a cloud of smoke poured
out of his mouth.
“No, of course not,” he said. “My dad isn’t one to
listen to a sixteen year old.”
~
“I’ll take you to Ukraine someday.”
“Sunflowers. There are parts of Ukraine where
there are endless fields of sunflowers wherever you
look. They’re as tall as me and the flowers are bigger than my face.”
He pulled me closer as he talked about Ukraine.
He insisted that I learn all that I could about the
Russia-Ukraine conflict, sending me innumerable
articles daily. Through him I learned about the
importance of the Ukrainian revolution and fights
that had been fought, some as recent as 2011 and
2012. He told me that he wanted to fight for his
people if he had to. When my eyes were flushed
with concern, he pulled me in close and whispered
in my ear, “I’ll survive for you.”
His eyes lit up every time he talked about the fields
of sunflowers in Ukraine. In the same way, his eyes
lit up every time he got angry.
Your golden eyes drew miners to starve and fight to abandon their homes.
We were in his bed, naked, wrapped up in blankets
and speckled by the corner light in his room. It was
late, the kind of late that feels early. The air conditioner hummed in the place of our phones which
were both off and hidden somewhere in the room.
He did no wrong. He could not do any wrong. His
eyes were blank but telling like a wall in a foreclosed
home. All of his intentions were good. Yes. Good.
“Where in Ukraine?” I asked.
“Have you been eating?” he asks as he lifts up my
shirt.
“Kiev, the city squares. And to the huge fields of
flowers.”
“What kind of flowers?”
72
~
I squirm away and pull my shirt down.
“Yes, I ate just before I came here,” I say. I can still
taste the salt in my mouth.
“You look skinny,” he tells me with a hint of disdain
in his voice.
My heart soars. I look skinny. But he’s reaching for
my stomach again and once again I’m backing away.
We get into the car and drive to the gas station.
I say that I need to go use the restroom. While
Kita pumps the gas, I make my way into the small
Holiday bathroom. I put my sweater on the ground
and rest my knees on it, my usual routine. I stick my
finger down my throat and vomit into the toilet.
As I walk back outside, Kita is getting back into his
car. I get in the front seat and sniffle slightly.Kita
looks at me quizzically.
“You okay?” he asks me.
My eyes are watery, my nose is burning, and my
breath is putrid.
“I’m fine,” I say with a smile.
~
The elevator door was so cold against my cheek.
I watched the red numbers blink as they rose.
8...9...10...11. My vision was going fuzzy and grey,
my ears started ringing and throbbing.
11...12...13. Ding. The doors opened and my
wobbly legs carried me down the seemingly endless hallway. My hands were barely working; as I
watched them push my key into my apartment door
I could not feel it. The door opened, I could see my
living room window. I closed the door behind me
and collapsed on the ground.
“Why did you faint?” His words echoed behind the
screen of my phone.
“I just haven’t eaten a lot today.”
There was a silence so deafening that it struck fear
in my heart. Fear I had not known.
“When did you eat last?” He had anger in his voice.
I paused. He would know if I lied but he would hate
the truth.
“I had a little dinner last night,” I said quietly.
“What did you eat?” His reply was sharp.
I was shaking.
“I had a little bit of salad I think,” I said with a
quivering voice.
I could hear his sigh. I can still hear his sigh.
“How many times have we talked about this?” He
exclaimed.
“I know, I know, I’m sorry…”
It didn’t matter. He didn’t listen. I had failed him
again.
“Do you know what it’s like to have a girlfriend that
can’t even take care of herself ?”
“What am I going to tell my friends?”
“You’re not even trying.”
I was sobbing, I was convulsing, I was sweating, all
from my bed from which I could not move.
My phone was glued to my ear and I had no energy
to remove it.
“So what are you going to do about this?” There
was intense spite in his words.
With a shaky voice I said, “I could send you a picture of everything I eat?”
He laughed. With his full, angry throat he laughed
73
at my pain.
“And do what? Post it on Facebook? Show all my
friends that my girlfriend is an anorexic who
can’t even feed herself ? You know what, go ahead.
Maybe that’ll help you change.”
I couldn’t breathe. I wanted to die. My stomach
kept whispering “never again, never again,
never again.” Opening my mouth made me panic
because it reminded me of eating.
I hung up my phone and with wobbly legs I walked
outside in the snow and smoked an entire pack of
cigarettes.
~
Months go by. Months.
I watched him pack his bag with clothes that I had
never seen him wear. He packed light, only a few
shirts and two pairs of pants.
“My dad will buy me more when I get to Ukraine,”
he said.
I sat on the edge of his bed and watched him focus
on folding his clothes. His visa sat in the center of
the bed, staring at me. I started to cry.
“Babe, it’s going to be fine,” Kita said without
breaking focus.
I watched him form a pile of the shirts that I had
grown used to him wearing. They looked like wilted
flower petals.
74
“Why aren’t you taking those?” I asked, pointing to
the wilted pile.
“My father won’t like them,” he said.
Later that night, we were drinking red wine in his
bed. His room was bare and cold. I was curled
against his side, my head on his chest. He stroked
my bare back and played with my hair. I sighed, but
not the kind of sigh that’s followed with kisses. Kita
sighed too.
“Petra,” he said, a tone of exasperation in his voice.
“If I ever treat you like my father treats women,
please leave me.”
~
I still remember how to say “I love you” in Russian.
“я люблю тебя.”
Ya lyublyu tebya.
~
My fingers were bones.
Anything beyond mascara was too much, especially lipstick. He hated lipstick. He thought that it
brought too much attention to my mouth. He didn’t
like when other people noticed me.
He stopped smoking cigarettes and instructed me to
do so too. “They’ll make you age faster,”he would
say. If I had a bad day and smoked a cigarette, he
would tell me he was disappointed.
I lived with three men at the time, something that
Kita would never let me forget. He asked every few
days to be sure I wasn’t sleeping with any of my
roommates. If I was spending too much time with a
friend, he would tell me that I was neglecting him.
He sent me articles outlining how to be a better
partner. He reminded me that he just wanted me
to be the best that I could be. The screaming and
hour-long phone calls were footnotes.
You stripped me of my dignity and told me,
“This is what you have.”
Your monstrous arms crawl into my nightmares
Your titanic stature collided with my glacier
and though you claim I sank you
You were a behemoth and I was a stone.
At the end, I fell into the ground. His screams surrounded me in my echo chamber and suffocated me.
My knees were bruised from kneeling in front of
the toilet all night. How apt for the one accused of
dropping to her knees for all men. I was free but I
did not know it yet. All I knew was the cold floor of
my bathroom and the tales of beautiful but troubled
Ukraine.
My goodbyes have been said,
These addictions fed.
It’s the cost that comes with the sickness.
And your screams won’t be heeded anymore.
75
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE UN-SPECIALS
Halle Chambers
When we are little, even before we can speak
We are told that we’re special and that we’re
unique.
That we all are made different and that none are
the same
Which fits quite nicely in a toddler’s mind frame.
And we are told we should treasure what’s different inside,
That what makes us different is not something to
hide.
But then quite soon after, things start to change;
The word “different” stops meaning “special” and
starts meaning “strange.”
We’re sectioned off from our average peers
In our own little category and told,
“you belong here,”
And then different is bad and normal is good,
And for the different ones, nothing is working the
way that it should
The way we’ve been taught or the way we’ve been
shown
All we know is that we do not like being lost on
our own.
76
So once again we are taken away
To a place where things makes sense again and
we’re ok:
Where no one hurts us,
Where no one can see,
Where no one deserts us,
Where we can be free.
But because the un-specials can’t see what goes
on,
They decide to make things up and get so much
wrong.
And it’s happened for years because they can’t see
through that door.
So long they don’t even know that it’s wrong
anymore.
It’s so fixed in their heads that these lies are right;
They judge each special kid by their stereotype.
But today that will end.
So you sit there and you wait,
cause it’s about time someone set the dang record
straight.
You probably think that this poem won’t cut it,
But today I’m gonna open the door and don’t you
dare shut it!
To start, let’s be clear:
I am...I was in Special Ed.
But just because I was in that room doesn’t mean
I’m brain dead!
So for Pete’s sake, don’t puppy dog guard me!
Just give me a break, it isn’t that hard see:
If I need your help, I will tell you I do.
Just please,
Please don’t mock me.
In my place, would you want me to mock you?
“Oh come on! Let her get it! Go easy on
her!”
Help, where not needed, is almost as bad as a slur.
I’m not invalid
So don’t play that card.
Yeah, I’m a little quirky and oversensitive,
But I’m not, and I quote,
“A little retard.”
Yeah, I’ve been called names.
And those words?
They hurt.
They catch in the center,
In your pit of self worth.
And they tear and they rip,
And those words are collective.
Soon you start to believe that you are defective.
I’ve dealt with them all, and surprisingly,
I actually prefer the straight up bullies
To those who pretend to like me.
Fake friends and two-faces
Of all genders and races.
They’re only my friends so they don’t have to see
me cry.
Or they use me,
abuse me,
Oh, how they confuse me!
Cause I can’t tell what’s truth and what’s lie.
“Hey! He likes you. Go give him a kiss!”
And because I don’t know better, I believe this.
But soon I find they’re not playing Cupid,
They just wanna make me look stupid.
For their entertainment, they make me play the
77
fool;
They pretend that they care for me
When they’re really just cruel.
It takes time and takes work to make you forget;
Even now, I’m not quite there yet.
I mean, here I am, in what’s supposed to be
home,
And yet here I am, still feeling alone.
I’m still paranoid, it doesn’t just end;
I still have to ask if someone’s my friend.
I say one thing and mean another;
I make a mistake,
But you take it verbatim.
Can’t you cut me a break?
If we’re talking and I look like I’m lost,
Don’t blow it off like it’s not worth the cost.
Sarcasm and subtlety muddle in my brain,
So please just take a minute to explain.
Do these quirks make me broken?
Is there something wrong with me?
The way society has spoken,
There would seem to be.
78
Stop poisoning the minds of “different” young
women and men.
I don’t like being defective....
Can I be special again?
SOREX PALUSTRIS
Emilie Tomas
Did they name you for
Your wit, pointed
Nose of pointed judgement
Who brought us fire;
five to seven inches of shrewd truth?
Or was it your mischief
That Inspired them? Your
Presence followed by screams
And a three inch tail.
I saw your likeness on a stage,
Dirt in place of your midnight coat
Though she is reformed now.
Perhaps it was the gleam in your
Eyes; whispered fortunes and
A summer of silver birth.
Maybe you are a messenger
Of God, somehow in your Eighteen
months you learned to walk
On water, the second coming
Of Christ.
79
woodsy adam ruff
gabriel bergstrom
80
WORDS
Malena Larsen
The bathroom wall was covered in words.
Words like fuck and love and song lyrics and
names with hearts around them. His body
looked peaceful, somehow, as he sat propped and
slumped against the door. His head hung to his
right shoulder and his mouth was open like he
was about to say something but was interrupted.
There was blood running down his left arm like
a river and a needle hung loosely out of his skin.
The words that he had heard her say several
hours earlier were getting quieter and quieter.
“It’s not working,” she had told him. “I’m
sorry.” They were smoking cigarettes outside her
apartment when she said it. She knew he had
been trying to fix himself. After twenty-eight days
of treatment and one week in a sober house on
Lake and Fifth she barely recognized him. He was
twenty-five pounds heavier and his skin looked
clean and strong; there was no more grey in his
cheeks. It wasn’t just his change in appearance
that scared her. Lately, he had been telling her
the difference between wrong and right and that
she should stay in on the weekends. His family
couldn’t stop talking about how proud they were
of him and they would ask her, “Doesn’t he just
seem so much better?” She would answer with yes
but feel guilty because she wished he still liked to
make mistakes. His family had a party after he got
out of treatment and his grandfather kept saying
things like, “Men in this family have always been
strong!” and, “Now he can take care of you.” His
grandfather didn’t care for her much but he felt
that she was the least of the boy’s problems. He
didn’t like the way she hung on him like a scarf
or the way she agreed with everything he said
without a second thought.
As he sat on the bathroom floor the words
she had said were getting quieter and quieter.
They were almost gone. He had been sober for
thirty-five days and he didn’t know why. He didn’t
feel better or stronger or more loved. His hand lay
loosely on the floor, palm up and open like he was
waiting for somebody to hold it. Everyone was so
proud of him but he couldn’t imagine living his
life without her.
Long after her words had faded completely,
the bathroom door opened. He fell back onto the
floor. His head hitting hard against the tile.
81
“Oh my gosh!” The man who opened the door
yelled. “Can someone help?” He took out his
phone to call 911. A crowd of people rushed
over to where the man was dialing. A young man
pushed past the group of people.
“Move!” The boy got on his knees by the body on
the floor. He reached into his pocket and took out
something that looked like a pen. He stuck it into
the arm of the body that was needle free. People
gasped and murmured and watched. Sirens rang
in the distance. The boy holding the pen looked
up at the bathroom wall that had words like fuck
and love and song lyrics and names with hearts
around them. He looked up at the group of people.
“It’s not working,” he said.
82
MALCOLM AND THE BLUE SIDE
Danny Polaschek
Brown leaves dragged past Malcolm’s feet
in the wind. The bench underneath him felt like
a rock and he had to clench his jaw to keep his
teeth from chattering. He stared at the empty
playground—the tire swing, the slide, the bridge
and the fireman’s pole. Nikki rested her head on
his shoulder. Each time a breeze swept through,
Malcolm could feel her nuzzle slightly closer, her
hair scratching and tickling his neck.
When he was a kid, Malcolm had sat on this
exact same bench many times with his mother.
They lived in a little blue house just a few blocks
away— “just a hop and a skip,” his mother would
say and Malcolm would make it his mission to
jump and bunny-hop the whole way there.
When they arrived, they’d eat lunch, sitting
together on the narrow, wooden bench. After
each bite of his sandwich, Malcolm would beg his
mother to let him go play, to which she would give
in once she herself had finished eating.
He always went straight for the slide. Once
at the top, he’d yell, “I’m going under!” and
swing himself down into the blue plastic tube. He
imagined he was a deep-sea diver plunging into
an underwater world of sunken pirate ships and
forgotten chests of gold. On particularly sunny
afternoons, he’d stop halfway down the slide and
admire the shadows that moved about on the
illuminated, blue plastic. He’d make believe that
fish swam all around him as little blotchy shadows
hovered whimsically over his head.
He eventually got the idea to bring his crayons to the park with him. He’d sit lodged in the
blue slide for most of the day, drawing exotic fish
with bright oranges, yellows and reds. He knew
fish didn’t smile but nevertheless gave them all
wide grins and big eyes to match. When it was
time to go home, his mother would knock from
the bottom of the slide. “Time to come back to
shore!” she’d announce. Malcolm would hide his
crayons in his back pocket and slide down to his
mother who would wait there with open arms
grinning at him.
The park seemed smaller now. Malcolm
was just as tall as the fireman’s pole and half as
long as the slide. He wondered if his fabricated
underwater universe still existed. Probably not,
he guessed. Although it was getting dark, Mal83
colm could see thick graffiti creeping out from the
shadows inside the blue slide. Malcolm pulled his
sweatshirt tighter around his neck, brushing Nikki
away in the process.
He felt her eyes on his face but refused to
acknowledge her. Inside the slide, he could still
make out the words “Bitch Ass” in thick spray
paint. His crayon drawings would certainly be
gone, he was sure of it now. Nikki picked up Malcolm’s hand and caressed it, her cold skin feeling
leathery and smooth.
“Malcolm,” she said.
Malcolm turned and mustered a smile, taking
Nikki’s hands to his face and kissing them awkwardly.
“Malcolm, let’s go home.”
The streetlights had not yet turned on for
the evening. Malcolm noticed the shadows on
the sides of the road stretching out and growing
bigger as they walked quietly past. He missed the
warm sunshine of summer and the hot nights
spent lounging in the front yard listening to his
mother’s radio; he missed the walks to the park,
his mother laughing at him as he crouched and
hopped along beside her. He remembered the
secret thrill of the crayon box in his back pocket,
then realized he’d forgotten his cigarettes on the
bench at the park. He was too cold to turn back.
He reached out silently for Nikki’s hand and, finding it much warmer than his own, held it stiffly
the rest of the walk home.
84
driving at zero one
john herbert
85
driving at zero two
john herbert
86
PLACEMAKERS
Diamonique Walker
Near my home,
Balloons dance in the wind.
I have reconditioned myself — These are not balloons
from a party, But they still celebrate a life.
I drive by, sometimes I walk.
And see a balloon or several
With their heads bobbing away
Positioned obscurely on the sidewalk.
Or on the island in the middle of the highway. Sometimes on no one in particular’s grass.
I don’t look for party decorations. At the feet of the
balloon’s ribbons, candles, cards and little trinkets sit.
Some kind of offering.
Looking weathered and dull.
His body bled some place close by. Probably killed
within ten feet.
A dancing, mocking balloon
Somehow now gets to sway in his place.
87
NECESSARILY AN EVIL THING CONSIDERED IN ANY LIGHT
Jacob J. Miller
“You know what I hate about this most of
all?” asked the first man. “Nobody’s going to be
around to take responsibility. Nobody is going to
have to answer for their crime.”
“What crime is that?” the other man asked,
sitting next to him in the middle of the cul-de-sac,
both of them at perfect leisure in lawn chairs as if
waiting for a parade to pass by.
“Mass-murder, I suppose. Call it, oh, I don’t
know. Call it, um, inciting the apocalypse.”
“Ha.”
“They deserve to be the ones left behind
after they obliterate everyone else. They should
be the ones who have to reap the aftermath, puke
out their guts and feel their bile boil inside their
stomachs, fend off marauding cannibals and giant
insects. And they should have to live with the new
world they created, or destroyed, rather.”
Just then, the other man looked down and
saw a lonely ant crawling up his pant leg. “Yeah,
but I don’t think that giant bug stuff is true. That
wouldn’t happen. The bugs’ll die like everything
else.”
“I mean, what do you think it’ll be like? I
88
know it’ll happen instantaneously, but they say the
cerebral cortex functions after everything else has
shut down and we linger in a sort of dream-state,
which could last for, well, for who knows how
long?”
“Well, that’s if you’re in a hospital bed, or
you have a heart attack or something, when you
have time to die with a little bit of peace. Our
brains are going to incinerate along with the rest
of us. There won’t even be any stuff of thought
anymore. I don’t think we have to worry about
something like that.”
“But what if that moment of pain before we
go lasts longer, you know? What if time stands
still? Nothing makes sense in a moment of such
lunacy. Such catastrophe. What if we feel our
tongues liquefying and spilling down our throats
and scalding our internal organs? What if, all in
that moment, we look down, and before our eyes
boil and burst from the heat we see our bones
glowing purple through our flesh as it begins dripping off like wax? What if you turn and look at
me and the last image you see is my face melting
off like those Nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark?”
“I’m not sure it’s the best time to be thinking
like that,” his friend said, as the sirens began to
wail their sorrowful last.
“Why even bother with that fucking thing?”
the man steamed. “It’s inconsiderate, a futile
exhortation. We know what’s coming. We’re not
going to hide in our basements from it like it’s a
fucking tornado.”
“Tornadoes aren’t so easy to hide from either.”
The first man scanned the horizon for what
he knew would be the last time. He took in the
sight of the skyline he saw from his window every
day and, with lamenting eyes, imaginatively
anticipated its supplanting by a fiery mushroom
climbing the sky. He closed his eyes and winced,
unable to cope with the unthinkable thought, the
impossible inevitability. Turning his head toward
a neighbor’s yard whose household ran a daycare,
he opened his eyes to a post-apocalyptic tableau
of children’s toys scattered about the lawn. Nothing needed yet be aflame for the man to resent the
picturesque cliché of innocence lost on display
before him. “Remember when they used to tell
kids to hide under their desks?” he inquired. “All
that siren is doing is making sure that we spend
our last moments in a panic, instead of dying
gracefully, accepting that we’re all in the same
sinking ship, in the middle of the ocean, if the
ocean were the entire planet, and filled with lava
instead of water. We should be spending our time
reminiscing, because that’s all we have now.”
“Well, we can’t talk about our plans for the
future.”
“We can’t discuss potential medical advancements.”
“The coming cure for cancer.”
“And cloning organs. Scholarships our
children just received, the singularity and will
the Matrix ever become a reality; would we ever
make contact with life elsewhere in the universe,
intercept an asteroid, mine them for resources?
It’s all useless, man, meaningless. Every human
achievement since the first spark made from one
rock dragging against another, gone within the
next hour,” he sighed heavily, draping a ribbon
of helplessness over his words of outrage. “Why
don’t you open that up?” He suggested, pointing at the bottle of scotch sitting at the leg of
his friend’s chair. His friend took a swig before
passing it over with a satisfied groan. “Here’s to
everything we do being the last time it will ever be
done,” the first man began. “That’s the best I can
do.”
“Yeah,” the other man raised an empty hand,
toasting to the end and everything that came
before it. “I suppose there’s something beautiful about the entire world—or nearly the entire
world—going out the same way. There’s a kind
of universal solidarity occurring right now, don’t
you think? Some are praying, no doubt, some are
exalting their various saviors, certain they will be
raptured up any minute, but we’re all still going
to be experiencing the same thing, at almost the
exact same time; the same heat, the same instantaneous moment of searing pain before any trace
of our molecules are imprinted as a shadow on
the asphalt beneath us.”
He had a complex contraption of a chair, one
of the men—it doesn’t really matter which one
now that the end was there; the kind of chair that
folds upward from all four corners and was nearly
89
impossible to fit back into its cylindrical carrying
sack—not that that mattered anymore either—
complete with cup holders and a detachable headrest, which he was putting to use as he spoke. His
friend’s chair was more old-fashioned, a conventional folding lawn chair with a checkered pattern
of flimsy plastic wrapped taut around aluminum
pipes, wobbly hard plastic armrests drilled in and
not quite parallel to each other.
Their chair legs began melting into the tar
beneath them. One of the men hummed softly;
a beautiful soundtrack to accompany him in the
cut to black. The other man closed his eyes and,
focusing on the sounds of the encroaching death
rattle, heard them as the grunts and whinnies of
the four horsemen’s horses as they galloped atop
the planet’s rapidly spreading dust.
90
Show less
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Ed... Show more
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Editor
Ryan Moore, Prose Editor
Gabriel Benson, Poetry Editor
Danny Polaschek, Poetry Editor
Cary Waterman, Advisor
2
WITH THANKS TO
Ivy Arts Copy and Print
Augsburg College Student Government
Augsburg College English Department
Augsburg College Art Department
The Echo
Augsburg Honors Program
QPA
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
What Type of Black Girl Are You? Nikkyra Whittaker ........................................................................... 8
Simul Justus et Peccator, Andy Anderson .......................................................................................... 11
Queer, Eve Taft ....................................................................................................................................... 12
Jesus in a Cracker, A.Tetzlaff ................................................................................................................ 14
Grey Cloud Island, David Baboila ......................................................................................................... 17
Saint Paul Airport, David Baboila .......................................................................................................... 18
White Bear Lake, David Baboila ............................................................................................................ 19
Zips Coliseum, David Baboila ............................................................................................................... 20
Bridge, Jacob J. Miller ............................................................................................................................ 21
50 Feet Tall, Emilie Tomas ...................................................................................................................... 25
Meow, Ashley Waalen ............................................................................................................................ 26
Mousetrap, Halle Chambers .................................................................................................................. 27
Faces, Constance Klippen ..................................................................................................................... 29
I Don’t Always Feel Colored, Diamonique Walker ............................................................................... 30
Where I am From, Hannah Schmit ......................................................................................................... 32
Who Am I?, Ashley Waalen .................................................................................................................... 34
2
Gratitude, D.E Green ..............................................................................................................................
CSBR, Gabriel Bergstrom ......................................................................................................................
The Fire, Elisabeth Beam ........................................................................................................................
Desert Drums, Abigail Carpenter ..........................................................................................................
Colors, Hannah Schmit ...........................................................................................................................
Urban Delight, Jazmin Crittenden .........................................................................................................
When Dad Wore Cologne, A. Tetzlaff ....................................................................................................
Shitty Christmas Trees, Elisabeth Beam ...............................................................................................
Summer Nights, Adam Ruff ...................................................................................................................
36
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
48
The People United, Adam Ruff .............................................................................................................. 49
After the Hike, Adam Ruff ..................................................................................................................... 50
Crumbs, Malena Larsen ......................................................................................................................... 51
Bloomed, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................................................... 55
Pruned, Audrey Campbell ...................................................................................................................... 56
Herman, Danny Polaschek ................................................................................................................... 57
El Barrio Suyo, Chad Berryman ............................................................................................................. 60
The Neighborhood, Chad Berryman ..................................................................................................... 61
Odyssey, Eve Taft .................................................................................................................................... 62
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 63
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 64
Counting Sheep, Danny Polaschek ...................................................................................................... 65
3
Sky Nights, Keeyonna Fox ...................................................................................................................... 67
Inner Self, Keeyonna Fox ....................................................................................................................... 68
Victory of the People, Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk ............................................................................. 69
An Open Letter to the Un-specials, Halle Chambers ...........................................................................76
Sorex Palustris, Emilie Tomas ................................................................................................................. 79
Woodsy Adam Ruff, Gabriel Bergstrom .................................................................................................. 80
Words, Malena Larsen ................................................................................................................................. 81
Malcom, Danny Polaschek ....................................................................................................................... 83
DRIVING AT ZERO ONE, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 85
DRIVING AT ZERO TWO, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 86
Placemakers, Diamonique Walker ........................................................................................................ 87
A Necessary Evil Thing Considered in any Light, Jacob J. Miller ....................................................... 88
1
WHAT TYPE OF BLACK GIRL ARE YOU?
Nikkyra Whittaker
On the spectrum of being black and female, we can
only be what we appear to be. Take this quiz to find
out what kind of black girl you really are!
1. You’re listening to the radio on the way to Target.
You’re playing…
a. Beyonce’s “****Flawless”
b. Taylor Swift’s “Fifteen” or “You Belong With
Me” or “Wildest Dreams”
c. Chris Brown’s “Loyal”
d. Keri Hilson’s “Pretty Girl Rock”
2. It’s your day off work. What will you be doing?
a. Blowing off steam on Facebook.
b. Watching old episodes of One Tree Hill
c. Out for drinks and scoping eye candy
d. Talking shit with the ladies while drinking Moscato!
3. What’s your dream home like?
a. Full of books on systemic oppression
b. Beverly Hills penthouse
c. Some big shot rapper’s mansion
d. Spacious New York Loft
8
4. Your favorite TV show is…
a. Docu-series on race
b. Sex in the City
c. Bad Girls Club
d. Love and Hip Hop
5. Finally, who’s your favorite female icon from this
list?
a. Angela Davis
b. Taylor Swift
c. New York from I Love New York
d. Nicki Minaj
Tally up how many of each letter you got and turn
the page to find out who you really are!
If you got mostly a’s...You’re an Angry Black Girl!
Congratulations, you loud-mouthed, anger filled
home-girl! I’m guessing there’s always some reason
to be mad at someone, isn’t there? Do you just spend
your days in a perpetual state of rage, angry at the
world for reasons they don’t find important? Do you
find yourself constantly snapping your fingers in
that z-formation, pursing your lips at anyone who
steps in your way? I bet people are telling you to
just be quiet, huh? I mean, what issues could you, a
black female, possibly have? Why should you care
that your high school English teacher gives you a
C+ on your essay because she thinks you copied
it from the white man online? Why does it matter
that your male co-worker at Target constantly teases
you about your nappy hair, calling it a “brillo pad,”
“cheeto puff,” or some other clever name? None of
this should anger you! Be aware, you sassy Sapphire,
in this world, your anger means nothing.
If you got mostly b’s...You’re an Oreo!
You grew up watching Lizzie McGuire and
listening to Aaron Carter. You straightened your
hair from the moment you were old enough to assert
yourself and cried when it wouldn’t lay flat. Your
friends were always shocked to see you bring collard
greens and jambalaya to lunch so you stopped eating
your favorite foods. They didn’t understand why
you couldn’t just brush your hair, wash your hair
everyday, why it suddenly grew or shrunk inches
overnight. I’m certain you’ve heard from many of
your friends how they just don’t see you as a black
girl. They erase your black skin because it doesn’t fit
the images of other black girls they see. You spend
most of your time edging away from the loud black
girls, the ghetto black girls who ate hot cheetos and
drank kool aid and had corn rows and long braids
and smelled like a mix of the jungle and your
ancestors pain and you wished, maybe for a just a
moment, but you did wish that you could be white.
But honey, you can never wash off that melanin! It’s
a permanent stain. Just because your friends can’t
see the black on you, it doesn’t mean the rest of the
world can’t.
9
If you got mostly c’s...You’re a Hip Hop Ho!
You sexual deviant you! Let me guess—big
breasts, small waist, and wide hips? You’ve got that
original Betty Boop to you, something in your eyes
that say yes to a question no one bothers to ask.
You’re the black girl that white guys use as a notch
in their belt. You are the exotic sexual being that
men love to hate and hate to love. You became a
sexual thing at a young age, when your breasts came
in at ten years old and became d-cups at fourteen.
They started looking at you differently, didn’t they?
Your eyes stopped existing. Your words didn’t matter.
Your body became the tool used to diminish your
worth. How often did you get yelled at in school to
put on something less revealing than your shorts?
Did you ever wonder why the skinny, flat-assed white
girls were never told the same thing? Honey, your
wide hips wrapped in chocolate skin were never
yours. You will never be yours.
10
If you got mostly d’s...You’re a Ghetto Fabulous Black Girl!
You make what little money you can working at
Walmart or doing nails. You make people waiting at
the bus stop with you uncomfortable with your loud
laughter and yellow and pink braids and long, bedazzled nails. You toss your weave around, remove
your earrings, and square up to anyone that says shit
about you. When you’re out, you are often told to
stop yelling, screaming, taking up space. You’ve got
baby daddy problems and you’re only 18. You grew
up playing double dutch in the middle of the street
with old rope. You accept your black, your ghetto,
your Ebonics. But you are not supposed to accept
yourself, honey! Don’t you see the fashion police
spreads in the magazines? You are on all the pages!
Don’t show your hips. Put on a shirt that conceals
your stomach. Put your breasts away. Don’t wear
bright lipstick. Stop standing out, being different.
Get smaller, quieter, lesser, as you are supposed to
be. You love your black too loudly and it makes
others uncomfortable. Your job is to make people
comfortable so do your best to limit the loudness of
your melanin.
simul justus et peccator
andy anderson
11
QUEER
Eve Taft
You think there isn’t a sign on my ribs that says
“stonewall inn”?
You think Matthew Shepard doesn’t tug at my hair
and warn me
as I walk the streets of my city?
You think I don’t choke on the smoke
from the hellfire you spit from your pulpits
with sparks that sear and heat branding
irons
which scar your names on me to mark me as
danger?
You think my veins don’t shiver
when they think
of the devastation
wracking the cities
that some called deliverance
while Reagan fiddled
as we burned
You think that the prisons
pink triangles
asylums
bullets spitting into a nightclub
don’t whisper in my head as I make my
way through the world?
12
You think that I don’t notice—
I kiss her
and kiss her
—the headline blowing by with a death toll
and I kiss her
the skyline splashing out behind us
the lights on the Washington Avenue bridge flicker
on and I kiss her
Putin criminalizes us, across the
world
I kiss her
Vigils held too late for young suicides
Corrupting, perverted, disgusting, an affront to
family values—
I kiss her
in the rain and the sleet of Minnesota
I kiss her, our lips tasting of chants from the protest
that shut down I-94
handed down from our grandmothers
hearts beating, eyes sparkling, alive
I kiss her
You think I forget the lists and the candles and the
deaths and the pain and
all that roars in my ears is a chorus
screaming over and over again
you were not able to kill us
I kiss her
and all is still
13
JESUS IN A CRACKER
A. Tetzlaff
Eucharist
I hugged my father’s black, pleated pants while
we waited for mass to start. He was beaming proudly and chatting with the rest of our family. I wore
the only dress I allowed to touch my body: by then
it was a year old and from my uncle’s wedding when
I walked down the aisle carrying a bouquet, looking
like a blonde deer caught in front of a semi truck.
It had a black velvet top connected to a white skirt.
All the girls wore white. My parents cut their losses.
All the boys, shirt and tie. Eight-year-olds taking
their first communion despite the fact that most of
us had no idea what was happening. Understanding the sacraments isn’t really necessary when you
grow up in a Catholic family. By the time you are
aware of your burden, it’s too late anyway. Religion
lived at Nativity of Our Lord Parish, in Green Bay,
Wisconsin. Between church and home, I lived in a
realm of contradiction. I came to visit religion, but
it never went home with me. On Sundays when the
game was in town, God would not judge you for
wearing your Packer jersey to church. Sinning was
bad, but you could tailgate and drink and carouse to
your heart’s content. We should have taken beer at
14
that first communion. We would have appreciated it
more than the wine. We took our places in the ritual
that had been performed again and again. The
time-worn ritual begins anew as I walk to the altar
with my hands folded in front of me. I must remember to raise my hands high enough so the rheumatic
priest doesn’t have to bend down. Right hand over
left. I’m a blonde deer again.
“The body of Christ.” This is the part where
I say, “Amen,” whether I mean it or not, then
put the communion wafer in my mouth. I must
cross myself (right hand touching head, then left
shoulder, then right shoulder) as I walk back up the
aisle and toward my family. They liked to sit in the
middle section, never too close to the altar. They
didn’t like making direct eye-contact with the priest
during his homily. To this day I skip the wine for
fear of communicable diseases. It stuck to the roof
of my mouth, this first communion wafer. It was
stale. There was no substance. Maybe the parched
flour and water, mixed with the lingering incense is
actually what Jesus tastes like. The absorbent clump
lasted into the next hymn. Saliva rushed into my
mouth and eventually the wafer, heavy with mois-
ture, fell from the roof of my mouth. I swallowed
without chewing.
Just go with it, I told myself. All these people
believe in this, so one day, you will too. But I wasn’t
sure. I didn’t get it. The power that kept me from
running back up the aisle wasn’t the love of God
gently pushing me along, but the ritual itself, and the
expectation of my parents and grandparents watching proud and probably dewy-eyed as I joined their
ranks. Hugs and smiles and congratulations as my
family comes out of the first communion Mass, but
I wasn’t sure what was such cause for celebration; I
hadn’t had a great epiphany about God, nor had I
felt any change at all. It was just like every Sunday
late in October.
head and tell me I was forgiven. “Sometimes, I’m
not very nice to my mom or my brother,” I told him.
Navitity didn’t own a confessional booth like the
ones in movies. In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever seen
a confessional booth at any Catholic church outside
the movies. We sat quietly in a tiny room. Being
small for my age, I circled the air below me with
my feet. I sat facing him directly. He crossed his legs
under the cassock he wore, clearly annoyed. After a
silence and a slow nod, the priest said, “Sometimes,
we hurt the people we love the most.” It was the
only part I heard or remember hearing; he started
talking about God’s forgiveness, I assume. I didn’t
pay attention, because I didn’t feel different after
admitting such a pitiful sin.
Marriage
I had no ill-feeling toward the physical place
of church. In fact, the ritual, the sounds, the smell
of incense, and the light that filtered through the
stained-glass windows from an Easterly rising sun
became familiar and comforting over the years. The
nave, filled with old pews, had witnessed my parents’
wedding and my grandparents’ weddings. The organ towered over the choir. The smell of old patrons
and Sunday cologne too liberally applied became a
sensory memory of that place. However, religion has
never been an inward practice; the practice and the
scene never joined together.
Anointing of the Sick
When times are bad, I’ve pulled the fragments
of ritual from my memory and recite the “Our
Father.” I did this in the winter of my eighteenth
year in days following my grandfather’s funeral. He
died of bladder cancer, worsened by a communicable bacterial infection called C.Difficile. I became
familiar with the ritual of funeral; I’d been to three
or four for close relatives. But this time, the ritual felt
different. Before, I was sad. My grandfather’s funeral
confirmed that the only sacred part of my world had
been ripped mercilessly from my arms.
Reconciliation
“Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.”As the
words come out of my mouth, they themselves felt
sinful. I hadn’t sinned, I was eleven. I barely knew
what sin was. I had to stop a moment to think of
a sin I had committed, so the priest could nod his
Baptism
I sat in the shower until the water hitting my
face was colder than I could stand, reciting
the “Our Father” over and over, sobbing.
Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy
name.
I hoped, over so many repetitions, that my view
15
of God and heaven would change. Yet, it confused
me more. Religion stopped looking like the patron
blind to reality and became a place where I didn’t
belong. Like I was missing out because I didn’t get
that epiphany, and didn’t have that same faith.
Confirmation
Religion was so stale, that when my Mother
would occasionally talk about faith, or God, or divine love at the dinner table I would blush with pity
and embarrassment. How can you believe this? I
thought, how can you be so blind to the real world?
Perhaps, I’m the blind one. I continue to live in
an intermediate space between faith and atheism. I
can’t commit to either. The fence between atheism
and faith is fraught with angst. Most days, I try to
laugh away my uncertainty. I tell jokes about my
Catholic past, chuckle when I hear of “recovering
Catholics,” and tell friends, “It smells like a Catholic
church in here,” whenever they burn incense. Religion is still stale to me. Religion has no nutritional
value. Stale religion has no holy orders.
16
grey cloud island
david baboila
17
saint paul airport
david baboila
18
white bear lake
david baboila
19
zips coliseum
david baboila
20
BRIDGE
Jacob J. Miller
This was not way back when, as my dad would have
you believe. It was more recent than that. If he can’t
flat out deny it, which he no longer can, he will at
least try to convince you that it was so long ago as to
suggest it might have been a different lifetime, and
he a different person. He has been, after all, Born
Again. Except he was not the only person involved,
and to carry along as if he was is an exercise in what
I’ve heard philosophers call solipsism. For him, his
transgression was between himself and the Holy
Ghost: accountable not to those he wronged, only to
an invisible spirit. But he doesn’t have sole authority
in determining the past’s relevance or irrelevance
to our lives today. My mother too pretends the past
is only what has happened at a particular point
in time, and not a factor in what determines what
has happened since then and what is happening
now. The slate wiper theory of forgiveness is what
allowed them to wear their veneer of innocence and
believe in its authenticity, and for that reason I resent their new-leaf turnover. My love for them may
not be emergent in my words, I know, but I do love
them, regardless of the fucked up traits they passed
on to their children, which will become evident as
this story unfolds
You might be wondering, if you care at all, what
could be so terrible. Well, it’s not so terrible, and
not even very uncommon, but it happened to me,
and my brothers and my sisters, and there was never
anything we could really do about it. We watched
it unfold almost every night to reveal its rotted pit.
What was scariest was not when a half-full beer bottle would be hurled in our direction for us being too
noisy, and then being held responsible for wasting
the beer, and getting punished even more for that.
What was scariest was when they fought with each
other, mom and dad, when they were both liquored
up. All of us children would be sitting in the living
room, on our knees, in a line, with our hands folded
and tucked inside our clenched thighs, having
hitherto been fulfilling our playful, childish duties
who couldn’t expect things to go so suddenly and
intensely wrong. They would fight about anything,
or nothing, for all we knew or cared. They would
yell, swear, slam their fists on various surfaces, throw
things across the room at each other as if rehearsed.
One time, I remember, and this is what I’m talking
about when I talk about how scary things got, my
21
dad had my mom pinned up against the refrigerator—after she threw three or four plates at him, one
that hit his arm, but would have hit his face if he
hadn’t been blocking, and cut it deep. He had the
sharp kitchen knife pressed firmly under her chin.
If she gulped too hard in fear, or if dad in his stupor
lost balance, she would have been bleeding all over
the family pictures held by magnets to the fridge.
As we grew older, my big brother and I began working under dad instead of merely living under
him. Our prospects in life weren’t substantial at that
point. Whatever potential we had, it had never been
encouraged, so entering into the family business, if it
can even be called that, was the only viable option.
I woke dad up most mornings from his typical
collapse into a face-down, fetal heap on the kitchen
floor, sometimes still wet, sometimes already crusted
over. I’d say, “it’s time for work, dad,” and he’d drive
me to the site where (drinking coffee with whiskey
in it on the way) heavy machinery was waiting to
be operated—even though we used hammers and
nails whenever we could. Stonehenge-sized slabs of
cement, wooden pillars, cinder blocks, and iron rods
littered the landscape. It was all so disorderly that if
a nomad wandered upon the scene, the indication
would be of destruction rather than pre-construction. There were no piles of allocated materials
or inventoried supply lists. It could have all been
salvaged from past demolitions or by thievery from
other project sites. We seemed to accrue it all without any kind of exchange or standard of accountability for use. Everything seemed to just show up
wherever and whenever we needed it. Who actually
made all this stuff? How did we move it from place
to place to use from job to job? Who permitted my
sodden father to oversee such potentially hazardous
22
projects? He was a self-made man outside the advent
of auditing. What did I care then? I was making my
way, fashioning for myself a future out of will power,
and holding my breath until I could extricate myself
from this grim farce.
First day on the job, my dad said to me, don’t
fuck up, or he’d make me test the bridge before
the support beams were all in place. I believed
him. That particular bridge wasn’t connecting two
sides over a raging river or anything; more of a
convenient pathway over a stream, but it was still a
threat coming from dad. Second day on the job, my
brother James tore partway through his leg with a
chainsaw. I heard him yell, but it sounded more out
of frustration than terror and pain. He sat down,
ripped his immediately blood-soaked pants from
where the initial tear was, delicately unlaced and removed his boot so as not to cause more pain, grunting as if he had done nothing more than step in dog
shit, and lifted the nearly severed part of his leg that
dangled lifelessly like a tube sock on a clothesline,
to close the wound, from which I saw steam rising
sacrificially to the wintery heavens. He reached
forward to grab the excess of sock which, although
bunched up at his toes, had a long, tortuous journey
before being completely removed. He screamed as
he stretched forward, more circumstantially appropriate this time, and this is when I dropped my—
whatever, the thing I was holding, I can’t remember
what, but I didn’t hear it land because I couldn’t
assimilate anything else that may have been transpiring around me. I almost seemed to float over to him,
not even aware of my legs propelling me forward. I
saw all the blood, but I wasn’t put off by it as much
as I thought I probably should have been, and I
thought that as I stared at it pooling out. I observed
it dispassionately, coldly, but I may not have been
breathing. At first sight, it was just an organic pipe
that sprung a leak. I think I asked if he was all right
but I meant it more like did he think he was going to
die. He said to go get dad and that’s when I became
afraid. I stood there for I don’t know how long, until
he repeated himself more urgently:
“Walt!” he said, “Go! Get! Dad!”
I listened that time, but I was still very afraid. I was
trembling and began feeling like I might faint, and
I almost hoped I wouldn’t find dad, that he’d be off
drinking somewhere, but he wasn’t. He was drinking
right there, over a small mound of dirt, holding a
big piece of wood sturdy for someone to do something with. I saw his breath bellow out into the cold
with a cough and evaporate as he took a swig from
a bottle before sliding it back into his coat pocket,
without so much as a pretense of inconspicuousness.The bottle neck stuck straight out and brushed
against his elbow, a cumbersome lump sinking
down and throwing off his equilibrium further than
the ethanol already had. I slowed my pace, tried to
regain some composure, and still hoped he wouldn’t
notice me. I could claim an attempt at getting his
attention, but he just couldn’t be bothered with me.
I tried, I’d tell James, but I’ll carry you. I was sure I
could have done that. Part of me still wished I could
have avoided involving my dad at all. It was selfish,
but I thought I might get slapped with the blame.
But I yelled, Dad! Come quick! Dad, I yelled again,
skidding on the gravel as I spun around, intent on
not letting my dad’s impatient glare lock on me,
and from that momentum, nearly ascending at a
perfectly horizontal angle in the air before I landed
face first on those same tiny rocks, a perfect reenactment of self-humiliation on the school playground
at recess. I felt all those multiple points of impact,
but wasted no time in catapulting myself back
up—no time for embarrassment just yet—clawed
off the pebbles that clung gently to the tiny dents
they bore into my face and palms, and sped back
to my brother who, when I reached the dirt-mound
summit again, I could see was lying flat, surrounded
by the thick, still-steaming purplish puddle which
had, since I left him, at least quadrupled in circumference. Not looking back at all during my return
sprint to see how far behind me dad was, or even if
he followed me at all, I turned from the sight of my
brother completely to see him, Dad, shuffling over
the mound, bogged down by beer bottles, which
could be heard clanging together in his pockets.
He was wheezing inhalations of frozen air. He saw
James right away, I know it, but he didn’t say anything until he got right up close to him, planting one
clumsy boot in the blood puddle with a squelchy,
meager splat, like an old-fashioned letter-sealing
stamp on melted wax. He leaned over with outward
turned elbows and hands on hips, looked at James’
face. James’ eyes were closed. Dad then scanned
down to the butchered leg, grimaced, scanned
back up to James’ face. James’ eyes were now open
again, frigid with shock, and dad said, “pull yourself
together, son,” erupting hysterically at his own clever
buffoonery.
James turned out to live, no real thanks to
our father. I ended up having to run to the nearest
phone anyway and call an ambulance. He didn’t
even lose his leg. He did require a blood transfusion
because he lost gallons of it, or at least it seemed
like it when I stood there staring at the mess, but his
gristly cheeks had their color restored right in front
of me, resupplying and, it almost seemed, re-inflat23
ing him to human shape at the coercion of some
stranger’s bodily elixir. It worked like sorcery, but far
more astonishing because it was methodologically
reliable. The warm fluid surged through his veins,
and he was ensconced for a moment in a prodigious glow of newfound vitality. Back then, my dad,
laughing, called him a lucky son-of-a-bitch, whereas
telling the story now, upon reflection and suspension of rational thought, my brother was “touched
by an angel.” Now, whenever this celestial creature
of mercy is mentioned, who conveniently remains
anonymous for humility’s sake I suppose, instead of
our dad drunkenly laughing and mocking the situation, James does. An example of an aforementioned
fucked up trait passed on in the family.
24
50 FEET TALL
Emilie Tomas
I was in 5th grade
When my class went
To see ‘The Human
Body’ and I watched
In childhood
Horror as
A 50 foot grin
Unfurled, loomed
Large enough
To pull me
Into orbit
Devoured
First a sandwich
And then my
Faith in humanity
With deafening
Smacks
Like thunder
If thunder
Was made
Of jelly and
Dismay and I
Knew it was a
Crime to allow a
Person to become
This
Inflated,
With every pore
Its own path to
Hell and I knew
I couldn’t trust
Anyone because
In our heads
We are all
50 feet tall.
25
meow you see
ashley waalen
26
MOUSETRAP
Halle Chambers
Minnie “Mousy” O’Mally knew she was
invisible up here on her fire escape. This was her
safeplace. With the ladder pulled up as it was now,
almost no one could reach her here. Plus, even if
someone did make it up here, she could easily get
away.
If she crawled rough the window, she’d be
securely locked in the apartment. There, it was
warm and dry and at least sometimes safe when her
daddy…no, excuse her, correction, “Father or Sir”
wasn’t home. He hated when she called him Daddy.
He wasn’t home now, out doing illegal God knows
what in the “family business,” but he would be back
soon. Hence why she was out here. So, no apartment, not right now.
If she dropped the ladder, she could slide down
to street level in seconds and be down the block
in under a minute. She knew, because she’d practiced and had timed herself. The only way to avoid
getting hit in the face was to be quick on your feet.
That was the first rule of fighting that Jase, her older
brother, had taught her. With the life they lived,
it was also a rule of survival. And they didn’t call
her “Mousy” for nothing: she was small and fast…
very fast. Jase could make a distraction, and Minnie
could run. But, Jase was working a job that “Father”
had given him out of town till this weekend, and
she’d surely get caught if she didn’t have her usual
head-start. So,“down” wouldn’t work either.
If she scaled up the ladder above her, she’d be
on the roof, where their oldest brother, Cobie, had
often taken her and Jase to stargaze. She hadn’t
known till six years into her still short life that he’d
done it to keep his precious baby brother and sister
away from their father’s sight when the man would
come home satellite high or plastered. She hadn’t
known till twelve years in that he’d take their father’s
hungover backhand on the mornings after, so she
and Jase didn’t. All she’d known as he’d taught her
each constellation was that Cobie was braver than
Orion and that she and her brothers were more
inseparable than the Gemini twins. But, her world
went as topsy-turvy as Cassiopeia when her father
had sent Cobie away, saying he would not have a
queer as a son. When Jase and Minnie hugged him,
Cobie swore he’d come back for them in a year or
so. Jase had given up when he’d been two years
gone. That was two years ago, and now even Minnie
27
was starting to doubt. No, she couldn’t go up to the
roo, not alone.
She shivered in the October chill as she reviewed her options: “in” would be facing her father’s
wrath, “down” would be facing being caught by
a cop or a stranger, and “up” would be facing a
reminder of the happiness, now heartbreak, brought
by a brother who was likely never coming home
again. So, maybe she couldn’t escape easily…or at
all. She shivered again, this time more in frantic
panic than from the frigid, near winter city wind.
For not the first time in her life, Mousy felt trapped.
28
faces
connie kilppen
29
*I DON’T ALWAYS FEEL COLORED
Diamonique Walker
Sometimes I find comfort in places I somehow know
I don’t belong
Never a full day, but hours will pass and I won’t
consider my brown skin or kinky hair
I’ll let the imminent fear of my black body being
made into an example fall back to the depths of my
mind
My daughter’s safety in mixed company won’t occur
to me
I won’t juxtapose my blackness with any other’s
identity
confidence
As if one chooses randomly from a pile of stock
black girl names when they look at me
He asks me if my hair is real
I tell him he can’t ask me that
He says oh it’s okay, my girlfriend is black
I’m a dirty smudge on freshly ironed white linens
Trying to blend in, trying to live my life
I breathe, momentarily
Suddenly, I’ll feel breathless, choked
Stabbed in the chest
Stung by a white hot micro aggressive slap in the
face
An unsolicited violation of my personal space
A pale hand gently pulls a lock of my hair in white
amazement
Or a thin pair of lips will say “what’s upppppp” to
me and not anyone else
I’ll get called a name like Jasmine with such utter
30
*Line borrowed from Claudia Rankine, Citizen
WHERE I AM FROM
Hannah Schmit
I am from the forest. From ruddy Maple and heady
Pine. I am from the sunlit dust that refracts the life
of the breeze. The rough wood of the trees are my
bones, roots firmly planted deep in the depths of the
cool black soil. Generations have taught me to live
in the sun, tan weathered hands, calloused and worn
cover small, break earth and sow seeds. Exhaling
with the unfurling of new leaves whose first stretch
welcomed life, I learned the importance of patience
and nurturing.
I am from dirt beneath my nails and gritty sand in
my teeth. Sap painted hands and hot tar feet, blackened from short dashes across burning pavement
that rippled with summer heat. Sandboxes were my
kingdom, the layers of silt and sand familiar to my
prodding hands. I climbed turreted towers of twisted
bark and branches to survey the world and breath
in time with the breeze. Twigs and leaves were my
crown and a rusty tractor my carriage. My people
were the songbirds and insistent cicadas whose songs
filtered lazily together through the woods. Sometimes I called back, matching note for note, melodies
and harmonies creating a canopy of familiarity.
I am from wildflowers who nodded their velvet, satin, and paintbrush heads as I passed by. From dried
grasses whose sweet scent rose from rolling waves
that undulated under horse-tail clouds above. The
gold-fringed top of the corn is my hair as it turns to
brown under the autumn sun.
I am from the passing of seasons, each marking the
time as brilliant red and orange gave way to pristine
white and serene gray. Freckles and sunburn traded
for pale skin cold kissed cheeks. My life can be
counted in scraped knees and bruises, and band-aids
and scars, each a story unique unto itself.
I am from the water. Clear and silted, still and rushing it surrounds me. The river courses through my
veins, its steady pulse my heartbeat. I am from the
muted silence of holding my breath. From letting
go in the soft pixelated light that swirls lazily in the
haze of a murky river. From the dew that rests in
early mists that lay as a blanket over a newly purified
earth, protecting the last of the dawn.
I am from music. Love-strung tunes of lullabies rock
31
my past to sleep and call forth dog-eared memories.
Treasured memories that float fragmented in my
mind,
I was waltzing with my darling…
Goodnight, Irene…
Then sings my soul…
Black Forest I have come to be in this place. Knit
sweaters and hand me downs weave the fabric of my
personality.
The black ink of the notes is stained on my fingers, the lyrics printed out as a map on my mind.
My body is movement, ‘full of grace’ as I danced
through recitals and music competitions. My history
is composed of the ivory keys of a piano board, the
metallic strings of a guitar, and the soft wheeze of a
musty accordion.
I am from survivors. From broken families and lives
I was given the opportunity to begin. Out of the
ashes of war and blood, death and pain I was taught
compassion. The scars remind me of my privilege.
A handful of ink-smeared letters, a fading tattoo,
and relentless nightmares that went unspoken.
Touched by shadows of heartbreak and longing I
have learned the fears of disease and pain, the cruelty of man and the destruction of illness.
I am from a legacy. Footsteps preceded my very first
and taught me how to stand tall—to walk courageously. When I was tired of walking and needed to
fly, strong hands lay behind me as I learned to test
my own strength.
I am from fading memories. From sweat and
ploughs, rough tools and run down sheds. My past is
a copper foundation of saved pennies stretched with
love and trust. The polished wood of a hunter’s gun
and tug of a taut fishing line tie me to
the land of a generation gone by.
I am from the creaking wood of a ship that ferried
dreams. From the fjords and
32
I am from strength. From weary hands that sought
to move forward. From songs crooned in different
tongues, prayers tucked away from missed lives.
I am from the sweet smell of tobacco. From a worn
brown pipe laid in the top overall pocket. From tales
of Shirley Temple and shiny black shoes. From the
canoe as it passes over reeds and the click of a cane
keeping time with shuffling shoes. From sterilized
rooms and flowers with similarly fated owners.
I am from loss and tears.
I am from the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, from
steam and coal. From concrete jungles and log cabins. I am a piece of the past, I am…
The rooms of my mind are wallpapered with
snapshots of a younger me. Sayings and phrases are
the soundtrack of my life. I carry them with me.
Tucked in locked and forgotten rooms they wait
patiently, longingly for me to recall.
future. I seek not where I am going only
exist here, as I am.
I am from the past. Shaped by the present I live for
the future. I am from wanderlust. An incorrigible
desire to explore that cannot be quelled with the
stillness between heartbeats. I am from the excitement that teeters on the brink of the inevitable.
I am pulled at by the gentle whisper of religions.
Called to the beauty of holiness in the world, I am
grounded in the church yet growing in the temple
and the mosque.
I am gentle hands that have learned to be useful—to
give back. Well-used fingers taught to survive and
protect. I am a collection of places and people that I
have encountered. In love with humanity, I exchange comfort for experience.
I am at home in the concrete jungles constructed
from heat-cracked pavement and in the mudpatched hut of the desert. The mountains and caves
call to me like the trees and fields of my youth. I am
at home in the grand expanse of a world that knows
no limits, understands no boundaries. A world that
exists, simply to exist. My feet itch to travel down
forgotten paths where the dust of ages can billow
out from under me and cloud the clarity of the
33
who am i?
ashley waalen
34
2
GRATITUDE: A POEM IN FOUR PARTS
D.E. Green
1. Le Chaim
2. In Praise of Delusion
Each day, my own sunrise, my own morning star:
your red head radiates strange aerial spikes.
When he walks down the sloping skyway from
Memorial
to the Music building on his way to a long evening
class, he sees his reflection in the large classroom
window at the base of the slope. He loves that mirror. In it, he is about a foot taller than his five-fiveand-a-half and twenty pounds lighter. He is younger
than his sixty years.
The silver hair is less telling. As he approaches, the
Other ways slightly, moves with the elegant gait of
an athlete or dancer. This, he imagines, is my Norwegian double—tall and slender and (at least from this distance)
good-looking.
Of course as man and image converge, his Other
shrinks into an eastern-European, Semitic, rather
compact, little old man.
Perhaps (he wonders) I have seen the inner image of myself.
Perhaps (he smiles) I am happy just to have illusions.
Our son’s beard and long Hasidic locks
on a head never bowed in prayer hover
over his guitar and, till he gets it just so,
a heavy-metal riff. The picture of Ollie, our old
pup,—
his face speaks love, love, love. Like the holiday meal
you’ll pretend to let me cook. Or when your hand
gently
strokes my heaving shoulder: I am sobbing silently
because the movie has ended well—a good death,
timely reconciliation, vows revived, a renewed
breath.
36
3. Thanksgiving
4: To My Son
This morning, as I drive
from Northfield to Hampton
past field after barren field,
three wild turkeys
foraging and gobbling
at the edge of the road—
their white-splashed wings,
black-feathered trunks,
It’s Friday, Z—, and (as always) time to say how
much I love you (and your mom too, since I don’t
say it often enough though I feel it every minute)
and how much I miss you and hope you can spend
a few hours with us and Grandma the first weekend
in November. We worry about you every day, ‘cuz
that’s our job, but we also have an abiding sense
of how strong you are: How much you have been
through, how far you’ve come, and how you face
each day with grit—and, I hope, love. The latter
is so hard to do: Over breakfast your mom and I
sometimes sit around and whine about our work,
about grading student papers. But a little later I’ll be
walking across campus and the light will be just right
and I’ll see a familiar face amid a group of young
people and—I don’t know why—I feel love. I think
that’s the word. And I felt it last time we picked you
up downtown and you were talking to some scruffy
stranger on the street. And the fact that you can still
be open to such encounters—isn’t that love too?—
filled me with wonder. It’s funny: Old people, among
whom I am about to number, have proverbially been
beyond wonder, such a romantic and old-fashioned
word. But I swear that I still feel it—and that you are
among the wonders of my world.
red combs poking
and pecking the gravel
and weeds—surprise me.
I flinch.
The car swerves.
I breathe.
They range unruffled.
37
work in progress
gabriel bergstrom
38
THE FIRE
Elisabeth Beam
I stood with my back to the crowd watching the
house go up in flames. It happened faster than I had
expected. It had taken less than a minute for the fire
to spread from the kitchen to the living room and
even less time for it to make its way upstairs and into
the bedrooms where Grandma and the twins had
been peacefully sleeping. Joel stood beside me; his
face was dark with ash, his mouth tilted upwards in
a sickeningly gleeful smile.
Momma had never liked Joel. She said he was a
troublemaker and I should do my best to stay away
from him. Joel hadn’t always been mean. When I
first met him he would bring me friends and make
me laugh. He gave me my grey tabby cat, Walter,
and my small white bunny, Snowy. We used to all
run around the garden and play and laugh. I didn’t
like it when Walter and Snowy played. Walter
always hurt Snowy. Joel loved it. Snowy’s pain filled
shrieks always brought a smile to his face.
Joel would play tricks on Momma. He’d move the
chair she was about to sit in and she’d tumble to the
floor with a crash and a scream. He would put dead
things in the twins’ crib for Momma to find. Once
he brought a live snake into the house and slipped
it into the shower when Momma was in it. She
screamed something awful and had locked me in
my room for a week. I always got blamed for Joel’s
wicked tricks.
Momma brought a lot of new friends to the house
after that. She brought in men wearing long white
coats who talked with me and asked questions about
Joel and Walter and Snowy. Joel would stand behind
them as they questioned me and make faces. I didn’t
understand why they didn’t just talk to Joel and grew
frustrated with their questions.
Once Momma brought home a man in a black suit.
He walked around the house mumbling in a strange
language, throwing water on the walls and waving
his cross around like a baton. I thought he was
crazy. I told Momma and she told me to hush and
sit down. The man stood in front of me yelling in his
strange way and holding his cross on my forehead.
It was cold and made me uncomfortable. Joel got
upset. He didn’t like the man and the way he was
39
shouting. The next thing I knew the man was on the
floor bleeding from a gash in his head and Joel was
laughing loudly in my ear. A bunch of police officers
showed up and Joel told me not to tell anyone what
he’d done. He said I should blame it on Momma
and she’d go away for a long time and stop bothering us. Momma shouted and cried and struggled as
the police dragged her away to the sound of Joel’s
gleeful laughter and the twins’ high pitched screams.
Grandma came after Momma. She was mean.
She locked me in my room and told me to stay
there until I learned my lesson. I watched him
stalk around the room at night mumbling darkly to
himself. Grandma made me to go church with her
every Sunday, she said I had to pray for my soul for
what I’d done to that man and to Momma. I didn’t
understand why everyone blamed me for Joel’s tricks
and was tired of being punished for all the naughty
things that he did.
One night at supper, Joel made scary faces at the
twins who started wailing. Grandma stood up and
yelled at me as she tried desperately to calm the
twins. She told me to go to my room. I said no. I
pointed at Joel and yelled at him with all my might.
This was all his fault. Grandma sent me to bed. Joel
told me they were going to send me away. They
would separate us and I would never be able to see
him again. I told him I was fine with that because he
was being horrible. That upset him. He got Walter and Snowy and made me watch as Walter ate
Snowy. I cried. He laughed.
Joel woke me up at midnight. He told me we could
stay together. Me, him, and Walter, but we had to do
40
something first. He smelt like gasoline. He led me to
the kitchen and pointed to the stove which was covered with a sticky, sweet smelling liquid. He told me
to open my hands. I did. He handed me a lighter.
I didn’t want to do it but Joel got angry when I tried
to say no. He yelled and told me to do it for all the
times Momma blamed me for something he did.
That if I did this everyone would finally realize it
was him doing all the bad things and not me. My
hands were shaking so bad it took me five tries to
get the lighter to ignite. When it did I froze and
stared at the small flame in my hands. It flickered
with every shuttering breath that came out of my
mouth. Joel grew impatient and slapped the lighter
out of my hand and onto the stove. There was a
large whooshing noise and a blast of orange light.
My arm hair stood on end and sweat trickled down
my face. I backed away. Joel stood in front of the
fire and laughed. He threw his arms out wide and
danced in tune with the flames. He was crazy but
his movements were so beautiful and fluid. It was
frightening. The fire advanced toward me. I didn’t
want to move. I wanted the fire to eat me like it was
going to eat Grandma and the twins. Joel grabbed
my hand and led me outside.
We stood to the side and watched as the fire slowly
ate up the house I had grown up in. The house that
the priest, the twins, and Grandma had all died in.
Sirens and smoke filled the night air. I looked to my
side for Joel, but he had disappeared.
DESERT DRUMS
Abigail Carpenter
When my London flatmate, Raoni, suggested
we travel to Northern Africa because he was missing
the heat of Brazil, we had no intention of visiting
the Sahara Desert and the Atlas Mountains. But we
quickly made friends with a generous and hospitable
Moroccan man, Raxido, who invited us to a local
drum circle at the edge of the Sahara Desert.
After traveling on camelback against an orange-rayed sunset, we found ourselves among the
sand dunes. We parked our camels single file near
our camp, and I realized a place that once only
existed in my dreams was now before me.
I had to close my eyes for a long while. I opened
them over and over again until I was sure of it. I
had to reach down and let the sand fall between my
fingers slowly. I had to breathe in the crisp, evening
air. And when I looked up, the stars speckled in the
sky like the summer freckles on my face, thousands
and thousands of them.
When the drum circle began, I let its music
fill me up. It started in my toes and moved higher,
tickled my fingers and sent goosebumps up my arms
and back. The drums vibrated within my chest and
when it reached my mouth, I screamed in laughter.
My laugh echoed farther and farther across the desert, not meeting any person or town or house until it
was miles and miles away.
I wrapped my blanket a little tighter and
watched my friends dance around the fire to the
beat of the drums. Their legs moved up and down
as their hands joined the ashes flying through the
night air.
For many hours, we sat around the fire, told
our stories and spoke aloud our dreams. We danced
and sang and took turns pounding the drums. We
slept under the stars among the silence of the desert
for only a few hours until the sun awoke us on the
horizon. And moving through the deep sand, the
sunrise at our backs, we rode our camels to the bus
to escape the desert heat before it swallowed us up
whole.
41
COLORS
Hannah Schmit
If I am a color call me red
The color of passion and love
Humanity worn on my sleeve
The color of my blood, beating heart.
Call me red.
If I am a season call me fall
With baited chilled breath I speak
My words on whirlwind breezes fall
An omen of changes to come
Call me fall.
If I am a sound call me silence.
The chaos and stillness of calm
My words lost yet encompassing
In anticipation of something
Call me silence
If I am a thought call me hope
The desire for something more
A yearning call deep within me
The need to breathe
Call me hope.
42
urban delight
jazmin crittenden
43
WHEN DAD WORE COLOGNE
A. Tetzlaff
“Did Grandpa Mike die?” My small voice
broke a quiet that Dad and I carry easily between
us. A radio frequency connecting our minds that
communicates silently, so we don’t have to. Even at
the age of three, I knew our sacred, noiseless space
well.
Dad took me to a park one day, nearby my
childhood home. We rarely visited this park unless
we intended to use its snowy slope for adrenaline
rushes in our bright plastic sleds in the winter time.
But it wasn’t wintertime now. My dad wore a blue
t-shirt he’d owned since high school. Summer or
spring, the season isn’t particularly distinct. The hills
rose nakedly as we quietly approached.
I’ve come back to the memory time and again;
the images are blurred, like a positive photograph
that didn’t come out of the darkroom correctly.
I can’t recall how my father responded to my
question, though I’m sure he patiently and painfully affirmed my query. In that moment I wasn’t
shocked. I wasn’t sad. Presently, I regret that I can’t
remember a man who loved me and was so dearly
loved by others. I don’t know how he looked aside
from the pictures I know. How he talked, laughed,
44
yelled, walked, I don’t recall. Did he wear cologne to
work like Dad?
When I was young, Dad wore cologne to work.
He woke up around five in the morning in order to
be at work five-thirty, and he still does, despite the
fact that no one expects him in the office till eight.
I’d hear his alarm from my bed and wait to smell
the mix of dewy summer grass and the spicy knives
of cologne in my nostrils. The smell lingered and
pulled me back to sleep as Dad left the house. On
the day at the park, Dad wasn’t wearing cologne.
Dad didn’t wear cologne that day because it was
either a weekend or he had the day off or had taken
time away to grieve.
I don’t remember the call to our corded
telephone late one night. It was the hospital telling
Mom and Dad that my grandfather died of a heart
attack while showering. I don’t know if he died
immediately or if the attack was slow, painful, cold,
and wet. I will never ask. The thought of breaking
the stitches grief so tenuously sewed incites trepidation. Was my young face one of his last images? I’m
vain enough to assume so––grandparents always
think of the grandbabies first. Was it a comfort? I
can only hope.
At my Grandfather’s funeral, I can’t remember
Mom’s grief. I can’t remember the funeral either.She
keeps the remnants of her love tended like a flower
garden and tells me of her father often. I have nothing but the cemented walkway leading to the park
that summer day deep in my mind.
Mom tells me that my grandfather lived as long
as he did because he was waiting for me. It was a
miracle I was even born, but that’s not my story to
tell. She calls me “the sparkle in his eye.”
Christopher, my younger and only brother,
inherited my grandfather’s bright, Anglo-blue irises.
He was born the year after my grandfather died.
Christopher joined the Army a few weeks ago; my
grandfather was a Marine in the 60s.
During his service in Asia, my grandfather collected each country’s currency. Grandma keeps the
collection in a red leather box in her bedroom closet.
I used to step onto a chair and carefully extract the
artifact from the top shelf and touch each coin and
each bill. Some of those tenders are much extinct
now.
The souvenirs of my grandfather’s life are far
less valuable to me than those of my travels––those,
at least, the mugs and the key chains, those have
memories attached of the real thing.
I’ve spent most of my life scouring photos and
objects, trying to resurrect an authentic memory
of my grandfather. Trying to find a sensation that
brings him back to me like the early morning scent
of Dad’s cologne because I only remember the
hills and my words and Dad. The solvents of time
washed away my grandfather.
45
SHITTY CHRISTMAS TREES AND SECONDHAND DOLLS
Elisabeth Beam
When I was a kid we didn’t have a lot of money.
But we managed to survive. Mom worked a lot at
the dingy looking Super 8 Motel just down the street
from the elementary school. You know, the kind
of motel that charges by the hour instead of night.
She hated it but it was close to school and paid just
enough. Around November she would start picking
up shifts at other hotels in town to save up more
money for Christmas. It was hard. The heat bill
always went up mid-October when the chill started
to set in and the snow began to fall. Presents were
always an issue. Getting stuff for just me and Sarah
was usually alright, but Mom came from a big family. Six brothers and sisters all of whom had kids. All
of whom would be needing presents. That’s a lot of
money. Money we just didn’t have.
One year there was a huge blizzard and they
canceled school for a week. Sarah was only six at
the time and she couldn’t be left alone to take care
of herself much less a five-year-old as well. So mom
had to stay home from work and look after us. She
tried to make it seem like she wasn’t stressed out
about the money, but I knew she was. She would
pace around the kitchen at night and mumble to
46
herself. She’d crouch over her checkbook and shake
her head. She tried to hide it from us, but I noticed.
I always noticed when she got like that. A week of
work missed meant we wouldn’t be able to afford the
gas to get to grandma’s house for Christmas. And a
week with everyone at home meant that the heat bill
was going to be rough. She was too proud to try and
get food stamps. So money that would normally go
towards presents went to buying our Christmas feast.
We didn’t go to my grandma’s house that
Christmas but it was probably the best Christmas of
my life. The day before school let out our landlord
took out all the carpet in the living room. He said it
was due to be replaced and that someone would be
over before the holiday to put down some new carpet. “Your feet will be so happy and thankful! That’s
the best Christmas present you could ask for!” he
had happily told us. No one came. The floor was
cold and there were nails and sharp staples sticking
up at weird angles. It hurt to step on them and small
red dots appeared throughout the house as we all
made the mistake of stepping in the living room
without socks.
Mom put down an old ratty green rug, one
that our cats liked to pee on. She bought a small
fake green tree from the thrift shop downtown. It
was the saddest looking tree. Most of the branches
were missing so it had random bald spots sporadically around its leaning trunk. A good number of
the ornaments that we put on it fell off because it
couldn’t support their weight. We made new ones
out of paper and glitter. Mom wrapped tinsel she’d
taken from work around it and Sarah and I sloppily
placed string lights. We put an old family picture at
the top of the tree because we were too scared that
our expensive Christmas angel would fall and break
if we tried to stick her up there.
Thinking back on it now it was a pretty shitty
looking tree, but back then I thought it was the best
thing I’d ever seen in my life. I remember sitting on
the floor amongst the nails and staples and looking
at it glittering and glistening and thinking that it was
a far better tree than anyone else could ever have. I
thought that even if we’d spend a million dollars on
a tree and all its dressings that it wouldn’t even be
able to come close to this masterpiece sitting before
me.
For Christmas Eve we blasted holiday music
and ran around the living room twirling and waving
our arms above our heads. Mom had somehow
found time to make new flannel pajamas for both
me and Sarah and we had immediately put them
on. She had also given us each a doll that she’d
found at a thrift store. They looked ratty and dirty
but I loved them both. Every bit of dust and matted
patch of hair was a story waiting to be told. The
dolls had character and I loved it.That shitty tree
and our thrift store dolls were great but they weren’t
what made that night so special. It was that we were
all together, making the most out of what we had
and not lamenting what we were missing. I think as
we grow up we lose the magic in secondhand dolls
and shitty Christmas trees.
47
summer nights
adam ruff
48
the people united
adam ruff
49
after the hike
adam ruff
50
CRUMBS
Malena Larsen
He’s looking for love
In the crevices of his couch
Like loose change.
I saw him lift up the cushions
And pull out crumbs
His mother’s earring
A quarter
The spoon he dropped last week
After eating ice cream out of the container.
It was chocolate cookie dough and he ate the whole thing.
I watched him put the quarter in his back pocket
and the spoon back in the cushions.
I told him I had been in love once
And he said
I like it when girls call me daddy.
I had a dream that night that he was dating somebody and my stomach hurt when I woke up.
I became a spoon in the couch cushion
Who said words like
Daddy
And
Fuck me
And
Hard.
At the end of every night I was put back with the
crumbs, and each day that he came to get me there
was more cat hair or lint stuck to me
I waited patiently
Dirty
For him to pick me up.
It was 77 degrees the late summer night he stopped
getting me from the cushions.
He told me that he found somebody to love and we
can’t be friends, because if I see you I’ll fuck you. I
asked him why he couldn’t control himself if he was
in love with somebody.
The inside of my ribcage
Was being scraped empty
51
Like the chocolate cookie dough ice cream container
And my stomach hurt
Like it did after the dream
Where he wasn’t mine
I can’t help it.
He told me.
I like it when girls call me daddy.
When we met he was wearing a suit and it looked
like he had spent a lot of time on his hair but I
didn’t think he was attractive until the weekend
when I was drunk.
Across the table
On the other side of red cups
And puddles of water
He stared at me
In a grey tank top.
His eyes
And arms
Were strong
52
And dark.
Making eye contact felt like sex
And he smelled like Fireball
And somebody I shouldn’t be alone with
And too much cologne.
We went swimming at 6 am at the neighbor’s lakefront when everyone else fell asleep.
He took off his shirt
I kept mine on.
The water fell off of him like it didn’t want to keep
his body covered for too long. He picked me up and
folded me over his right shoulder and threw me into
the 6 am summer sweet lake water.
He drove me home
At 7 am
Still drunk and
Smitten.
It was 88 degrees and my birthday the night I let
him kiss me in the back hallway of our friend’s frat.
I couldn’t wait anymore
He told me
In the house that smelled like
Liquor and dust
And damp wood.
The first time we
Fucked
Was in the front seat of his
White Pontiac Grand prix
At 11 pm on a Tuesday.
I saw him almost
As an animal.
His fists
Were clenched
And his eyebrows
Like shelves
Over his beetle eyes.
Do you like fucking daddy?
After that night I had to sneak him into my bedroom
because he couldn’t do all of the positions he wanted to in his car. He needed to prove to me that he
was the best fuck and that he could make me cum
and that I should call him
Daddy.
I had never called fucking, fucking before. Before I
was a dirty spoon it had only been called love.
His eyes started to remind me
Of Tiny
Round
Black beetles.
There’s nobody else anymore
We should just keep fucking.
And when we fucked
It was 66 degrees and almost fall when he came to
my house in his white Pontiac Grand Prix and told
me
I remembered then, the quarter he put in his pants
and how he used me to eat his ice cream and then
put me back with all the crumbs in the cushions of
53
his couch
Where he keeps looking for love
Like it’s the loose change
In his back pocket.
54
bloomed
audrey campbell
55
pruned
audrey campbell
56
HERMAN
Danny Polaschek
Grape juice dribbled down Herman’s chin and
landed in scattered droplets down the front of his
white T-shirt. He didn’t notice and, after setting
down his half-emptied glass, picked up his spoon
and started on his bowl of bran flakes. Sitting at the
kitchen table, there was nothing in front of Herman
—but a bare white wall. It seemed, however, that he
wasn’t looking at it, but rather through it like a child
looks through a window and, seeing nothing but
gray skies and rain, is overwhelmed by disappointment because they will not be outdoors playing that
day.
As Herman sat there facing the white wall and
chomping his cereal, his son entered the kitchen
and began his morning ritual. Herman heard the
coffee-maker start bubbling from somewhere behind
him in the kitchen along with the quick and efficient pitter-pattering of his son’s feet, who Herman
assumed had to be walking laps around the center
island as some sort of new, trendy morning workout.
Once the coffee maker’s burbling came to an end
the footsteps stopped as well.
Herman focused on the sound of the coffee being poured, the soft sound of liquid filling a ceramic
mug. The sound stopped as quickly as it had started
and Herman was further drawn from his relaxed,
monotonous state by the sound of his son’s voice.
“How are the flakes this morning, Dad?”
Herman didn’t turn around to face his son, but
continued with what he was doing, looking like a
cow chewing cud. “Five star quality,” he replied in
between spoonfuls. “Flaky as ever.”
Herman’s son chuckled a bit and looked up
from his fresh cup of coffee but the laugh died away
when he noticed that his father was still turned away
from him, eyes glued straight ahead. Taking another
sip, Herman’s son pondered whether he would keep
pursuing his father in conversation or not. He ultimately decided against it and left the kitchen, coffee
mug in hand.
A sigh escaped Herman’s throat as he set down
his spoon, finished with his mushed and soggy cereal. Ain’t this the life, he thought to himself sarcastically. Finally turning away from the wall, Herman
scooted himself back from the kitchen table and
slowly stood up. He gripped the side of the table for
balance and took a few deep breaths in an effort to
steady himself. Just a few weeks before, Herman had
57
missed a stair descending to the basement and found
himself tumbling clumsily down the rest of the way
until crashing to a stop on the last few steps.
Herman’s head still felt a bit shaky from time to
time, which caused a bit of a tremble in his legs. Instead of walking from place to place, he grew accustomed to maneuvering his way to each destination
by leaning on and grabbing anything he could for
support and then flinging himself to another sturdy
checkpoint, and so on and so forth until he reached
his goal. It was much like a monkey swinging from
vine to vine, but less precise and much less graceful.
With his feet finally under him, legs steady,
Herman pushed away from the kitchen table and
launched himself to the kitchen counter, which
caught him with cold indifference. Hunched over,
Herman caught his breath for a few seconds before
beginning to shuffle down the length of the marble
counter towards the coffeemaker at the other end.
“This better be a damn good cup of Joe,” he mumbled to himself, clearly exhausted.
Halfway down the counter, Herman stopped.
With a steady grip on the counter he reached up to
the cupboard above his head and swung it open. He
couldn’t see inside but he knew that what he was
looking for was in there: his old blue coffee mug—
one of the only things worth bringing with when he
moved into his son’s house the year before. Feeling
around the smooth, wooden interior, Herman
eventually got a hold of his mug which distinguished
itself by having only half of a handle still attached.
With the partial handle hooked onto his ring and
middle fingers, Herman pulled out his mug and
brought it shakily down over his head, setting it on
the counter with a soft “clink.”
Herman was beginning to feel dizzy at this
58
point, and wished for a moment that he had listened
to the doctor about getting a walker. “Mr. Huckley,”
the doctor said, “even if you don’t think you’ll use
it, take it anyways. Just in case.” Herman didn’t take
the walker, and wouldn’t even let anyone help to
walk him out of the hospital, not even his son. “I
don’t need your damn help,” he snorted each time
someone tried to take his arm to steady him. He was
always a stubborn man and old age wasn’t going to
change that.
Continuing down the counter, Herman felt this
same stubborn anger boiling in him. He was almost
seventy years old and yet he felt like a child who
was just learning to walk. He’d built his own home,
and a garage to go with it, and now he could hardly
make it to the opposite end of the room without
feeling fatigued.
Sweat was running hot from Herman’s forehead. He wiped it with a shaky hand and breathed
in deeply, closing his eyes as he did so. He only had
five or so more steps to go and he braced himself for
the final stretch, determined to get there even if it
killed him.
With a focused balance and patient, shuffling
steps Herman managed to get to the end of the
counter and the coffee pot. He exhaled in relief, and
a satisfied smile tugged the corners of his mouth up
ever so slightly. With his blue mug in one hand, Herman picked up the coffeepot in the other, intent on
pouring himself a well-deserved cup of coffee after
his tiresome journey. His satisfaction was immediately replaced with bitterness as he lifted the pot
and felt that it was nearly empty, only a few drops
remained rolling around in the bottom.
Herman’s minute smile had vanished and his
brow hardened, scrunching up his forehead in small,
tense knots. Setting the pot back on the counter,
Herman hissed repeatedly under his breath, cursing
his son for not leaving him any coffee. Herman’s
hands were visibly trembling and he was having
a difficult time keeping a grip on the edge of the
counter. He contemplated making more coffee but
dismissed the idea immediately, knowing that he
could not remain standing and moving around the
kitchen much longer.
Herman felt a hot flush come over his face and
could feel beads of sweat rolling down his temples
and his cheeks. In one swift motion he wound up
and threw his coffee mug across the room, where it
shattered against the windowless, white wall. Slivers
and shards of ceramic bounced all over the kitchen,
the blue pieces scattered like shattered glass.
Herman heard footsteps drumming down the
staircase before his son entered the room,stopping in
the doorway to avoid stepping on any of the pieces
of blue ceramic. “Dad!” he exclaimed, “What happened?
Herman was bent over, hunched with his hands
on his knees. He was struggling for breath now,
and sweat soaked through his shirt on his back. In
between wheezes, Herman said exasperated, “You
didn’t leave me any damn coffee, you son of a
bitch.”
His son stood there eyeing first his father and
then the indent in the wall where the mug had hit.
He shook his head in disbelief, which quickly turned
to anger. With a clenched jaw, he left the room and
returned a minute later with broom in hand. He
began quietly sweeping the blue bits of coffee mug
into a dustpan.
After Herman had caught his breath and recomposed himself, he pulled his body back
into a standing position, leaning against the counter. He glanced to his son, bent over and sweeping
under the kitchen table. “I heard you on the phone
last night,” he said.
Herman kept his eyes on his son as he stood
and turned to face him. His son raised an eyebrow
at him but gave no verbal reply. “I heard you,” Herman repeated.
His son bit his lip and continued sweeping, eyes
trained on the floor. “It’s just not working, dad.”
59
EL BARRIO SUYO
Chad Berryman
El viento le envolvió al hombre como una manta de hielo. Él andaba por el barrio suyo pero los
vecinos no lo saludaron. Caminaba delante de una
casa grande con flores y grandes ventanas, y por esas
ventanas podía oír una pelea entre dos padres y los
lamentos penosos de sus hijos.
Él seguía la acera que serpenteaba por un
parque lindo donde había un banco solitario. Él
Lo saludó con la cabeza. Recordaba unas noches
del verano cuando este banco no había ofrecido
insultos ni acusaciones, sino un lugar simpático para
descansar mientras él le regalaba un uso admirable.
Pero en el invierno el banco se congelaba como él, y
ambos eran incapaces de ayudarse el uno al otro.
Paseaba delante de una casa blanca de arquitectura maravillosa. Un coche altanero llegara
la entrada. Un padre sincero apareció mientras
acababa de contar los acontecimientos de su día. Su
hija miraba su celular, y el silencio suspiró por la expresión herida de la cara del padre. Ellos entraron a
la casa sin otra palabra.
El hombre nómada seguía caminando, y pronto
la nieve dentro de sus venas se derretía por una balada antigua que se tarareaba al ritmo de sus pasos.
60
No pido mucho, no vivo de prisa
canto los himnos con risa bendita
no tengo nada salvo alma amada
y sin despedida no hay la llegada
THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD
Chad Berryman
The frigid air wrapped around the man like a
blanket of ice. He was travelling through his own
neighborhood, but no neighbors acknowledged him.
As he walked in front of a large, picturesque house,
complete with flowers and giant windows, he could
make out the sound of two parents fighting accompanied by the upsetting cries of their children.
The sidewalk snaked its way through a park in
which there stood one solitary bench. With a nod
of his head, the man greeted it. Nights of summers
past filled his mind, nights in which the bench
had not offered insults or accusations but rather a
consoling place of rest while he presented it with the
gift of an honorable purpose. However, the bench
froze and shivered in the winter the same as he, and
neither could provide the other with any relief.
He passed by a white house of grand construction. There, a flashy car had just pulled into the
driveway. From it emerged an earnest father finishing the recounting of his day. His daughter, however, simply stared at her phone, and the wounded
expression on her father’s face betrayed an unsung
sigh. The two entered the house without another
word.
As the wandering man continued walking, the
snow in his veins began to melt due to an old tune
he commenced to hum in time with his steps.
I don’t ask for much, or live in a rush
in my blessed laughter the hymns come alive
there’s nothing I own save a soul that is loved
for without a farewell one could never arrive
61
ODYSSEY
Eve Taft
Thank you for the twisted pathways of your mind
Which led to the streets and alleyways of Dublin
James Joyce, do you understand that you opened floodgates?
Your avalanche of babbling sentences, sans punctuation
Buck Mulligan tossing form and style into the wind
Your catechism, you, Daedalus, gave us sacrament
Blood flow to wake up the numb limbs of literature
You spoke with your soul to our souls
Fearing not the noise in your skull but flinging it down in ink
I understand you, “life is many days”
I understand you, “god is a shout in the street”
I understand you, “I am another now and yet the same”
You understand me “everything speaks in its own way”
Soon I’ll visit your beloved homeland
Walking the streets of Dublin, writing and giving thanks to modernism
Now as free of rigid form
As Ireland of England
62
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
63
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
64
COUNTING SHEEP
Danny Polaschek
What can you do
when the world is asleep?
Go to sleep too?
I’ve counted all my sheep.
They jumped through the air
gliding for 5 or 6 feet
cleared the fence and then flew
with not even a bleat. I didn’t focus however
on these aerial sheep antics
because far away in the distance
was a sight oh so fantastic.
A blue house, with a single light on
in the window sat a girl
a beauty no pencil could ever have drawn.
I looked up at her
and she down at me
addicted to the eyesight
too distracted to count sheep.
65
3
sky nights
keeyonna fox
67
inner self
keeyonna fox
68
VICTORY OF THE PEOPLE
Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk
Your worship was my refuge, your clay heart my focal
point, your chelsea smile the apple of my eye. We were
sick. We poisoned ourselves with amphetamines and pills
until we didn’t recognize ourselves in the mirror. We
walked miles just to feel accomplished in our space, we
turned the cigarettes we shared into sentiments we thought
we shared. I must possess the wrong innocence.
Souls are fickle things that change when left to die in the
cold.
~
He was outrageously tall.
He towered over me like the Statue of Liberty and
he talked to me as though I was a boat in the harbor.
Standing five inches taller than six feet, he was an
image of Ukrainian beauty. He stood like someone
who knew things you didn’t know and this fascinated
me.
I was so naive, so optimistic. I saw the lust and want
in his eyes and I mistook it for passion.The curve of
his jaw and his long eyelashes crept into the screens
behind my eyelids and ignited a fire in me that I
didn’t know how to put out. I was the new girl in
town struggling to keep my loneliness at bay. He
was a gleaming light in that summer of darkness.
I had just moved to Minnesota months before. After
discovering drugs and promiscuous sex I became
nothing short of a hurricane. Amphetamines kept
me awake, cigarettes kept me skinny, and weed kept
me sane. My GPA reflected exactly what they don’t
tell you about functional depression: you can feel
like a blank page, but as long as you fill it with words
people will stop asking questions.
He was selling me drugs. He offered me a good
price. I had never met him but I figured what the
hell, I could stand to meet new people. It was dark,
long past sundown. We were meeting in a parking
lot by a lake a few blocks away from my house. I
was in my mom’s car. I waited and listened to Amy
Winehouse until I saw an orange car pull into a
parking spot a few yards away from me. The man
driving fit the picture I had seen of him before. We
69
made eye contact and he ushered me over to his car.
I took a deep breath, grabbed my sweater, and got
my money ready. He rolled down the passenger side
window.
“You Nikita?” I said.
He smiled at me. A smile that I would come to
know.
“You can call me Kita.”
~
He had really good drugs. I’m not sure that they
were pure, but at the time I didn’t care. Neither did
he. We just wanted to get high. We did his drugs
together, sitting in a playground by the lake, talking
about life and what we crave. He told me that he
was applying to a college in London. I didn’t think
anything of it.
Before long we saw each other every day. He was
a lifeguard who had to be on duty early in the
morning, so he would take me out for coffee at eight
in the morning. No makeup, sweatpants, my hair in
a messy bun. He didn’t care. We would talk about
things that we hadn’t shared with anyone else. He
told me he struggled with his relationship with his
father in Ukraine. I told him that I had struggled
with eating disorders since I was thirteen.
We would sneak out onto his back porch to smoke
cigarettes late at night. His mother hated that we
smoked.
70
“You need to quit smoking, love,” she’d tell me. “I
smoked for twenty-five years and it took two pregnancies to get me to stop.”
His mother loved me. She thought that I was
spunky, independent, had a mind of my own. She
did not like his last girlfriend. She made that very
clear. She, like Nikita, was very tall. She had long
curly black hair and eyes so intense that you would
lose your appetite. Her Russian accent was thick
and powerful. She had run away to the United
States when she was twenty-one and seven months
pregnant with her first son. Nikita.
“Does it mean anything?” I asked him. “Your
name.”
He smiled when he answered.
“My mom told me it means ‘victory of the people,’”
he said.
Oh Kita,
you have no victory.
You are the secret I keep from my mother
the hidden disease that projectile vomits
and digs with fingernails sharpened by teeth.
Your fields of sunflowers told me a secret,
your secrets so dark and beautiful
and I killed myself with your gargantuan sunflowers.
His mother was beautiful. She had been a professional figure skater that traveled the world, meeting
people as she went. She met Kita’s father in her
home country of Ukraine and according to the
story, he was immediately drawn to her exuberant
personality and her long legs. At twenty-one she
was well on her way to continue pursuing a successful skating career until she got pregnant. According
to Kita his father did not accompany her to her appointments.He did not send her flowers. He did not
ask if she was okay. Instead Kita’s mother made her
way to America to create a life of victory and hope.
He took me to meet his grandmother. She said hello
and came in and that was the last that I understood.
The entire time I was there she would ask me questions in Russian and Kita would translate for me.
He taught me how to say
Hello
(Privet)
Yes
(da)
No
(net)
And thank you, which I don’t remember. We spent
almost the entire time we were there trying to help
his grandmother set up a new movie streaming
program on her computer. I know nothing about
computers in English, let alone in Russian. I was
overwhelmed. The leather furniture just made my
nervous sweat more noticeable.
She told me about Ukraine a little bit. She said it
was beautiful but troubled. She offered me chocolate and cookies. I sat, sweating, trying my hardest
to pay attention. When I said anything to her, Kita
would translate for me. I wanted to leave.
After we left his grandmother’s house he told me
to wait in his car while he talked privately with his
grandmother. I thought it was strange but didn’t
question it. I played mindless games on my phone
while I waited for him. Some part of me knew that
they were talking about me, but I continued to deny
it. I was hungry, but I wasn’t planning on doing
anything about it too soon. I was hungry often then.
When he returned to the car I asked what they had
talked about and with no hesitation he said, “You.”
I paused, then asked him to elaborate.
“She likes you,” he said. And that was that.
How strange, I thought, to be liked by someone who
never explicitly spoke a word to me.
~
Andrevich was Kita’s middle name. Named after
his father.
Kita’s father was very handsome. In his forties with
tan skin and thick hair, he was a heartthrob that
would make you look twice. He lived in a nice,
expensive apartment in Kiev with his girlfriend who
was twenty years younger than him. Apparently
that was a theme.
Kita had only seen his father a handful of times
in his life. He had gone back to Ukraine to spend
some time with him as a young boy, but didn’t have
too much recollection of it. When he was sixteen he
went back to live with his father and his twenty-yearold girlfriend for a while. Kita has always been tall,
thin, and handsome. His father noticed this.
“So what happened?” I asked him one day.
71
Kita shrugged.
“He kicked me out and I came back to the states,”
he said without a flinch.
He said this as though it was a commonality.
“He thought that I fucked his girlfriend,” he said as
he lit a cigarette.
There was a very long, uncomfortable silence.
“Did you?” I asked.
He laughed out loud and a cloud of smoke poured
out of his mouth.
“No, of course not,” he said. “My dad isn’t one to
listen to a sixteen year old.”
~
“I’ll take you to Ukraine someday.”
“Sunflowers. There are parts of Ukraine where
there are endless fields of sunflowers wherever you
look. They’re as tall as me and the flowers are bigger than my face.”
He pulled me closer as he talked about Ukraine.
He insisted that I learn all that I could about the
Russia-Ukraine conflict, sending me innumerable
articles daily. Through him I learned about the
importance of the Ukrainian revolution and fights
that had been fought, some as recent as 2011 and
2012. He told me that he wanted to fight for his
people if he had to. When my eyes were flushed
with concern, he pulled me in close and whispered
in my ear, “I’ll survive for you.”
His eyes lit up every time he talked about the fields
of sunflowers in Ukraine. In the same way, his eyes
lit up every time he got angry.
Your golden eyes drew miners to starve and fight to abandon their homes.
We were in his bed, naked, wrapped up in blankets
and speckled by the corner light in his room. It was
late, the kind of late that feels early. The air conditioner hummed in the place of our phones which
were both off and hidden somewhere in the room.
He did no wrong. He could not do any wrong. His
eyes were blank but telling like a wall in a foreclosed
home. All of his intentions were good. Yes. Good.
“Where in Ukraine?” I asked.
“Have you been eating?” he asks as he lifts up my
shirt.
“Kiev, the city squares. And to the huge fields of
flowers.”
“What kind of flowers?”
72
~
I squirm away and pull my shirt down.
“Yes, I ate just before I came here,” I say. I can still
taste the salt in my mouth.
“You look skinny,” he tells me with a hint of disdain
in his voice.
My heart soars. I look skinny. But he’s reaching for
my stomach again and once again I’m backing away.
We get into the car and drive to the gas station.
I say that I need to go use the restroom. While
Kita pumps the gas, I make my way into the small
Holiday bathroom. I put my sweater on the ground
and rest my knees on it, my usual routine. I stick my
finger down my throat and vomit into the toilet.
As I walk back outside, Kita is getting back into his
car. I get in the front seat and sniffle slightly.Kita
looks at me quizzically.
“You okay?” he asks me.
My eyes are watery, my nose is burning, and my
breath is putrid.
“I’m fine,” I say with a smile.
~
The elevator door was so cold against my cheek.
I watched the red numbers blink as they rose.
8...9...10...11. My vision was going fuzzy and grey,
my ears started ringing and throbbing.
11...12...13. Ding. The doors opened and my
wobbly legs carried me down the seemingly endless hallway. My hands were barely working; as I
watched them push my key into my apartment door
I could not feel it. The door opened, I could see my
living room window. I closed the door behind me
and collapsed on the ground.
“Why did you faint?” His words echoed behind the
screen of my phone.
“I just haven’t eaten a lot today.”
There was a silence so deafening that it struck fear
in my heart. Fear I had not known.
“When did you eat last?” He had anger in his voice.
I paused. He would know if I lied but he would hate
the truth.
“I had a little dinner last night,” I said quietly.
“What did you eat?” His reply was sharp.
I was shaking.
“I had a little bit of salad I think,” I said with a
quivering voice.
I could hear his sigh. I can still hear his sigh.
“How many times have we talked about this?” He
exclaimed.
“I know, I know, I’m sorry…”
It didn’t matter. He didn’t listen. I had failed him
again.
“Do you know what it’s like to have a girlfriend that
can’t even take care of herself ?”
“What am I going to tell my friends?”
“You’re not even trying.”
I was sobbing, I was convulsing, I was sweating, all
from my bed from which I could not move.
My phone was glued to my ear and I had no energy
to remove it.
“So what are you going to do about this?” There
was intense spite in his words.
With a shaky voice I said, “I could send you a picture of everything I eat?”
He laughed. With his full, angry throat he laughed
73
at my pain.
“And do what? Post it on Facebook? Show all my
friends that my girlfriend is an anorexic who
can’t even feed herself ? You know what, go ahead.
Maybe that’ll help you change.”
I couldn’t breathe. I wanted to die. My stomach
kept whispering “never again, never again,
never again.” Opening my mouth made me panic
because it reminded me of eating.
I hung up my phone and with wobbly legs I walked
outside in the snow and smoked an entire pack of
cigarettes.
~
Months go by. Months.
I watched him pack his bag with clothes that I had
never seen him wear. He packed light, only a few
shirts and two pairs of pants.
“My dad will buy me more when I get to Ukraine,”
he said.
I sat on the edge of his bed and watched him focus
on folding his clothes. His visa sat in the center of
the bed, staring at me. I started to cry.
“Babe, it’s going to be fine,” Kita said without
breaking focus.
I watched him form a pile of the shirts that I had
grown used to him wearing. They looked like wilted
flower petals.
74
“Why aren’t you taking those?” I asked, pointing to
the wilted pile.
“My father won’t like them,” he said.
Later that night, we were drinking red wine in his
bed. His room was bare and cold. I was curled
against his side, my head on his chest. He stroked
my bare back and played with my hair. I sighed, but
not the kind of sigh that’s followed with kisses. Kita
sighed too.
“Petra,” he said, a tone of exasperation in his voice.
“If I ever treat you like my father treats women,
please leave me.”
~
I still remember how to say “I love you” in Russian.
“я люблю тебя.”
Ya lyublyu tebya.
~
My fingers were bones.
Anything beyond mascara was too much, especially lipstick. He hated lipstick. He thought that it
brought too much attention to my mouth. He didn’t
like when other people noticed me.
He stopped smoking cigarettes and instructed me to
do so too. “They’ll make you age faster,”he would
say. If I had a bad day and smoked a cigarette, he
would tell me he was disappointed.
I lived with three men at the time, something that
Kita would never let me forget. He asked every few
days to be sure I wasn’t sleeping with any of my
roommates. If I was spending too much time with a
friend, he would tell me that I was neglecting him.
He sent me articles outlining how to be a better
partner. He reminded me that he just wanted me
to be the best that I could be. The screaming and
hour-long phone calls were footnotes.
You stripped me of my dignity and told me,
“This is what you have.”
Your monstrous arms crawl into my nightmares
Your titanic stature collided with my glacier
and though you claim I sank you
You were a behemoth and I was a stone.
At the end, I fell into the ground. His screams surrounded me in my echo chamber and suffocated me.
My knees were bruised from kneeling in front of
the toilet all night. How apt for the one accused of
dropping to her knees for all men. I was free but I
did not know it yet. All I knew was the cold floor of
my bathroom and the tales of beautiful but troubled
Ukraine.
My goodbyes have been said,
These addictions fed.
It’s the cost that comes with the sickness.
And your screams won’t be heeded anymore.
75
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE UN-SPECIALS
Halle Chambers
When we are little, even before we can speak
We are told that we’re special and that we’re
unique.
That we all are made different and that none are
the same
Which fits quite nicely in a toddler’s mind frame.
And we are told we should treasure what’s different inside,
That what makes us different is not something to
hide.
But then quite soon after, things start to change;
The word “different” stops meaning “special” and
starts meaning “strange.”
We’re sectioned off from our average peers
In our own little category and told,
“you belong here,”
And then different is bad and normal is good,
And for the different ones, nothing is working the
way that it should
The way we’ve been taught or the way we’ve been
shown
All we know is that we do not like being lost on
our own.
76
So once again we are taken away
To a place where things makes sense again and
we’re ok:
Where no one hurts us,
Where no one can see,
Where no one deserts us,
Where we can be free.
But because the un-specials can’t see what goes
on,
They decide to make things up and get so much
wrong.
And it’s happened for years because they can’t see
through that door.
So long they don’t even know that it’s wrong
anymore.
It’s so fixed in their heads that these lies are right;
They judge each special kid by their stereotype.
But today that will end.
So you sit there and you wait,
cause it’s about time someone set the dang record
straight.
You probably think that this poem won’t cut it,
But today I’m gonna open the door and don’t you
dare shut it!
To start, let’s be clear:
I am...I was in Special Ed.
But just because I was in that room doesn’t mean
I’m brain dead!
So for Pete’s sake, don’t puppy dog guard me!
Just give me a break, it isn’t that hard see:
If I need your help, I will tell you I do.
Just please,
Please don’t mock me.
In my place, would you want me to mock you?
“Oh come on! Let her get it! Go easy on
her!”
Help, where not needed, is almost as bad as a slur.
I’m not invalid
So don’t play that card.
Yeah, I’m a little quirky and oversensitive,
But I’m not, and I quote,
“A little retard.”
Yeah, I’ve been called names.
And those words?
They hurt.
They catch in the center,
In your pit of self worth.
And they tear and they rip,
And those words are collective.
Soon you start to believe that you are defective.
I’ve dealt with them all, and surprisingly,
I actually prefer the straight up bullies
To those who pretend to like me.
Fake friends and two-faces
Of all genders and races.
They’re only my friends so they don’t have to see
me cry.
Or they use me,
abuse me,
Oh, how they confuse me!
Cause I can’t tell what’s truth and what’s lie.
“Hey! He likes you. Go give him a kiss!”
And because I don’t know better, I believe this.
But soon I find they’re not playing Cupid,
They just wanna make me look stupid.
For their entertainment, they make me play the
77
fool;
They pretend that they care for me
When they’re really just cruel.
It takes time and takes work to make you forget;
Even now, I’m not quite there yet.
I mean, here I am, in what’s supposed to be
home,
And yet here I am, still feeling alone.
I’m still paranoid, it doesn’t just end;
I still have to ask if someone’s my friend.
I say one thing and mean another;
I make a mistake,
But you take it verbatim.
Can’t you cut me a break?
If we’re talking and I look like I’m lost,
Don’t blow it off like it’s not worth the cost.
Sarcasm and subtlety muddle in my brain,
So please just take a minute to explain.
Do these quirks make me broken?
Is there something wrong with me?
The way society has spoken,
There would seem to be.
78
Stop poisoning the minds of “different” young
women and men.
I don’t like being defective....
Can I be special again?
SOREX PALUSTRIS
Emilie Tomas
Did they name you for
Your wit, pointed
Nose of pointed judgement
Who brought us fire;
five to seven inches of shrewd truth?
Or was it your mischief
That Inspired them? Your
Presence followed by screams
And a three inch tail.
I saw your likeness on a stage,
Dirt in place of your midnight coat
Though she is reformed now.
Perhaps it was the gleam in your
Eyes; whispered fortunes and
A summer of silver birth.
Maybe you are a messenger
Of God, somehow in your Eighteen
months you learned to walk
On water, the second coming
Of Christ.
79
woodsy adam ruff
gabriel bergstrom
80
WORDS
Malena Larsen
The bathroom wall was covered in words.
Words like fuck and love and song lyrics and
names with hearts around them. His body
looked peaceful, somehow, as he sat propped and
slumped against the door. His head hung to his
right shoulder and his mouth was open like he
was about to say something but was interrupted.
There was blood running down his left arm like
a river and a needle hung loosely out of his skin.
The words that he had heard her say several
hours earlier were getting quieter and quieter.
“It’s not working,” she had told him. “I’m
sorry.” They were smoking cigarettes outside her
apartment when she said it. She knew he had
been trying to fix himself. After twenty-eight days
of treatment and one week in a sober house on
Lake and Fifth she barely recognized him. He was
twenty-five pounds heavier and his skin looked
clean and strong; there was no more grey in his
cheeks. It wasn’t just his change in appearance
that scared her. Lately, he had been telling her
the difference between wrong and right and that
she should stay in on the weekends. His family
couldn’t stop talking about how proud they were
of him and they would ask her, “Doesn’t he just
seem so much better?” She would answer with yes
but feel guilty because she wished he still liked to
make mistakes. His family had a party after he got
out of treatment and his grandfather kept saying
things like, “Men in this family have always been
strong!” and, “Now he can take care of you.” His
grandfather didn’t care for her much but he felt
that she was the least of the boy’s problems. He
didn’t like the way she hung on him like a scarf
or the way she agreed with everything he said
without a second thought.
As he sat on the bathroom floor the words
she had said were getting quieter and quieter.
They were almost gone. He had been sober for
thirty-five days and he didn’t know why. He didn’t
feel better or stronger or more loved. His hand lay
loosely on the floor, palm up and open like he was
waiting for somebody to hold it. Everyone was so
proud of him but he couldn’t imagine living his
life without her.
Long after her words had faded completely,
the bathroom door opened. He fell back onto the
floor. His head hitting hard against the tile.
81
“Oh my gosh!” The man who opened the door
yelled. “Can someone help?” He took out his
phone to call 911. A crowd of people rushed
over to where the man was dialing. A young man
pushed past the group of people.
“Move!” The boy got on his knees by the body on
the floor. He reached into his pocket and took out
something that looked like a pen. He stuck it into
the arm of the body that was needle free. People
gasped and murmured and watched. Sirens rang
in the distance. The boy holding the pen looked
up at the bathroom wall that had words like fuck
and love and song lyrics and names with hearts
around them. He looked up at the group of people.
“It’s not working,” he said.
82
MALCOLM AND THE BLUE SIDE
Danny Polaschek
Brown leaves dragged past Malcolm’s feet
in the wind. The bench underneath him felt like
a rock and he had to clench his jaw to keep his
teeth from chattering. He stared at the empty
playground—the tire swing, the slide, the bridge
and the fireman’s pole. Nikki rested her head on
his shoulder. Each time a breeze swept through,
Malcolm could feel her nuzzle slightly closer, her
hair scratching and tickling his neck.
When he was a kid, Malcolm had sat on this
exact same bench many times with his mother.
They lived in a little blue house just a few blocks
away— “just a hop and a skip,” his mother would
say and Malcolm would make it his mission to
jump and bunny-hop the whole way there.
When they arrived, they’d eat lunch, sitting
together on the narrow, wooden bench. After
each bite of his sandwich, Malcolm would beg his
mother to let him go play, to which she would give
in once she herself had finished eating.
He always went straight for the slide. Once
at the top, he’d yell, “I’m going under!” and
swing himself down into the blue plastic tube. He
imagined he was a deep-sea diver plunging into
an underwater world of sunken pirate ships and
forgotten chests of gold. On particularly sunny
afternoons, he’d stop halfway down the slide and
admire the shadows that moved about on the
illuminated, blue plastic. He’d make believe that
fish swam all around him as little blotchy shadows
hovered whimsically over his head.
He eventually got the idea to bring his crayons to the park with him. He’d sit lodged in the
blue slide for most of the day, drawing exotic fish
with bright oranges, yellows and reds. He knew
fish didn’t smile but nevertheless gave them all
wide grins and big eyes to match. When it was
time to go home, his mother would knock from
the bottom of the slide. “Time to come back to
shore!” she’d announce. Malcolm would hide his
crayons in his back pocket and slide down to his
mother who would wait there with open arms
grinning at him.
The park seemed smaller now. Malcolm
was just as tall as the fireman’s pole and half as
long as the slide. He wondered if his fabricated
underwater universe still existed. Probably not,
he guessed. Although it was getting dark, Mal83
colm could see thick graffiti creeping out from the
shadows inside the blue slide. Malcolm pulled his
sweatshirt tighter around his neck, brushing Nikki
away in the process.
He felt her eyes on his face but refused to
acknowledge her. Inside the slide, he could still
make out the words “Bitch Ass” in thick spray
paint. His crayon drawings would certainly be
gone, he was sure of it now. Nikki picked up Malcolm’s hand and caressed it, her cold skin feeling
leathery and smooth.
“Malcolm,” she said.
Malcolm turned and mustered a smile, taking
Nikki’s hands to his face and kissing them awkwardly.
“Malcolm, let’s go home.”
The streetlights had not yet turned on for
the evening. Malcolm noticed the shadows on
the sides of the road stretching out and growing
bigger as they walked quietly past. He missed the
warm sunshine of summer and the hot nights
spent lounging in the front yard listening to his
mother’s radio; he missed the walks to the park,
his mother laughing at him as he crouched and
hopped along beside her. He remembered the
secret thrill of the crayon box in his back pocket,
then realized he’d forgotten his cigarettes on the
bench at the park. He was too cold to turn back.
He reached out silently for Nikki’s hand and, finding it much warmer than his own, held it stiffly
the rest of the walk home.
84
driving at zero one
john herbert
85
driving at zero two
john herbert
86
PLACEMAKERS
Diamonique Walker
Near my home,
Balloons dance in the wind.
I have reconditioned myself — These are not balloons
from a party, But they still celebrate a life.
I drive by, sometimes I walk.
And see a balloon or several
With their heads bobbing away
Positioned obscurely on the sidewalk.
Or on the island in the middle of the highway. Sometimes on no one in particular’s grass.
I don’t look for party decorations. At the feet of the
balloon’s ribbons, candles, cards and little trinkets sit.
Some kind of offering.
Looking weathered and dull.
His body bled some place close by. Probably killed
within ten feet.
A dancing, mocking balloon
Somehow now gets to sway in his place.
87
NECESSARILY AN EVIL THING CONSIDERED IN ANY LIGHT
Jacob J. Miller
“You know what I hate about this most of
all?” asked the first man. “Nobody’s going to be
around to take responsibility. Nobody is going to
have to answer for their crime.”
“What crime is that?” the other man asked,
sitting next to him in the middle of the cul-de-sac,
both of them at perfect leisure in lawn chairs as if
waiting for a parade to pass by.
“Mass-murder, I suppose. Call it, oh, I don’t
know. Call it, um, inciting the apocalypse.”
“Ha.”
“They deserve to be the ones left behind
after they obliterate everyone else. They should
be the ones who have to reap the aftermath, puke
out their guts and feel their bile boil inside their
stomachs, fend off marauding cannibals and giant
insects. And they should have to live with the new
world they created, or destroyed, rather.”
Just then, the other man looked down and
saw a lonely ant crawling up his pant leg. “Yeah,
but I don’t think that giant bug stuff is true. That
wouldn’t happen. The bugs’ll die like everything
else.”
“I mean, what do you think it’ll be like? I
88
know it’ll happen instantaneously, but they say the
cerebral cortex functions after everything else has
shut down and we linger in a sort of dream-state,
which could last for, well, for who knows how
long?”
“Well, that’s if you’re in a hospital bed, or
you have a heart attack or something, when you
have time to die with a little bit of peace. Our
brains are going to incinerate along with the rest
of us. There won’t even be any stuff of thought
anymore. I don’t think we have to worry about
something like that.”
“But what if that moment of pain before we
go lasts longer, you know? What if time stands
still? Nothing makes sense in a moment of such
lunacy. Such catastrophe. What if we feel our
tongues liquefying and spilling down our throats
and scalding our internal organs? What if, all in
that moment, we look down, and before our eyes
boil and burst from the heat we see our bones
glowing purple through our flesh as it begins dripping off like wax? What if you turn and look at
me and the last image you see is my face melting
off like those Nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark?”
“I’m not sure it’s the best time to be thinking
like that,” his friend said, as the sirens began to
wail their sorrowful last.
“Why even bother with that fucking thing?”
the man steamed. “It’s inconsiderate, a futile
exhortation. We know what’s coming. We’re not
going to hide in our basements from it like it’s a
fucking tornado.”
“Tornadoes aren’t so easy to hide from either.”
The first man scanned the horizon for what
he knew would be the last time. He took in the
sight of the skyline he saw from his window every
day and, with lamenting eyes, imaginatively
anticipated its supplanting by a fiery mushroom
climbing the sky. He closed his eyes and winced,
unable to cope with the unthinkable thought, the
impossible inevitability. Turning his head toward
a neighbor’s yard whose household ran a daycare,
he opened his eyes to a post-apocalyptic tableau
of children’s toys scattered about the lawn. Nothing needed yet be aflame for the man to resent the
picturesque cliché of innocence lost on display
before him. “Remember when they used to tell
kids to hide under their desks?” he inquired. “All
that siren is doing is making sure that we spend
our last moments in a panic, instead of dying
gracefully, accepting that we’re all in the same
sinking ship, in the middle of the ocean, if the
ocean were the entire planet, and filled with lava
instead of water. We should be spending our time
reminiscing, because that’s all we have now.”
“Well, we can’t talk about our plans for the
future.”
“We can’t discuss potential medical advancements.”
“The coming cure for cancer.”
“And cloning organs. Scholarships our
children just received, the singularity and will
the Matrix ever become a reality; would we ever
make contact with life elsewhere in the universe,
intercept an asteroid, mine them for resources?
It’s all useless, man, meaningless. Every human
achievement since the first spark made from one
rock dragging against another, gone within the
next hour,” he sighed heavily, draping a ribbon
of helplessness over his words of outrage. “Why
don’t you open that up?” He suggested, pointing at the bottle of scotch sitting at the leg of
his friend’s chair. His friend took a swig before
passing it over with a satisfied groan. “Here’s to
everything we do being the last time it will ever be
done,” the first man began. “That’s the best I can
do.”
“Yeah,” the other man raised an empty hand,
toasting to the end and everything that came
before it. “I suppose there’s something beautiful about the entire world—or nearly the entire
world—going out the same way. There’s a kind
of universal solidarity occurring right now, don’t
you think? Some are praying, no doubt, some are
exalting their various saviors, certain they will be
raptured up any minute, but we’re all still going
to be experiencing the same thing, at almost the
exact same time; the same heat, the same instantaneous moment of searing pain before any trace
of our molecules are imprinted as a shadow on
the asphalt beneath us.”
He had a complex contraption of a chair, one
of the men—it doesn’t really matter which one
now that the end was there; the kind of chair that
folds upward from all four corners and was nearly
89
impossible to fit back into its cylindrical carrying
sack—not that that mattered anymore either—
complete with cup holders and a detachable headrest, which he was putting to use as he spoke. His
friend’s chair was more old-fashioned, a conventional folding lawn chair with a checkered pattern
of flimsy plastic wrapped taut around aluminum
pipes, wobbly hard plastic armrests drilled in and
not quite parallel to each other.
Their chair legs began melting into the tar
beneath them. One of the men hummed softly;
a beautiful soundtrack to accompany him in the
cut to black. The other man closed his eyes and,
focusing on the sounds of the encroaching death
rattle, heard them as the grunts and whinnies of
the four horsemen’s horses as they galloped atop
the planet’s rapidly spreading dust.
90
Show less
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Ed... Show more
MURPHY SQUARE VISUAL ART
& LITERARY MAGAZINE
ISSUE 42, 2017
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malena Larsen, Editor In Chief
Abigail Tetzlaff, Associate Editor
Audrey Campbell, Art & Layout Editor
Cassie Dong, Art Editor
Jazmin Crittenden, Art Editor
Elisabeth Beam, Prose Editor
Abigail Carpenter, Prose Editor
Ryan Moore, Prose Editor
Gabriel Benson, Poetry Editor
Danny Polaschek, Poetry Editor
Cary Waterman, Advisor
2
WITH THANKS TO
Ivy Arts Copy and Print
Augsburg College Student Government
Augsburg College English Department
Augsburg College Art Department
The Echo
Augsburg Honors Program
QPA
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1
What Type of Black Girl Are You? Nikkyra Whittaker ........................................................................... 8
Simul Justus et Peccator, Andy Anderson .......................................................................................... 11
Queer, Eve Taft ....................................................................................................................................... 12
Jesus in a Cracker, A.Tetzlaff ................................................................................................................ 14
Grey Cloud Island, David Baboila ......................................................................................................... 17
Saint Paul Airport, David Baboila .......................................................................................................... 18
White Bear Lake, David Baboila ............................................................................................................ 19
Zips Coliseum, David Baboila ............................................................................................................... 20
Bridge, Jacob J. Miller ............................................................................................................................ 21
50 Feet Tall, Emilie Tomas ...................................................................................................................... 25
Meow, Ashley Waalen ............................................................................................................................ 26
Mousetrap, Halle Chambers .................................................................................................................. 27
Faces, Constance Klippen ..................................................................................................................... 29
I Don’t Always Feel Colored, Diamonique Walker ............................................................................... 30
Where I am From, Hannah Schmit ......................................................................................................... 32
Who Am I?, Ashley Waalen .................................................................................................................... 34
2
Gratitude, D.E Green ..............................................................................................................................
CSBR, Gabriel Bergstrom ......................................................................................................................
The Fire, Elisabeth Beam ........................................................................................................................
Desert Drums, Abigail Carpenter ..........................................................................................................
Colors, Hannah Schmit ...........................................................................................................................
Urban Delight, Jazmin Crittenden .........................................................................................................
When Dad Wore Cologne, A. Tetzlaff ....................................................................................................
Shitty Christmas Trees, Elisabeth Beam ...............................................................................................
Summer Nights, Adam Ruff ...................................................................................................................
36
38
39
41
42
43
44
46
48
The People United, Adam Ruff .............................................................................................................. 49
After the Hike, Adam Ruff ..................................................................................................................... 50
Crumbs, Malena Larsen ......................................................................................................................... 51
Bloomed, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................................................... 55
Pruned, Audrey Campbell ...................................................................................................................... 56
Herman, Danny Polaschek ................................................................................................................... 57
El Barrio Suyo, Chad Berryman ............................................................................................................. 60
The Neighborhood, Chad Berryman ..................................................................................................... 61
Odyssey, Eve Taft .................................................................................................................................... 62
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 63
Postcards From My Bedroom, Audrey Campbell ................................................................................. 64
Counting Sheep, Danny Polaschek ...................................................................................................... 65
3
Sky Nights, Keeyonna Fox ...................................................................................................................... 67
Inner Self, Keeyonna Fox ....................................................................................................................... 68
Victory of the People, Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk ............................................................................. 69
An Open Letter to the Un-specials, Halle Chambers ...........................................................................76
Sorex Palustris, Emilie Tomas ................................................................................................................. 79
Woodsy Adam Ruff, Gabriel Bergstrom .................................................................................................. 80
Words, Malena Larsen ................................................................................................................................. 81
Malcom, Danny Polaschek ....................................................................................................................... 83
DRIVING AT ZERO ONE, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 85
DRIVING AT ZERO TWO, John Herbert ................................................................................................... 86
Placemakers, Diamonique Walker ........................................................................................................ 87
A Necessary Evil Thing Considered in any Light, Jacob J. Miller ....................................................... 88
1
WHAT TYPE OF BLACK GIRL ARE YOU?
Nikkyra Whittaker
On the spectrum of being black and female, we can
only be what we appear to be. Take this quiz to find
out what kind of black girl you really are!
1. You’re listening to the radio on the way to Target.
You’re playing…
a. Beyonce’s “****Flawless”
b. Taylor Swift’s “Fifteen” or “You Belong With
Me” or “Wildest Dreams”
c. Chris Brown’s “Loyal”
d. Keri Hilson’s “Pretty Girl Rock”
2. It’s your day off work. What will you be doing?
a. Blowing off steam on Facebook.
b. Watching old episodes of One Tree Hill
c. Out for drinks and scoping eye candy
d. Talking shit with the ladies while drinking Moscato!
3. What’s your dream home like?
a. Full of books on systemic oppression
b. Beverly Hills penthouse
c. Some big shot rapper’s mansion
d. Spacious New York Loft
8
4. Your favorite TV show is…
a. Docu-series on race
b. Sex in the City
c. Bad Girls Club
d. Love and Hip Hop
5. Finally, who’s your favorite female icon from this
list?
a. Angela Davis
b. Taylor Swift
c. New York from I Love New York
d. Nicki Minaj
Tally up how many of each letter you got and turn
the page to find out who you really are!
If you got mostly a’s...You’re an Angry Black Girl!
Congratulations, you loud-mouthed, anger filled
home-girl! I’m guessing there’s always some reason
to be mad at someone, isn’t there? Do you just spend
your days in a perpetual state of rage, angry at the
world for reasons they don’t find important? Do you
find yourself constantly snapping your fingers in
that z-formation, pursing your lips at anyone who
steps in your way? I bet people are telling you to
just be quiet, huh? I mean, what issues could you, a
black female, possibly have? Why should you care
that your high school English teacher gives you a
C+ on your essay because she thinks you copied
it from the white man online? Why does it matter
that your male co-worker at Target constantly teases
you about your nappy hair, calling it a “brillo pad,”
“cheeto puff,” or some other clever name? None of
this should anger you! Be aware, you sassy Sapphire,
in this world, your anger means nothing.
If you got mostly b’s...You’re an Oreo!
You grew up watching Lizzie McGuire and
listening to Aaron Carter. You straightened your
hair from the moment you were old enough to assert
yourself and cried when it wouldn’t lay flat. Your
friends were always shocked to see you bring collard
greens and jambalaya to lunch so you stopped eating
your favorite foods. They didn’t understand why
you couldn’t just brush your hair, wash your hair
everyday, why it suddenly grew or shrunk inches
overnight. I’m certain you’ve heard from many of
your friends how they just don’t see you as a black
girl. They erase your black skin because it doesn’t fit
the images of other black girls they see. You spend
most of your time edging away from the loud black
girls, the ghetto black girls who ate hot cheetos and
drank kool aid and had corn rows and long braids
and smelled like a mix of the jungle and your
ancestors pain and you wished, maybe for a just a
moment, but you did wish that you could be white.
But honey, you can never wash off that melanin! It’s
a permanent stain. Just because your friends can’t
see the black on you, it doesn’t mean the rest of the
world can’t.
9
If you got mostly c’s...You’re a Hip Hop Ho!
You sexual deviant you! Let me guess—big
breasts, small waist, and wide hips? You’ve got that
original Betty Boop to you, something in your eyes
that say yes to a question no one bothers to ask.
You’re the black girl that white guys use as a notch
in their belt. You are the exotic sexual being that
men love to hate and hate to love. You became a
sexual thing at a young age, when your breasts came
in at ten years old and became d-cups at fourteen.
They started looking at you differently, didn’t they?
Your eyes stopped existing. Your words didn’t matter.
Your body became the tool used to diminish your
worth. How often did you get yelled at in school to
put on something less revealing than your shorts?
Did you ever wonder why the skinny, flat-assed white
girls were never told the same thing? Honey, your
wide hips wrapped in chocolate skin were never
yours. You will never be yours.
10
If you got mostly d’s...You’re a Ghetto Fabulous Black Girl!
You make what little money you can working at
Walmart or doing nails. You make people waiting at
the bus stop with you uncomfortable with your loud
laughter and yellow and pink braids and long, bedazzled nails. You toss your weave around, remove
your earrings, and square up to anyone that says shit
about you. When you’re out, you are often told to
stop yelling, screaming, taking up space. You’ve got
baby daddy problems and you’re only 18. You grew
up playing double dutch in the middle of the street
with old rope. You accept your black, your ghetto,
your Ebonics. But you are not supposed to accept
yourself, honey! Don’t you see the fashion police
spreads in the magazines? You are on all the pages!
Don’t show your hips. Put on a shirt that conceals
your stomach. Put your breasts away. Don’t wear
bright lipstick. Stop standing out, being different.
Get smaller, quieter, lesser, as you are supposed to
be. You love your black too loudly and it makes
others uncomfortable. Your job is to make people
comfortable so do your best to limit the loudness of
your melanin.
simul justus et peccator
andy anderson
11
QUEER
Eve Taft
You think there isn’t a sign on my ribs that says
“stonewall inn”?
You think Matthew Shepard doesn’t tug at my hair
and warn me
as I walk the streets of my city?
You think I don’t choke on the smoke
from the hellfire you spit from your pulpits
with sparks that sear and heat branding
irons
which scar your names on me to mark me as
danger?
You think my veins don’t shiver
when they think
of the devastation
wracking the cities
that some called deliverance
while Reagan fiddled
as we burned
You think that the prisons
pink triangles
asylums
bullets spitting into a nightclub
don’t whisper in my head as I make my
way through the world?
12
You think that I don’t notice—
I kiss her
and kiss her
—the headline blowing by with a death toll
and I kiss her
the skyline splashing out behind us
the lights on the Washington Avenue bridge flicker
on and I kiss her
Putin criminalizes us, across the
world
I kiss her
Vigils held too late for young suicides
Corrupting, perverted, disgusting, an affront to
family values—
I kiss her
in the rain and the sleet of Minnesota
I kiss her, our lips tasting of chants from the protest
that shut down I-94
handed down from our grandmothers
hearts beating, eyes sparkling, alive
I kiss her
You think I forget the lists and the candles and the
deaths and the pain and
all that roars in my ears is a chorus
screaming over and over again
you were not able to kill us
I kiss her
and all is still
13
JESUS IN A CRACKER
A. Tetzlaff
Eucharist
I hugged my father’s black, pleated pants while
we waited for mass to start. He was beaming proudly and chatting with the rest of our family. I wore
the only dress I allowed to touch my body: by then
it was a year old and from my uncle’s wedding when
I walked down the aisle carrying a bouquet, looking
like a blonde deer caught in front of a semi truck.
It had a black velvet top connected to a white skirt.
All the girls wore white. My parents cut their losses.
All the boys, shirt and tie. Eight-year-olds taking
their first communion despite the fact that most of
us had no idea what was happening. Understanding the sacraments isn’t really necessary when you
grow up in a Catholic family. By the time you are
aware of your burden, it’s too late anyway. Religion
lived at Nativity of Our Lord Parish, in Green Bay,
Wisconsin. Between church and home, I lived in a
realm of contradiction. I came to visit religion, but
it never went home with me. On Sundays when the
game was in town, God would not judge you for
wearing your Packer jersey to church. Sinning was
bad, but you could tailgate and drink and carouse to
your heart’s content. We should have taken beer at
14
that first communion. We would have appreciated it
more than the wine. We took our places in the ritual
that had been performed again and again. The
time-worn ritual begins anew as I walk to the altar
with my hands folded in front of me. I must remember to raise my hands high enough so the rheumatic
priest doesn’t have to bend down. Right hand over
left. I’m a blonde deer again.
“The body of Christ.” This is the part where
I say, “Amen,” whether I mean it or not, then
put the communion wafer in my mouth. I must
cross myself (right hand touching head, then left
shoulder, then right shoulder) as I walk back up the
aisle and toward my family. They liked to sit in the
middle section, never too close to the altar. They
didn’t like making direct eye-contact with the priest
during his homily. To this day I skip the wine for
fear of communicable diseases. It stuck to the roof
of my mouth, this first communion wafer. It was
stale. There was no substance. Maybe the parched
flour and water, mixed with the lingering incense is
actually what Jesus tastes like. The absorbent clump
lasted into the next hymn. Saliva rushed into my
mouth and eventually the wafer, heavy with mois-
ture, fell from the roof of my mouth. I swallowed
without chewing.
Just go with it, I told myself. All these people
believe in this, so one day, you will too. But I wasn’t
sure. I didn’t get it. The power that kept me from
running back up the aisle wasn’t the love of God
gently pushing me along, but the ritual itself, and the
expectation of my parents and grandparents watching proud and probably dewy-eyed as I joined their
ranks. Hugs and smiles and congratulations as my
family comes out of the first communion Mass, but
I wasn’t sure what was such cause for celebration; I
hadn’t had a great epiphany about God, nor had I
felt any change at all. It was just like every Sunday
late in October.
head and tell me I was forgiven. “Sometimes, I’m
not very nice to my mom or my brother,” I told him.
Navitity didn’t own a confessional booth like the
ones in movies. In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever seen
a confessional booth at any Catholic church outside
the movies. We sat quietly in a tiny room. Being
small for my age, I circled the air below me with
my feet. I sat facing him directly. He crossed his legs
under the cassock he wore, clearly annoyed. After a
silence and a slow nod, the priest said, “Sometimes,
we hurt the people we love the most.” It was the
only part I heard or remember hearing; he started
talking about God’s forgiveness, I assume. I didn’t
pay attention, because I didn’t feel different after
admitting such a pitiful sin.
Marriage
I had no ill-feeling toward the physical place
of church. In fact, the ritual, the sounds, the smell
of incense, and the light that filtered through the
stained-glass windows from an Easterly rising sun
became familiar and comforting over the years. The
nave, filled with old pews, had witnessed my parents’
wedding and my grandparents’ weddings. The organ towered over the choir. The smell of old patrons
and Sunday cologne too liberally applied became a
sensory memory of that place. However, religion has
never been an inward practice; the practice and the
scene never joined together.
Anointing of the Sick
When times are bad, I’ve pulled the fragments
of ritual from my memory and recite the “Our
Father.” I did this in the winter of my eighteenth
year in days following my grandfather’s funeral. He
died of bladder cancer, worsened by a communicable bacterial infection called C.Difficile. I became
familiar with the ritual of funeral; I’d been to three
or four for close relatives. But this time, the ritual felt
different. Before, I was sad. My grandfather’s funeral
confirmed that the only sacred part of my world had
been ripped mercilessly from my arms.
Reconciliation
“Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.”As the
words come out of my mouth, they themselves felt
sinful. I hadn’t sinned, I was eleven. I barely knew
what sin was. I had to stop a moment to think of
a sin I had committed, so the priest could nod his
Baptism
I sat in the shower until the water hitting my
face was colder than I could stand, reciting
the “Our Father” over and over, sobbing.
Our Father, who art in heaven, Hallowed be thy
name.
I hoped, over so many repetitions, that my view
15
of God and heaven would change. Yet, it confused
me more. Religion stopped looking like the patron
blind to reality and became a place where I didn’t
belong. Like I was missing out because I didn’t get
that epiphany, and didn’t have that same faith.
Confirmation
Religion was so stale, that when my Mother
would occasionally talk about faith, or God, or divine love at the dinner table I would blush with pity
and embarrassment. How can you believe this? I
thought, how can you be so blind to the real world?
Perhaps, I’m the blind one. I continue to live in
an intermediate space between faith and atheism. I
can’t commit to either. The fence between atheism
and faith is fraught with angst. Most days, I try to
laugh away my uncertainty. I tell jokes about my
Catholic past, chuckle when I hear of “recovering
Catholics,” and tell friends, “It smells like a Catholic
church in here,” whenever they burn incense. Religion is still stale to me. Religion has no nutritional
value. Stale religion has no holy orders.
16
grey cloud island
david baboila
17
saint paul airport
david baboila
18
white bear lake
david baboila
19
zips coliseum
david baboila
20
BRIDGE
Jacob J. Miller
This was not way back when, as my dad would have
you believe. It was more recent than that. If he can’t
flat out deny it, which he no longer can, he will at
least try to convince you that it was so long ago as to
suggest it might have been a different lifetime, and
he a different person. He has been, after all, Born
Again. Except he was not the only person involved,
and to carry along as if he was is an exercise in what
I’ve heard philosophers call solipsism. For him, his
transgression was between himself and the Holy
Ghost: accountable not to those he wronged, only to
an invisible spirit. But he doesn’t have sole authority
in determining the past’s relevance or irrelevance
to our lives today. My mother too pretends the past
is only what has happened at a particular point
in time, and not a factor in what determines what
has happened since then and what is happening
now. The slate wiper theory of forgiveness is what
allowed them to wear their veneer of innocence and
believe in its authenticity, and for that reason I resent their new-leaf turnover. My love for them may
not be emergent in my words, I know, but I do love
them, regardless of the fucked up traits they passed
on to their children, which will become evident as
this story unfolds
You might be wondering, if you care at all, what
could be so terrible. Well, it’s not so terrible, and
not even very uncommon, but it happened to me,
and my brothers and my sisters, and there was never
anything we could really do about it. We watched
it unfold almost every night to reveal its rotted pit.
What was scariest was not when a half-full beer bottle would be hurled in our direction for us being too
noisy, and then being held responsible for wasting
the beer, and getting punished even more for that.
What was scariest was when they fought with each
other, mom and dad, when they were both liquored
up. All of us children would be sitting in the living
room, on our knees, in a line, with our hands folded
and tucked inside our clenched thighs, having
hitherto been fulfilling our playful, childish duties
who couldn’t expect things to go so suddenly and
intensely wrong. They would fight about anything,
or nothing, for all we knew or cared. They would
yell, swear, slam their fists on various surfaces, throw
things across the room at each other as if rehearsed.
One time, I remember, and this is what I’m talking
about when I talk about how scary things got, my
21
dad had my mom pinned up against the refrigerator—after she threw three or four plates at him, one
that hit his arm, but would have hit his face if he
hadn’t been blocking, and cut it deep. He had the
sharp kitchen knife pressed firmly under her chin.
If she gulped too hard in fear, or if dad in his stupor
lost balance, she would have been bleeding all over
the family pictures held by magnets to the fridge.
As we grew older, my big brother and I began working under dad instead of merely living under
him. Our prospects in life weren’t substantial at that
point. Whatever potential we had, it had never been
encouraged, so entering into the family business, if it
can even be called that, was the only viable option.
I woke dad up most mornings from his typical
collapse into a face-down, fetal heap on the kitchen
floor, sometimes still wet, sometimes already crusted
over. I’d say, “it’s time for work, dad,” and he’d drive
me to the site where (drinking coffee with whiskey
in it on the way) heavy machinery was waiting to
be operated—even though we used hammers and
nails whenever we could. Stonehenge-sized slabs of
cement, wooden pillars, cinder blocks, and iron rods
littered the landscape. It was all so disorderly that if
a nomad wandered upon the scene, the indication
would be of destruction rather than pre-construction. There were no piles of allocated materials
or inventoried supply lists. It could have all been
salvaged from past demolitions or by thievery from
other project sites. We seemed to accrue it all without any kind of exchange or standard of accountability for use. Everything seemed to just show up
wherever and whenever we needed it. Who actually
made all this stuff? How did we move it from place
to place to use from job to job? Who permitted my
sodden father to oversee such potentially hazardous
22
projects? He was a self-made man outside the advent
of auditing. What did I care then? I was making my
way, fashioning for myself a future out of will power,
and holding my breath until I could extricate myself
from this grim farce.
First day on the job, my dad said to me, don’t
fuck up, or he’d make me test the bridge before
the support beams were all in place. I believed
him. That particular bridge wasn’t connecting two
sides over a raging river or anything; more of a
convenient pathway over a stream, but it was still a
threat coming from dad. Second day on the job, my
brother James tore partway through his leg with a
chainsaw. I heard him yell, but it sounded more out
of frustration than terror and pain. He sat down,
ripped his immediately blood-soaked pants from
where the initial tear was, delicately unlaced and removed his boot so as not to cause more pain, grunting as if he had done nothing more than step in dog
shit, and lifted the nearly severed part of his leg that
dangled lifelessly like a tube sock on a clothesline,
to close the wound, from which I saw steam rising
sacrificially to the wintery heavens. He reached
forward to grab the excess of sock which, although
bunched up at his toes, had a long, tortuous journey
before being completely removed. He screamed as
he stretched forward, more circumstantially appropriate this time, and this is when I dropped my—
whatever, the thing I was holding, I can’t remember
what, but I didn’t hear it land because I couldn’t
assimilate anything else that may have been transpiring around me. I almost seemed to float over to him,
not even aware of my legs propelling me forward. I
saw all the blood, but I wasn’t put off by it as much
as I thought I probably should have been, and I
thought that as I stared at it pooling out. I observed
it dispassionately, coldly, but I may not have been
breathing. At first sight, it was just an organic pipe
that sprung a leak. I think I asked if he was all right
but I meant it more like did he think he was going to
die. He said to go get dad and that’s when I became
afraid. I stood there for I don’t know how long, until
he repeated himself more urgently:
“Walt!” he said, “Go! Get! Dad!”
I listened that time, but I was still very afraid. I was
trembling and began feeling like I might faint, and
I almost hoped I wouldn’t find dad, that he’d be off
drinking somewhere, but he wasn’t. He was drinking
right there, over a small mound of dirt, holding a
big piece of wood sturdy for someone to do something with. I saw his breath bellow out into the cold
with a cough and evaporate as he took a swig from
a bottle before sliding it back into his coat pocket,
without so much as a pretense of inconspicuousness.The bottle neck stuck straight out and brushed
against his elbow, a cumbersome lump sinking
down and throwing off his equilibrium further than
the ethanol already had. I slowed my pace, tried to
regain some composure, and still hoped he wouldn’t
notice me. I could claim an attempt at getting his
attention, but he just couldn’t be bothered with me.
I tried, I’d tell James, but I’ll carry you. I was sure I
could have done that. Part of me still wished I could
have avoided involving my dad at all. It was selfish,
but I thought I might get slapped with the blame.
But I yelled, Dad! Come quick! Dad, I yelled again,
skidding on the gravel as I spun around, intent on
not letting my dad’s impatient glare lock on me,
and from that momentum, nearly ascending at a
perfectly horizontal angle in the air before I landed
face first on those same tiny rocks, a perfect reenactment of self-humiliation on the school playground
at recess. I felt all those multiple points of impact,
but wasted no time in catapulting myself back
up—no time for embarrassment just yet—clawed
off the pebbles that clung gently to the tiny dents
they bore into my face and palms, and sped back
to my brother who, when I reached the dirt-mound
summit again, I could see was lying flat, surrounded
by the thick, still-steaming purplish puddle which
had, since I left him, at least quadrupled in circumference. Not looking back at all during my return
sprint to see how far behind me dad was, or even if
he followed me at all, I turned from the sight of my
brother completely to see him, Dad, shuffling over
the mound, bogged down by beer bottles, which
could be heard clanging together in his pockets.
He was wheezing inhalations of frozen air. He saw
James right away, I know it, but he didn’t say anything until he got right up close to him, planting one
clumsy boot in the blood puddle with a squelchy,
meager splat, like an old-fashioned letter-sealing
stamp on melted wax. He leaned over with outward
turned elbows and hands on hips, looked at James’
face. James’ eyes were closed. Dad then scanned
down to the butchered leg, grimaced, scanned
back up to James’ face. James’ eyes were now open
again, frigid with shock, and dad said, “pull yourself
together, son,” erupting hysterically at his own clever
buffoonery.
James turned out to live, no real thanks to
our father. I ended up having to run to the nearest
phone anyway and call an ambulance. He didn’t
even lose his leg. He did require a blood transfusion
because he lost gallons of it, or at least it seemed
like it when I stood there staring at the mess, but his
gristly cheeks had their color restored right in front
of me, resupplying and, it almost seemed, re-inflat23
ing him to human shape at the coercion of some
stranger’s bodily elixir. It worked like sorcery, but far
more astonishing because it was methodologically
reliable. The warm fluid surged through his veins,
and he was ensconced for a moment in a prodigious glow of newfound vitality. Back then, my dad,
laughing, called him a lucky son-of-a-bitch, whereas
telling the story now, upon reflection and suspension of rational thought, my brother was “touched
by an angel.” Now, whenever this celestial creature
of mercy is mentioned, who conveniently remains
anonymous for humility’s sake I suppose, instead of
our dad drunkenly laughing and mocking the situation, James does. An example of an aforementioned
fucked up trait passed on in the family.
24
50 FEET TALL
Emilie Tomas
I was in 5th grade
When my class went
To see ‘The Human
Body’ and I watched
In childhood
Horror as
A 50 foot grin
Unfurled, loomed
Large enough
To pull me
Into orbit
Devoured
First a sandwich
And then my
Faith in humanity
With deafening
Smacks
Like thunder
If thunder
Was made
Of jelly and
Dismay and I
Knew it was a
Crime to allow a
Person to become
This
Inflated,
With every pore
Its own path to
Hell and I knew
I couldn’t trust
Anyone because
In our heads
We are all
50 feet tall.
25
meow you see
ashley waalen
26
MOUSETRAP
Halle Chambers
Minnie “Mousy” O’Mally knew she was
invisible up here on her fire escape. This was her
safeplace. With the ladder pulled up as it was now,
almost no one could reach her here. Plus, even if
someone did make it up here, she could easily get
away.
If she crawled rough the window, she’d be
securely locked in the apartment. There, it was
warm and dry and at least sometimes safe when her
daddy…no, excuse her, correction, “Father or Sir”
wasn’t home. He hated when she called him Daddy.
He wasn’t home now, out doing illegal God knows
what in the “family business,” but he would be back
soon. Hence why she was out here. So, no apartment, not right now.
If she dropped the ladder, she could slide down
to street level in seconds and be down the block
in under a minute. She knew, because she’d practiced and had timed herself. The only way to avoid
getting hit in the face was to be quick on your feet.
That was the first rule of fighting that Jase, her older
brother, had taught her. With the life they lived,
it was also a rule of survival. And they didn’t call
her “Mousy” for nothing: she was small and fast…
very fast. Jase could make a distraction, and Minnie
could run. But, Jase was working a job that “Father”
had given him out of town till this weekend, and
she’d surely get caught if she didn’t have her usual
head-start. So,“down” wouldn’t work either.
If she scaled up the ladder above her, she’d be
on the roof, where their oldest brother, Cobie, had
often taken her and Jase to stargaze. She hadn’t
known till six years into her still short life that he’d
done it to keep his precious baby brother and sister
away from their father’s sight when the man would
come home satellite high or plastered. She hadn’t
known till twelve years in that he’d take their father’s
hungover backhand on the mornings after, so she
and Jase didn’t. All she’d known as he’d taught her
each constellation was that Cobie was braver than
Orion and that she and her brothers were more
inseparable than the Gemini twins. But, her world
went as topsy-turvy as Cassiopeia when her father
had sent Cobie away, saying he would not have a
queer as a son. When Jase and Minnie hugged him,
Cobie swore he’d come back for them in a year or
so. Jase had given up when he’d been two years
gone. That was two years ago, and now even Minnie
27
was starting to doubt. No, she couldn’t go up to the
roo, not alone.
She shivered in the October chill as she reviewed her options: “in” would be facing her father’s
wrath, “down” would be facing being caught by
a cop or a stranger, and “up” would be facing a
reminder of the happiness, now heartbreak, brought
by a brother who was likely never coming home
again. So, maybe she couldn’t escape easily…or at
all. She shivered again, this time more in frantic
panic than from the frigid, near winter city wind.
For not the first time in her life, Mousy felt trapped.
28
faces
connie kilppen
29
*I DON’T ALWAYS FEEL COLORED
Diamonique Walker
Sometimes I find comfort in places I somehow know
I don’t belong
Never a full day, but hours will pass and I won’t
consider my brown skin or kinky hair
I’ll let the imminent fear of my black body being
made into an example fall back to the depths of my
mind
My daughter’s safety in mixed company won’t occur
to me
I won’t juxtapose my blackness with any other’s
identity
confidence
As if one chooses randomly from a pile of stock
black girl names when they look at me
He asks me if my hair is real
I tell him he can’t ask me that
He says oh it’s okay, my girlfriend is black
I’m a dirty smudge on freshly ironed white linens
Trying to blend in, trying to live my life
I breathe, momentarily
Suddenly, I’ll feel breathless, choked
Stabbed in the chest
Stung by a white hot micro aggressive slap in the
face
An unsolicited violation of my personal space
A pale hand gently pulls a lock of my hair in white
amazement
Or a thin pair of lips will say “what’s upppppp” to
me and not anyone else
I’ll get called a name like Jasmine with such utter
30
*Line borrowed from Claudia Rankine, Citizen
WHERE I AM FROM
Hannah Schmit
I am from the forest. From ruddy Maple and heady
Pine. I am from the sunlit dust that refracts the life
of the breeze. The rough wood of the trees are my
bones, roots firmly planted deep in the depths of the
cool black soil. Generations have taught me to live
in the sun, tan weathered hands, calloused and worn
cover small, break earth and sow seeds. Exhaling
with the unfurling of new leaves whose first stretch
welcomed life, I learned the importance of patience
and nurturing.
I am from dirt beneath my nails and gritty sand in
my teeth. Sap painted hands and hot tar feet, blackened from short dashes across burning pavement
that rippled with summer heat. Sandboxes were my
kingdom, the layers of silt and sand familiar to my
prodding hands. I climbed turreted towers of twisted
bark and branches to survey the world and breath
in time with the breeze. Twigs and leaves were my
crown and a rusty tractor my carriage. My people
were the songbirds and insistent cicadas whose songs
filtered lazily together through the woods. Sometimes I called back, matching note for note, melodies
and harmonies creating a canopy of familiarity.
I am from wildflowers who nodded their velvet, satin, and paintbrush heads as I passed by. From dried
grasses whose sweet scent rose from rolling waves
that undulated under horse-tail clouds above. The
gold-fringed top of the corn is my hair as it turns to
brown under the autumn sun.
I am from the passing of seasons, each marking the
time as brilliant red and orange gave way to pristine
white and serene gray. Freckles and sunburn traded
for pale skin cold kissed cheeks. My life can be
counted in scraped knees and bruises, and band-aids
and scars, each a story unique unto itself.
I am from the water. Clear and silted, still and rushing it surrounds me. The river courses through my
veins, its steady pulse my heartbeat. I am from the
muted silence of holding my breath. From letting
go in the soft pixelated light that swirls lazily in the
haze of a murky river. From the dew that rests in
early mists that lay as a blanket over a newly purified
earth, protecting the last of the dawn.
I am from music. Love-strung tunes of lullabies rock
31
my past to sleep and call forth dog-eared memories.
Treasured memories that float fragmented in my
mind,
I was waltzing with my darling…
Goodnight, Irene…
Then sings my soul…
Black Forest I have come to be in this place. Knit
sweaters and hand me downs weave the fabric of my
personality.
The black ink of the notes is stained on my fingers, the lyrics printed out as a map on my mind.
My body is movement, ‘full of grace’ as I danced
through recitals and music competitions. My history
is composed of the ivory keys of a piano board, the
metallic strings of a guitar, and the soft wheeze of a
musty accordion.
I am from survivors. From broken families and lives
I was given the opportunity to begin. Out of the
ashes of war and blood, death and pain I was taught
compassion. The scars remind me of my privilege.
A handful of ink-smeared letters, a fading tattoo,
and relentless nightmares that went unspoken.
Touched by shadows of heartbreak and longing I
have learned the fears of disease and pain, the cruelty of man and the destruction of illness.
I am from a legacy. Footsteps preceded my very first
and taught me how to stand tall—to walk courageously. When I was tired of walking and needed to
fly, strong hands lay behind me as I learned to test
my own strength.
I am from fading memories. From sweat and
ploughs, rough tools and run down sheds. My past is
a copper foundation of saved pennies stretched with
love and trust. The polished wood of a hunter’s gun
and tug of a taut fishing line tie me to
the land of a generation gone by.
I am from the creaking wood of a ship that ferried
dreams. From the fjords and
32
I am from strength. From weary hands that sought
to move forward. From songs crooned in different
tongues, prayers tucked away from missed lives.
I am from the sweet smell of tobacco. From a worn
brown pipe laid in the top overall pocket. From tales
of Shirley Temple and shiny black shoes. From the
canoe as it passes over reeds and the click of a cane
keeping time with shuffling shoes. From sterilized
rooms and flowers with similarly fated owners.
I am from loss and tears.
I am from the Mississippi and the Great Lakes, from
steam and coal. From concrete jungles and log cabins. I am a piece of the past, I am…
The rooms of my mind are wallpapered with
snapshots of a younger me. Sayings and phrases are
the soundtrack of my life. I carry them with me.
Tucked in locked and forgotten rooms they wait
patiently, longingly for me to recall.
future. I seek not where I am going only
exist here, as I am.
I am from the past. Shaped by the present I live for
the future. I am from wanderlust. An incorrigible
desire to explore that cannot be quelled with the
stillness between heartbeats. I am from the excitement that teeters on the brink of the inevitable.
I am pulled at by the gentle whisper of religions.
Called to the beauty of holiness in the world, I am
grounded in the church yet growing in the temple
and the mosque.
I am gentle hands that have learned to be useful—to
give back. Well-used fingers taught to survive and
protect. I am a collection of places and people that I
have encountered. In love with humanity, I exchange comfort for experience.
I am at home in the concrete jungles constructed
from heat-cracked pavement and in the mudpatched hut of the desert. The mountains and caves
call to me like the trees and fields of my youth. I am
at home in the grand expanse of a world that knows
no limits, understands no boundaries. A world that
exists, simply to exist. My feet itch to travel down
forgotten paths where the dust of ages can billow
out from under me and cloud the clarity of the
33
who am i?
ashley waalen
34
2
GRATITUDE: A POEM IN FOUR PARTS
D.E. Green
1. Le Chaim
2. In Praise of Delusion
Each day, my own sunrise, my own morning star:
your red head radiates strange aerial spikes.
When he walks down the sloping skyway from
Memorial
to the Music building on his way to a long evening
class, he sees his reflection in the large classroom
window at the base of the slope. He loves that mirror. In it, he is about a foot taller than his five-fiveand-a-half and twenty pounds lighter. He is younger
than his sixty years.
The silver hair is less telling. As he approaches, the
Other ways slightly, moves with the elegant gait of
an athlete or dancer. This, he imagines, is my Norwegian double—tall and slender and (at least from this distance)
good-looking.
Of course as man and image converge, his Other
shrinks into an eastern-European, Semitic, rather
compact, little old man.
Perhaps (he wonders) I have seen the inner image of myself.
Perhaps (he smiles) I am happy just to have illusions.
Our son’s beard and long Hasidic locks
on a head never bowed in prayer hover
over his guitar and, till he gets it just so,
a heavy-metal riff. The picture of Ollie, our old
pup,—
his face speaks love, love, love. Like the holiday meal
you’ll pretend to let me cook. Or when your hand
gently
strokes my heaving shoulder: I am sobbing silently
because the movie has ended well—a good death,
timely reconciliation, vows revived, a renewed
breath.
36
3. Thanksgiving
4: To My Son
This morning, as I drive
from Northfield to Hampton
past field after barren field,
three wild turkeys
foraging and gobbling
at the edge of the road—
their white-splashed wings,
black-feathered trunks,
It’s Friday, Z—, and (as always) time to say how
much I love you (and your mom too, since I don’t
say it often enough though I feel it every minute)
and how much I miss you and hope you can spend
a few hours with us and Grandma the first weekend
in November. We worry about you every day, ‘cuz
that’s our job, but we also have an abiding sense
of how strong you are: How much you have been
through, how far you’ve come, and how you face
each day with grit—and, I hope, love. The latter
is so hard to do: Over breakfast your mom and I
sometimes sit around and whine about our work,
about grading student papers. But a little later I’ll be
walking across campus and the light will be just right
and I’ll see a familiar face amid a group of young
people and—I don’t know why—I feel love. I think
that’s the word. And I felt it last time we picked you
up downtown and you were talking to some scruffy
stranger on the street. And the fact that you can still
be open to such encounters—isn’t that love too?—
filled me with wonder. It’s funny: Old people, among
whom I am about to number, have proverbially been
beyond wonder, such a romantic and old-fashioned
word. But I swear that I still feel it—and that you are
among the wonders of my world.
red combs poking
and pecking the gravel
and weeds—surprise me.
I flinch.
The car swerves.
I breathe.
They range unruffled.
37
work in progress
gabriel bergstrom
38
THE FIRE
Elisabeth Beam
I stood with my back to the crowd watching the
house go up in flames. It happened faster than I had
expected. It had taken less than a minute for the fire
to spread from the kitchen to the living room and
even less time for it to make its way upstairs and into
the bedrooms where Grandma and the twins had
been peacefully sleeping. Joel stood beside me; his
face was dark with ash, his mouth tilted upwards in
a sickeningly gleeful smile.
Momma had never liked Joel. She said he was a
troublemaker and I should do my best to stay away
from him. Joel hadn’t always been mean. When I
first met him he would bring me friends and make
me laugh. He gave me my grey tabby cat, Walter,
and my small white bunny, Snowy. We used to all
run around the garden and play and laugh. I didn’t
like it when Walter and Snowy played. Walter
always hurt Snowy. Joel loved it. Snowy’s pain filled
shrieks always brought a smile to his face.
Joel would play tricks on Momma. He’d move the
chair she was about to sit in and she’d tumble to the
floor with a crash and a scream. He would put dead
things in the twins’ crib for Momma to find. Once
he brought a live snake into the house and slipped
it into the shower when Momma was in it. She
screamed something awful and had locked me in
my room for a week. I always got blamed for Joel’s
wicked tricks.
Momma brought a lot of new friends to the house
after that. She brought in men wearing long white
coats who talked with me and asked questions about
Joel and Walter and Snowy. Joel would stand behind
them as they questioned me and make faces. I didn’t
understand why they didn’t just talk to Joel and grew
frustrated with their questions.
Once Momma brought home a man in a black suit.
He walked around the house mumbling in a strange
language, throwing water on the walls and waving
his cross around like a baton. I thought he was
crazy. I told Momma and she told me to hush and
sit down. The man stood in front of me yelling in his
strange way and holding his cross on my forehead.
It was cold and made me uncomfortable. Joel got
upset. He didn’t like the man and the way he was
39
shouting. The next thing I knew the man was on the
floor bleeding from a gash in his head and Joel was
laughing loudly in my ear. A bunch of police officers
showed up and Joel told me not to tell anyone what
he’d done. He said I should blame it on Momma
and she’d go away for a long time and stop bothering us. Momma shouted and cried and struggled as
the police dragged her away to the sound of Joel’s
gleeful laughter and the twins’ high pitched screams.
Grandma came after Momma. She was mean.
She locked me in my room and told me to stay
there until I learned my lesson. I watched him
stalk around the room at night mumbling darkly to
himself. Grandma made me to go church with her
every Sunday, she said I had to pray for my soul for
what I’d done to that man and to Momma. I didn’t
understand why everyone blamed me for Joel’s tricks
and was tired of being punished for all the naughty
things that he did.
One night at supper, Joel made scary faces at the
twins who started wailing. Grandma stood up and
yelled at me as she tried desperately to calm the
twins. She told me to go to my room. I said no. I
pointed at Joel and yelled at him with all my might.
This was all his fault. Grandma sent me to bed. Joel
told me they were going to send me away. They
would separate us and I would never be able to see
him again. I told him I was fine with that because he
was being horrible. That upset him. He got Walter and Snowy and made me watch as Walter ate
Snowy. I cried. He laughed.
Joel woke me up at midnight. He told me we could
stay together. Me, him, and Walter, but we had to do
40
something first. He smelt like gasoline. He led me to
the kitchen and pointed to the stove which was covered with a sticky, sweet smelling liquid. He told me
to open my hands. I did. He handed me a lighter.
I didn’t want to do it but Joel got angry when I tried
to say no. He yelled and told me to do it for all the
times Momma blamed me for something he did.
That if I did this everyone would finally realize it
was him doing all the bad things and not me. My
hands were shaking so bad it took me five tries to
get the lighter to ignite. When it did I froze and
stared at the small flame in my hands. It flickered
with every shuttering breath that came out of my
mouth. Joel grew impatient and slapped the lighter
out of my hand and onto the stove. There was a
large whooshing noise and a blast of orange light.
My arm hair stood on end and sweat trickled down
my face. I backed away. Joel stood in front of the
fire and laughed. He threw his arms out wide and
danced in tune with the flames. He was crazy but
his movements were so beautiful and fluid. It was
frightening. The fire advanced toward me. I didn’t
want to move. I wanted the fire to eat me like it was
going to eat Grandma and the twins. Joel grabbed
my hand and led me outside.
We stood to the side and watched as the fire slowly
ate up the house I had grown up in. The house that
the priest, the twins, and Grandma had all died in.
Sirens and smoke filled the night air. I looked to my
side for Joel, but he had disappeared.
DESERT DRUMS
Abigail Carpenter
When my London flatmate, Raoni, suggested
we travel to Northern Africa because he was missing
the heat of Brazil, we had no intention of visiting
the Sahara Desert and the Atlas Mountains. But we
quickly made friends with a generous and hospitable
Moroccan man, Raxido, who invited us to a local
drum circle at the edge of the Sahara Desert.
After traveling on camelback against an orange-rayed sunset, we found ourselves among the
sand dunes. We parked our camels single file near
our camp, and I realized a place that once only
existed in my dreams was now before me.
I had to close my eyes for a long while. I opened
them over and over again until I was sure of it. I
had to reach down and let the sand fall between my
fingers slowly. I had to breathe in the crisp, evening
air. And when I looked up, the stars speckled in the
sky like the summer freckles on my face, thousands
and thousands of them.
When the drum circle began, I let its music
fill me up. It started in my toes and moved higher,
tickled my fingers and sent goosebumps up my arms
and back. The drums vibrated within my chest and
when it reached my mouth, I screamed in laughter.
My laugh echoed farther and farther across the desert, not meeting any person or town or house until it
was miles and miles away.
I wrapped my blanket a little tighter and
watched my friends dance around the fire to the
beat of the drums. Their legs moved up and down
as their hands joined the ashes flying through the
night air.
For many hours, we sat around the fire, told
our stories and spoke aloud our dreams. We danced
and sang and took turns pounding the drums. We
slept under the stars among the silence of the desert
for only a few hours until the sun awoke us on the
horizon. And moving through the deep sand, the
sunrise at our backs, we rode our camels to the bus
to escape the desert heat before it swallowed us up
whole.
41
COLORS
Hannah Schmit
If I am a color call me red
The color of passion and love
Humanity worn on my sleeve
The color of my blood, beating heart.
Call me red.
If I am a season call me fall
With baited chilled breath I speak
My words on whirlwind breezes fall
An omen of changes to come
Call me fall.
If I am a sound call me silence.
The chaos and stillness of calm
My words lost yet encompassing
In anticipation of something
Call me silence
If I am a thought call me hope
The desire for something more
A yearning call deep within me
The need to breathe
Call me hope.
42
urban delight
jazmin crittenden
43
WHEN DAD WORE COLOGNE
A. Tetzlaff
“Did Grandpa Mike die?” My small voice
broke a quiet that Dad and I carry easily between
us. A radio frequency connecting our minds that
communicates silently, so we don’t have to. Even at
the age of three, I knew our sacred, noiseless space
well.
Dad took me to a park one day, nearby my
childhood home. We rarely visited this park unless
we intended to use its snowy slope for adrenaline
rushes in our bright plastic sleds in the winter time.
But it wasn’t wintertime now. My dad wore a blue
t-shirt he’d owned since high school. Summer or
spring, the season isn’t particularly distinct. The hills
rose nakedly as we quietly approached.
I’ve come back to the memory time and again;
the images are blurred, like a positive photograph
that didn’t come out of the darkroom correctly.
I can’t recall how my father responded to my
question, though I’m sure he patiently and painfully affirmed my query. In that moment I wasn’t
shocked. I wasn’t sad. Presently, I regret that I can’t
remember a man who loved me and was so dearly
loved by others. I don’t know how he looked aside
from the pictures I know. How he talked, laughed,
44
yelled, walked, I don’t recall. Did he wear cologne to
work like Dad?
When I was young, Dad wore cologne to work.
He woke up around five in the morning in order to
be at work five-thirty, and he still does, despite the
fact that no one expects him in the office till eight.
I’d hear his alarm from my bed and wait to smell
the mix of dewy summer grass and the spicy knives
of cologne in my nostrils. The smell lingered and
pulled me back to sleep as Dad left the house. On
the day at the park, Dad wasn’t wearing cologne.
Dad didn’t wear cologne that day because it was
either a weekend or he had the day off or had taken
time away to grieve.
I don’t remember the call to our corded
telephone late one night. It was the hospital telling
Mom and Dad that my grandfather died of a heart
attack while showering. I don’t know if he died
immediately or if the attack was slow, painful, cold,
and wet. I will never ask. The thought of breaking
the stitches grief so tenuously sewed incites trepidation. Was my young face one of his last images? I’m
vain enough to assume so––grandparents always
think of the grandbabies first. Was it a comfort? I
can only hope.
At my Grandfather’s funeral, I can’t remember
Mom’s grief. I can’t remember the funeral either.She
keeps the remnants of her love tended like a flower
garden and tells me of her father often. I have nothing but the cemented walkway leading to the park
that summer day deep in my mind.
Mom tells me that my grandfather lived as long
as he did because he was waiting for me. It was a
miracle I was even born, but that’s not my story to
tell. She calls me “the sparkle in his eye.”
Christopher, my younger and only brother,
inherited my grandfather’s bright, Anglo-blue irises.
He was born the year after my grandfather died.
Christopher joined the Army a few weeks ago; my
grandfather was a Marine in the 60s.
During his service in Asia, my grandfather collected each country’s currency. Grandma keeps the
collection in a red leather box in her bedroom closet.
I used to step onto a chair and carefully extract the
artifact from the top shelf and touch each coin and
each bill. Some of those tenders are much extinct
now.
The souvenirs of my grandfather’s life are far
less valuable to me than those of my travels––those,
at least, the mugs and the key chains, those have
memories attached of the real thing.
I’ve spent most of my life scouring photos and
objects, trying to resurrect an authentic memory
of my grandfather. Trying to find a sensation that
brings him back to me like the early morning scent
of Dad’s cologne because I only remember the
hills and my words and Dad. The solvents of time
washed away my grandfather.
45
SHITTY CHRISTMAS TREES AND SECONDHAND DOLLS
Elisabeth Beam
When I was a kid we didn’t have a lot of money.
But we managed to survive. Mom worked a lot at
the dingy looking Super 8 Motel just down the street
from the elementary school. You know, the kind
of motel that charges by the hour instead of night.
She hated it but it was close to school and paid just
enough. Around November she would start picking
up shifts at other hotels in town to save up more
money for Christmas. It was hard. The heat bill
always went up mid-October when the chill started
to set in and the snow began to fall. Presents were
always an issue. Getting stuff for just me and Sarah
was usually alright, but Mom came from a big family. Six brothers and sisters all of whom had kids. All
of whom would be needing presents. That’s a lot of
money. Money we just didn’t have.
One year there was a huge blizzard and they
canceled school for a week. Sarah was only six at
the time and she couldn’t be left alone to take care
of herself much less a five-year-old as well. So mom
had to stay home from work and look after us. She
tried to make it seem like she wasn’t stressed out
about the money, but I knew she was. She would
pace around the kitchen at night and mumble to
46
herself. She’d crouch over her checkbook and shake
her head. She tried to hide it from us, but I noticed.
I always noticed when she got like that. A week of
work missed meant we wouldn’t be able to afford the
gas to get to grandma’s house for Christmas. And a
week with everyone at home meant that the heat bill
was going to be rough. She was too proud to try and
get food stamps. So money that would normally go
towards presents went to buying our Christmas feast.
We didn’t go to my grandma’s house that
Christmas but it was probably the best Christmas of
my life. The day before school let out our landlord
took out all the carpet in the living room. He said it
was due to be replaced and that someone would be
over before the holiday to put down some new carpet. “Your feet will be so happy and thankful! That’s
the best Christmas present you could ask for!” he
had happily told us. No one came. The floor was
cold and there were nails and sharp staples sticking
up at weird angles. It hurt to step on them and small
red dots appeared throughout the house as we all
made the mistake of stepping in the living room
without socks.
Mom put down an old ratty green rug, one
that our cats liked to pee on. She bought a small
fake green tree from the thrift shop downtown. It
was the saddest looking tree. Most of the branches
were missing so it had random bald spots sporadically around its leaning trunk. A good number of
the ornaments that we put on it fell off because it
couldn’t support their weight. We made new ones
out of paper and glitter. Mom wrapped tinsel she’d
taken from work around it and Sarah and I sloppily
placed string lights. We put an old family picture at
the top of the tree because we were too scared that
our expensive Christmas angel would fall and break
if we tried to stick her up there.
Thinking back on it now it was a pretty shitty
looking tree, but back then I thought it was the best
thing I’d ever seen in my life. I remember sitting on
the floor amongst the nails and staples and looking
at it glittering and glistening and thinking that it was
a far better tree than anyone else could ever have. I
thought that even if we’d spend a million dollars on
a tree and all its dressings that it wouldn’t even be
able to come close to this masterpiece sitting before
me.
For Christmas Eve we blasted holiday music
and ran around the living room twirling and waving
our arms above our heads. Mom had somehow
found time to make new flannel pajamas for both
me and Sarah and we had immediately put them
on. She had also given us each a doll that she’d
found at a thrift store. They looked ratty and dirty
but I loved them both. Every bit of dust and matted
patch of hair was a story waiting to be told. The
dolls had character and I loved it.That shitty tree
and our thrift store dolls were great but they weren’t
what made that night so special. It was that we were
all together, making the most out of what we had
and not lamenting what we were missing. I think as
we grow up we lose the magic in secondhand dolls
and shitty Christmas trees.
47
summer nights
adam ruff
48
the people united
adam ruff
49
after the hike
adam ruff
50
CRUMBS
Malena Larsen
He’s looking for love
In the crevices of his couch
Like loose change.
I saw him lift up the cushions
And pull out crumbs
His mother’s earring
A quarter
The spoon he dropped last week
After eating ice cream out of the container.
It was chocolate cookie dough and he ate the whole thing.
I watched him put the quarter in his back pocket
and the spoon back in the cushions.
I told him I had been in love once
And he said
I like it when girls call me daddy.
I had a dream that night that he was dating somebody and my stomach hurt when I woke up.
I became a spoon in the couch cushion
Who said words like
Daddy
And
Fuck me
And
Hard.
At the end of every night I was put back with the
crumbs, and each day that he came to get me there
was more cat hair or lint stuck to me
I waited patiently
Dirty
For him to pick me up.
It was 77 degrees the late summer night he stopped
getting me from the cushions.
He told me that he found somebody to love and we
can’t be friends, because if I see you I’ll fuck you. I
asked him why he couldn’t control himself if he was
in love with somebody.
The inside of my ribcage
Was being scraped empty
51
Like the chocolate cookie dough ice cream container
And my stomach hurt
Like it did after the dream
Where he wasn’t mine
I can’t help it.
He told me.
I like it when girls call me daddy.
When we met he was wearing a suit and it looked
like he had spent a lot of time on his hair but I
didn’t think he was attractive until the weekend
when I was drunk.
Across the table
On the other side of red cups
And puddles of water
He stared at me
In a grey tank top.
His eyes
And arms
Were strong
52
And dark.
Making eye contact felt like sex
And he smelled like Fireball
And somebody I shouldn’t be alone with
And too much cologne.
We went swimming at 6 am at the neighbor’s lakefront when everyone else fell asleep.
He took off his shirt
I kept mine on.
The water fell off of him like it didn’t want to keep
his body covered for too long. He picked me up and
folded me over his right shoulder and threw me into
the 6 am summer sweet lake water.
He drove me home
At 7 am
Still drunk and
Smitten.
It was 88 degrees and my birthday the night I let
him kiss me in the back hallway of our friend’s frat.
I couldn’t wait anymore
He told me
In the house that smelled like
Liquor and dust
And damp wood.
The first time we
Fucked
Was in the front seat of his
White Pontiac Grand prix
At 11 pm on a Tuesday.
I saw him almost
As an animal.
His fists
Were clenched
And his eyebrows
Like shelves
Over his beetle eyes.
Do you like fucking daddy?
After that night I had to sneak him into my bedroom
because he couldn’t do all of the positions he wanted to in his car. He needed to prove to me that he
was the best fuck and that he could make me cum
and that I should call him
Daddy.
I had never called fucking, fucking before. Before I
was a dirty spoon it had only been called love.
His eyes started to remind me
Of Tiny
Round
Black beetles.
There’s nobody else anymore
We should just keep fucking.
And when we fucked
It was 66 degrees and almost fall when he came to
my house in his white Pontiac Grand Prix and told
me
I remembered then, the quarter he put in his pants
and how he used me to eat his ice cream and then
put me back with all the crumbs in the cushions of
53
his couch
Where he keeps looking for love
Like it’s the loose change
In his back pocket.
54
bloomed
audrey campbell
55
pruned
audrey campbell
56
HERMAN
Danny Polaschek
Grape juice dribbled down Herman’s chin and
landed in scattered droplets down the front of his
white T-shirt. He didn’t notice and, after setting
down his half-emptied glass, picked up his spoon
and started on his bowl of bran flakes. Sitting at the
kitchen table, there was nothing in front of Herman
—but a bare white wall. It seemed, however, that he
wasn’t looking at it, but rather through it like a child
looks through a window and, seeing nothing but
gray skies and rain, is overwhelmed by disappointment because they will not be outdoors playing that
day.
As Herman sat there facing the white wall and
chomping his cereal, his son entered the kitchen
and began his morning ritual. Herman heard the
coffee-maker start bubbling from somewhere behind
him in the kitchen along with the quick and efficient pitter-pattering of his son’s feet, who Herman
assumed had to be walking laps around the center
island as some sort of new, trendy morning workout.
Once the coffee maker’s burbling came to an end
the footsteps stopped as well.
Herman focused on the sound of the coffee being poured, the soft sound of liquid filling a ceramic
mug. The sound stopped as quickly as it had started
and Herman was further drawn from his relaxed,
monotonous state by the sound of his son’s voice.
“How are the flakes this morning, Dad?”
Herman didn’t turn around to face his son, but
continued with what he was doing, looking like a
cow chewing cud. “Five star quality,” he replied in
between spoonfuls. “Flaky as ever.”
Herman’s son chuckled a bit and looked up
from his fresh cup of coffee but the laugh died away
when he noticed that his father was still turned away
from him, eyes glued straight ahead. Taking another
sip, Herman’s son pondered whether he would keep
pursuing his father in conversation or not. He ultimately decided against it and left the kitchen, coffee
mug in hand.
A sigh escaped Herman’s throat as he set down
his spoon, finished with his mushed and soggy cereal. Ain’t this the life, he thought to himself sarcastically. Finally turning away from the wall, Herman
scooted himself back from the kitchen table and
slowly stood up. He gripped the side of the table for
balance and took a few deep breaths in an effort to
steady himself. Just a few weeks before, Herman had
57
missed a stair descending to the basement and found
himself tumbling clumsily down the rest of the way
until crashing to a stop on the last few steps.
Herman’s head still felt a bit shaky from time to
time, which caused a bit of a tremble in his legs. Instead of walking from place to place, he grew accustomed to maneuvering his way to each destination
by leaning on and grabbing anything he could for
support and then flinging himself to another sturdy
checkpoint, and so on and so forth until he reached
his goal. It was much like a monkey swinging from
vine to vine, but less precise and much less graceful.
With his feet finally under him, legs steady,
Herman pushed away from the kitchen table and
launched himself to the kitchen counter, which
caught him with cold indifference. Hunched over,
Herman caught his breath for a few seconds before
beginning to shuffle down the length of the marble
counter towards the coffeemaker at the other end.
“This better be a damn good cup of Joe,” he mumbled to himself, clearly exhausted.
Halfway down the counter, Herman stopped.
With a steady grip on the counter he reached up to
the cupboard above his head and swung it open. He
couldn’t see inside but he knew that what he was
looking for was in there: his old blue coffee mug—
one of the only things worth bringing with when he
moved into his son’s house the year before. Feeling
around the smooth, wooden interior, Herman
eventually got a hold of his mug which distinguished
itself by having only half of a handle still attached.
With the partial handle hooked onto his ring and
middle fingers, Herman pulled out his mug and
brought it shakily down over his head, setting it on
the counter with a soft “clink.”
Herman was beginning to feel dizzy at this
58
point, and wished for a moment that he had listened
to the doctor about getting a walker. “Mr. Huckley,”
the doctor said, “even if you don’t think you’ll use
it, take it anyways. Just in case.” Herman didn’t take
the walker, and wouldn’t even let anyone help to
walk him out of the hospital, not even his son. “I
don’t need your damn help,” he snorted each time
someone tried to take his arm to steady him. He was
always a stubborn man and old age wasn’t going to
change that.
Continuing down the counter, Herman felt this
same stubborn anger boiling in him. He was almost
seventy years old and yet he felt like a child who
was just learning to walk. He’d built his own home,
and a garage to go with it, and now he could hardly
make it to the opposite end of the room without
feeling fatigued.
Sweat was running hot from Herman’s forehead. He wiped it with a shaky hand and breathed
in deeply, closing his eyes as he did so. He only had
five or so more steps to go and he braced himself for
the final stretch, determined to get there even if it
killed him.
With a focused balance and patient, shuffling
steps Herman managed to get to the end of the
counter and the coffee pot. He exhaled in relief, and
a satisfied smile tugged the corners of his mouth up
ever so slightly. With his blue mug in one hand, Herman picked up the coffeepot in the other, intent on
pouring himself a well-deserved cup of coffee after
his tiresome journey. His satisfaction was immediately replaced with bitterness as he lifted the pot
and felt that it was nearly empty, only a few drops
remained rolling around in the bottom.
Herman’s minute smile had vanished and his
brow hardened, scrunching up his forehead in small,
tense knots. Setting the pot back on the counter,
Herman hissed repeatedly under his breath, cursing
his son for not leaving him any coffee. Herman’s
hands were visibly trembling and he was having
a difficult time keeping a grip on the edge of the
counter. He contemplated making more coffee but
dismissed the idea immediately, knowing that he
could not remain standing and moving around the
kitchen much longer.
Herman felt a hot flush come over his face and
could feel beads of sweat rolling down his temples
and his cheeks. In one swift motion he wound up
and threw his coffee mug across the room, where it
shattered against the windowless, white wall. Slivers
and shards of ceramic bounced all over the kitchen,
the blue pieces scattered like shattered glass.
Herman heard footsteps drumming down the
staircase before his son entered the room,stopping in
the doorway to avoid stepping on any of the pieces
of blue ceramic. “Dad!” he exclaimed, “What happened?
Herman was bent over, hunched with his hands
on his knees. He was struggling for breath now,
and sweat soaked through his shirt on his back. In
between wheezes, Herman said exasperated, “You
didn’t leave me any damn coffee, you son of a
bitch.”
His son stood there eyeing first his father and
then the indent in the wall where the mug had hit.
He shook his head in disbelief, which quickly turned
to anger. With a clenched jaw, he left the room and
returned a minute later with broom in hand. He
began quietly sweeping the blue bits of coffee mug
into a dustpan.
After Herman had caught his breath and recomposed himself, he pulled his body back
into a standing position, leaning against the counter. He glanced to his son, bent over and sweeping
under the kitchen table. “I heard you on the phone
last night,” he said.
Herman kept his eyes on his son as he stood
and turned to face him. His son raised an eyebrow
at him but gave no verbal reply. “I heard you,” Herman repeated.
His son bit his lip and continued sweeping, eyes
trained on the floor. “It’s just not working, dad.”
59
EL BARRIO SUYO
Chad Berryman
El viento le envolvió al hombre como una manta de hielo. Él andaba por el barrio suyo pero los
vecinos no lo saludaron. Caminaba delante de una
casa grande con flores y grandes ventanas, y por esas
ventanas podía oír una pelea entre dos padres y los
lamentos penosos de sus hijos.
Él seguía la acera que serpenteaba por un
parque lindo donde había un banco solitario. Él
Lo saludó con la cabeza. Recordaba unas noches
del verano cuando este banco no había ofrecido
insultos ni acusaciones, sino un lugar simpático para
descansar mientras él le regalaba un uso admirable.
Pero en el invierno el banco se congelaba como él, y
ambos eran incapaces de ayudarse el uno al otro.
Paseaba delante de una casa blanca de arquitectura maravillosa. Un coche altanero llegara
la entrada. Un padre sincero apareció mientras
acababa de contar los acontecimientos de su día. Su
hija miraba su celular, y el silencio suspiró por la expresión herida de la cara del padre. Ellos entraron a
la casa sin otra palabra.
El hombre nómada seguía caminando, y pronto
la nieve dentro de sus venas se derretía por una balada antigua que se tarareaba al ritmo de sus pasos.
60
No pido mucho, no vivo de prisa
canto los himnos con risa bendita
no tengo nada salvo alma amada
y sin despedida no hay la llegada
THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD
Chad Berryman
The frigid air wrapped around the man like a
blanket of ice. He was travelling through his own
neighborhood, but no neighbors acknowledged him.
As he walked in front of a large, picturesque house,
complete with flowers and giant windows, he could
make out the sound of two parents fighting accompanied by the upsetting cries of their children.
The sidewalk snaked its way through a park in
which there stood one solitary bench. With a nod
of his head, the man greeted it. Nights of summers
past filled his mind, nights in which the bench
had not offered insults or accusations but rather a
consoling place of rest while he presented it with the
gift of an honorable purpose. However, the bench
froze and shivered in the winter the same as he, and
neither could provide the other with any relief.
He passed by a white house of grand construction. There, a flashy car had just pulled into the
driveway. From it emerged an earnest father finishing the recounting of his day. His daughter, however, simply stared at her phone, and the wounded
expression on her father’s face betrayed an unsung
sigh. The two entered the house without another
word.
As the wandering man continued walking, the
snow in his veins began to melt due to an old tune
he commenced to hum in time with his steps.
I don’t ask for much, or live in a rush
in my blessed laughter the hymns come alive
there’s nothing I own save a soul that is loved
for without a farewell one could never arrive
61
ODYSSEY
Eve Taft
Thank you for the twisted pathways of your mind
Which led to the streets and alleyways of Dublin
James Joyce, do you understand that you opened floodgates?
Your avalanche of babbling sentences, sans punctuation
Buck Mulligan tossing form and style into the wind
Your catechism, you, Daedalus, gave us sacrament
Blood flow to wake up the numb limbs of literature
You spoke with your soul to our souls
Fearing not the noise in your skull but flinging it down in ink
I understand you, “life is many days”
I understand you, “god is a shout in the street”
I understand you, “I am another now and yet the same”
You understand me “everything speaks in its own way”
Soon I’ll visit your beloved homeland
Walking the streets of Dublin, writing and giving thanks to modernism
Now as free of rigid form
As Ireland of England
62
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
63
postcards from my bedroom
audrey campbell
64
COUNTING SHEEP
Danny Polaschek
What can you do
when the world is asleep?
Go to sleep too?
I’ve counted all my sheep.
They jumped through the air
gliding for 5 or 6 feet
cleared the fence and then flew
with not even a bleat. I didn’t focus however
on these aerial sheep antics
because far away in the distance
was a sight oh so fantastic.
A blue house, with a single light on
in the window sat a girl
a beauty no pencil could ever have drawn.
I looked up at her
and she down at me
addicted to the eyesight
too distracted to count sheep.
65
3
sky nights
keeyonna fox
67
inner self
keeyonna fox
68
VICTORY OF THE PEOPLE
Petra S. Shaffer-Gottschalk
Your worship was my refuge, your clay heart my focal
point, your chelsea smile the apple of my eye. We were
sick. We poisoned ourselves with amphetamines and pills
until we didn’t recognize ourselves in the mirror. We
walked miles just to feel accomplished in our space, we
turned the cigarettes we shared into sentiments we thought
we shared. I must possess the wrong innocence.
Souls are fickle things that change when left to die in the
cold.
~
He was outrageously tall.
He towered over me like the Statue of Liberty and
he talked to me as though I was a boat in the harbor.
Standing five inches taller than six feet, he was an
image of Ukrainian beauty. He stood like someone
who knew things you didn’t know and this fascinated
me.
I was so naive, so optimistic. I saw the lust and want
in his eyes and I mistook it for passion.The curve of
his jaw and his long eyelashes crept into the screens
behind my eyelids and ignited a fire in me that I
didn’t know how to put out. I was the new girl in
town struggling to keep my loneliness at bay. He
was a gleaming light in that summer of darkness.
I had just moved to Minnesota months before. After
discovering drugs and promiscuous sex I became
nothing short of a hurricane. Amphetamines kept
me awake, cigarettes kept me skinny, and weed kept
me sane. My GPA reflected exactly what they don’t
tell you about functional depression: you can feel
like a blank page, but as long as you fill it with words
people will stop asking questions.
He was selling me drugs. He offered me a good
price. I had never met him but I figured what the
hell, I could stand to meet new people. It was dark,
long past sundown. We were meeting in a parking
lot by a lake a few blocks away from my house. I
was in my mom’s car. I waited and listened to Amy
Winehouse until I saw an orange car pull into a
parking spot a few yards away from me. The man
driving fit the picture I had seen of him before. We
69
made eye contact and he ushered me over to his car.
I took a deep breath, grabbed my sweater, and got
my money ready. He rolled down the passenger side
window.
“You Nikita?” I said.
He smiled at me. A smile that I would come to
know.
“You can call me Kita.”
~
He had really good drugs. I’m not sure that they
were pure, but at the time I didn’t care. Neither did
he. We just wanted to get high. We did his drugs
together, sitting in a playground by the lake, talking
about life and what we crave. He told me that he
was applying to a college in London. I didn’t think
anything of it.
Before long we saw each other every day. He was
a lifeguard who had to be on duty early in the
morning, so he would take me out for coffee at eight
in the morning. No makeup, sweatpants, my hair in
a messy bun. He didn’t care. We would talk about
things that we hadn’t shared with anyone else. He
told me he struggled with his relationship with his
father in Ukraine. I told him that I had struggled
with eating disorders since I was thirteen.
We would sneak out onto his back porch to smoke
cigarettes late at night. His mother hated that we
smoked.
70
“You need to quit smoking, love,” she’d tell me. “I
smoked for twenty-five years and it took two pregnancies to get me to stop.”
His mother loved me. She thought that I was
spunky, independent, had a mind of my own. She
did not like his last girlfriend. She made that very
clear. She, like Nikita, was very tall. She had long
curly black hair and eyes so intense that you would
lose your appetite. Her Russian accent was thick
and powerful. She had run away to the United
States when she was twenty-one and seven months
pregnant with her first son. Nikita.
“Does it mean anything?” I asked him. “Your
name.”
He smiled when he answered.
“My mom told me it means ‘victory of the people,’”
he said.
Oh Kita,
you have no victory.
You are the secret I keep from my mother
the hidden disease that projectile vomits
and digs with fingernails sharpened by teeth.
Your fields of sunflowers told me a secret,
your secrets so dark and beautiful
and I killed myself with your gargantuan sunflowers.
His mother was beautiful. She had been a professional figure skater that traveled the world, meeting
people as she went. She met Kita’s father in her
home country of Ukraine and according to the
story, he was immediately drawn to her exuberant
personality and her long legs. At twenty-one she
was well on her way to continue pursuing a successful skating career until she got pregnant. According
to Kita his father did not accompany her to her appointments.He did not send her flowers. He did not
ask if she was okay. Instead Kita’s mother made her
way to America to create a life of victory and hope.
He took me to meet his grandmother. She said hello
and came in and that was the last that I understood.
The entire time I was there she would ask me questions in Russian and Kita would translate for me.
He taught me how to say
Hello
(Privet)
Yes
(da)
No
(net)
And thank you, which I don’t remember. We spent
almost the entire time we were there trying to help
his grandmother set up a new movie streaming
program on her computer. I know nothing about
computers in English, let alone in Russian. I was
overwhelmed. The leather furniture just made my
nervous sweat more noticeable.
She told me about Ukraine a little bit. She said it
was beautiful but troubled. She offered me chocolate and cookies. I sat, sweating, trying my hardest
to pay attention. When I said anything to her, Kita
would translate for me. I wanted to leave.
After we left his grandmother’s house he told me
to wait in his car while he talked privately with his
grandmother. I thought it was strange but didn’t
question it. I played mindless games on my phone
while I waited for him. Some part of me knew that
they were talking about me, but I continued to deny
it. I was hungry, but I wasn’t planning on doing
anything about it too soon. I was hungry often then.
When he returned to the car I asked what they had
talked about and with no hesitation he said, “You.”
I paused, then asked him to elaborate.
“She likes you,” he said. And that was that.
How strange, I thought, to be liked by someone who
never explicitly spoke a word to me.
~
Andrevich was Kita’s middle name. Named after
his father.
Kita’s father was very handsome. In his forties with
tan skin and thick hair, he was a heartthrob that
would make you look twice. He lived in a nice,
expensive apartment in Kiev with his girlfriend who
was twenty years younger than him. Apparently
that was a theme.
Kita had only seen his father a handful of times
in his life. He had gone back to Ukraine to spend
some time with him as a young boy, but didn’t have
too much recollection of it. When he was sixteen he
went back to live with his father and his twenty-yearold girlfriend for a while. Kita has always been tall,
thin, and handsome. His father noticed this.
“So what happened?” I asked him one day.
71
Kita shrugged.
“He kicked me out and I came back to the states,”
he said without a flinch.
He said this as though it was a commonality.
“He thought that I fucked his girlfriend,” he said as
he lit a cigarette.
There was a very long, uncomfortable silence.
“Did you?” I asked.
He laughed out loud and a cloud of smoke poured
out of his mouth.
“No, of course not,” he said. “My dad isn’t one to
listen to a sixteen year old.”
~
“I’ll take you to Ukraine someday.”
“Sunflowers. There are parts of Ukraine where
there are endless fields of sunflowers wherever you
look. They’re as tall as me and the flowers are bigger than my face.”
He pulled me closer as he talked about Ukraine.
He insisted that I learn all that I could about the
Russia-Ukraine conflict, sending me innumerable
articles daily. Through him I learned about the
importance of the Ukrainian revolution and fights
that had been fought, some as recent as 2011 and
2012. He told me that he wanted to fight for his
people if he had to. When my eyes were flushed
with concern, he pulled me in close and whispered
in my ear, “I’ll survive for you.”
His eyes lit up every time he talked about the fields
of sunflowers in Ukraine. In the same way, his eyes
lit up every time he got angry.
Your golden eyes drew miners to starve and fight to abandon their homes.
We were in his bed, naked, wrapped up in blankets
and speckled by the corner light in his room. It was
late, the kind of late that feels early. The air conditioner hummed in the place of our phones which
were both off and hidden somewhere in the room.
He did no wrong. He could not do any wrong. His
eyes were blank but telling like a wall in a foreclosed
home. All of his intentions were good. Yes. Good.
“Where in Ukraine?” I asked.
“Have you been eating?” he asks as he lifts up my
shirt.
“Kiev, the city squares. And to the huge fields of
flowers.”
“What kind of flowers?”
72
~
I squirm away and pull my shirt down.
“Yes, I ate just before I came here,” I say. I can still
taste the salt in my mouth.
“You look skinny,” he tells me with a hint of disdain
in his voice.
My heart soars. I look skinny. But he’s reaching for
my stomach again and once again I’m backing away.
We get into the car and drive to the gas station.
I say that I need to go use the restroom. While
Kita pumps the gas, I make my way into the small
Holiday bathroom. I put my sweater on the ground
and rest my knees on it, my usual routine. I stick my
finger down my throat and vomit into the toilet.
As I walk back outside, Kita is getting back into his
car. I get in the front seat and sniffle slightly.Kita
looks at me quizzically.
“You okay?” he asks me.
My eyes are watery, my nose is burning, and my
breath is putrid.
“I’m fine,” I say with a smile.
~
The elevator door was so cold against my cheek.
I watched the red numbers blink as they rose.
8...9...10...11. My vision was going fuzzy and grey,
my ears started ringing and throbbing.
11...12...13. Ding. The doors opened and my
wobbly legs carried me down the seemingly endless hallway. My hands were barely working; as I
watched them push my key into my apartment door
I could not feel it. The door opened, I could see my
living room window. I closed the door behind me
and collapsed on the ground.
“Why did you faint?” His words echoed behind the
screen of my phone.
“I just haven’t eaten a lot today.”
There was a silence so deafening that it struck fear
in my heart. Fear I had not known.
“When did you eat last?” He had anger in his voice.
I paused. He would know if I lied but he would hate
the truth.
“I had a little dinner last night,” I said quietly.
“What did you eat?” His reply was sharp.
I was shaking.
“I had a little bit of salad I think,” I said with a
quivering voice.
I could hear his sigh. I can still hear his sigh.
“How many times have we talked about this?” He
exclaimed.
“I know, I know, I’m sorry…”
It didn’t matter. He didn’t listen. I had failed him
again.
“Do you know what it’s like to have a girlfriend that
can’t even take care of herself ?”
“What am I going to tell my friends?”
“You’re not even trying.”
I was sobbing, I was convulsing, I was sweating, all
from my bed from which I could not move.
My phone was glued to my ear and I had no energy
to remove it.
“So what are you going to do about this?” There
was intense spite in his words.
With a shaky voice I said, “I could send you a picture of everything I eat?”
He laughed. With his full, angry throat he laughed
73
at my pain.
“And do what? Post it on Facebook? Show all my
friends that my girlfriend is an anorexic who
can’t even feed herself ? You know what, go ahead.
Maybe that’ll help you change.”
I couldn’t breathe. I wanted to die. My stomach
kept whispering “never again, never again,
never again.” Opening my mouth made me panic
because it reminded me of eating.
I hung up my phone and with wobbly legs I walked
outside in the snow and smoked an entire pack of
cigarettes.
~
Months go by. Months.
I watched him pack his bag with clothes that I had
never seen him wear. He packed light, only a few
shirts and two pairs of pants.
“My dad will buy me more when I get to Ukraine,”
he said.
I sat on the edge of his bed and watched him focus
on folding his clothes. His visa sat in the center of
the bed, staring at me. I started to cry.
“Babe, it’s going to be fine,” Kita said without
breaking focus.
I watched him form a pile of the shirts that I had
grown used to him wearing. They looked like wilted
flower petals.
74
“Why aren’t you taking those?” I asked, pointing to
the wilted pile.
“My father won’t like them,” he said.
Later that night, we were drinking red wine in his
bed. His room was bare and cold. I was curled
against his side, my head on his chest. He stroked
my bare back and played with my hair. I sighed, but
not the kind of sigh that’s followed with kisses. Kita
sighed too.
“Petra,” he said, a tone of exasperation in his voice.
“If I ever treat you like my father treats women,
please leave me.”
~
I still remember how to say “I love you” in Russian.
“я люблю тебя.”
Ya lyublyu tebya.
~
My fingers were bones.
Anything beyond mascara was too much, especially lipstick. He hated lipstick. He thought that it
brought too much attention to my mouth. He didn’t
like when other people noticed me.
He stopped smoking cigarettes and instructed me to
do so too. “They’ll make you age faster,”he would
say. If I had a bad day and smoked a cigarette, he
would tell me he was disappointed.
I lived with three men at the time, something that
Kita would never let me forget. He asked every few
days to be sure I wasn’t sleeping with any of my
roommates. If I was spending too much time with a
friend, he would tell me that I was neglecting him.
He sent me articles outlining how to be a better
partner. He reminded me that he just wanted me
to be the best that I could be. The screaming and
hour-long phone calls were footnotes.
You stripped me of my dignity and told me,
“This is what you have.”
Your monstrous arms crawl into my nightmares
Your titanic stature collided with my glacier
and though you claim I sank you
You were a behemoth and I was a stone.
At the end, I fell into the ground. His screams surrounded me in my echo chamber and suffocated me.
My knees were bruised from kneeling in front of
the toilet all night. How apt for the one accused of
dropping to her knees for all men. I was free but I
did not know it yet. All I knew was the cold floor of
my bathroom and the tales of beautiful but troubled
Ukraine.
My goodbyes have been said,
These addictions fed.
It’s the cost that comes with the sickness.
And your screams won’t be heeded anymore.
75
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE UN-SPECIALS
Halle Chambers
When we are little, even before we can speak
We are told that we’re special and that we’re
unique.
That we all are made different and that none are
the same
Which fits quite nicely in a toddler’s mind frame.
And we are told we should treasure what’s different inside,
That what makes us different is not something to
hide.
But then quite soon after, things start to change;
The word “different” stops meaning “special” and
starts meaning “strange.”
We’re sectioned off from our average peers
In our own little category and told,
“you belong here,”
And then different is bad and normal is good,
And for the different ones, nothing is working the
way that it should
The way we’ve been taught or the way we’ve been
shown
All we know is that we do not like being lost on
our own.
76
So once again we are taken away
To a place where things makes sense again and
we’re ok:
Where no one hurts us,
Where no one can see,
Where no one deserts us,
Where we can be free.
But because the un-specials can’t see what goes
on,
They decide to make things up and get so much
wrong.
And it’s happened for years because they can’t see
through that door.
So long they don’t even know that it’s wrong
anymore.
It’s so fixed in their heads that these lies are right;
They judge each special kid by their stereotype.
But today that will end.
So you sit there and you wait,
cause it’s about time someone set the dang record
straight.
You probably think that this poem won’t cut it,
But today I’m gonna open the door and don’t you
dare shut it!
To start, let’s be clear:
I am...I was in Special Ed.
But just because I was in that room doesn’t mean
I’m brain dead!
So for Pete’s sake, don’t puppy dog guard me!
Just give me a break, it isn’t that hard see:
If I need your help, I will tell you I do.
Just please,
Please don’t mock me.
In my place, would you want me to mock you?
“Oh come on! Let her get it! Go easy on
her!”
Help, where not needed, is almost as bad as a slur.
I’m not invalid
So don’t play that card.
Yeah, I’m a little quirky and oversensitive,
But I’m not, and I quote,
“A little retard.”
Yeah, I’ve been called names.
And those words?
They hurt.
They catch in the center,
In your pit of self worth.
And they tear and they rip,
And those words are collective.
Soon you start to believe that you are defective.
I’ve dealt with them all, and surprisingly,
I actually prefer the straight up bullies
To those who pretend to like me.
Fake friends and two-faces
Of all genders and races.
They’re only my friends so they don’t have to see
me cry.
Or they use me,
abuse me,
Oh, how they confuse me!
Cause I can’t tell what’s truth and what’s lie.
“Hey! He likes you. Go give him a kiss!”
And because I don’t know better, I believe this.
But soon I find they’re not playing Cupid,
They just wanna make me look stupid.
For their entertainment, they make me play the
77
fool;
They pretend that they care for me
When they’re really just cruel.
It takes time and takes work to make you forget;
Even now, I’m not quite there yet.
I mean, here I am, in what’s supposed to be
home,
And yet here I am, still feeling alone.
I’m still paranoid, it doesn’t just end;
I still have to ask if someone’s my friend.
I say one thing and mean another;
I make a mistake,
But you take it verbatim.
Can’t you cut me a break?
If we’re talking and I look like I’m lost,
Don’t blow it off like it’s not worth the cost.
Sarcasm and subtlety muddle in my brain,
So please just take a minute to explain.
Do these quirks make me broken?
Is there something wrong with me?
The way society has spoken,
There would seem to be.
78
Stop poisoning the minds of “different” young
women and men.
I don’t like being defective....
Can I be special again?
SOREX PALUSTRIS
Emilie Tomas
Did they name you for
Your wit, pointed
Nose of pointed judgement
Who brought us fire;
five to seven inches of shrewd truth?
Or was it your mischief
That Inspired them? Your
Presence followed by screams
And a three inch tail.
I saw your likeness on a stage,
Dirt in place of your midnight coat
Though she is reformed now.
Perhaps it was the gleam in your
Eyes; whispered fortunes and
A summer of silver birth.
Maybe you are a messenger
Of God, somehow in your Eighteen
months you learned to walk
On water, the second coming
Of Christ.
79
woodsy adam ruff
gabriel bergstrom
80
WORDS
Malena Larsen
The bathroom wall was covered in words.
Words like fuck and love and song lyrics and
names with hearts around them. His body
looked peaceful, somehow, as he sat propped and
slumped against the door. His head hung to his
right shoulder and his mouth was open like he
was about to say something but was interrupted.
There was blood running down his left arm like
a river and a needle hung loosely out of his skin.
The words that he had heard her say several
hours earlier were getting quieter and quieter.
“It’s not working,” she had told him. “I’m
sorry.” They were smoking cigarettes outside her
apartment when she said it. She knew he had
been trying to fix himself. After twenty-eight days
of treatment and one week in a sober house on
Lake and Fifth she barely recognized him. He was
twenty-five pounds heavier and his skin looked
clean and strong; there was no more grey in his
cheeks. It wasn’t just his change in appearance
that scared her. Lately, he had been telling her
the difference between wrong and right and that
she should stay in on the weekends. His family
couldn’t stop talking about how proud they were
of him and they would ask her, “Doesn’t he just
seem so much better?” She would answer with yes
but feel guilty because she wished he still liked to
make mistakes. His family had a party after he got
out of treatment and his grandfather kept saying
things like, “Men in this family have always been
strong!” and, “Now he can take care of you.” His
grandfather didn’t care for her much but he felt
that she was the least of the boy’s problems. He
didn’t like the way she hung on him like a scarf
or the way she agreed with everything he said
without a second thought.
As he sat on the bathroom floor the words
she had said were getting quieter and quieter.
They were almost gone. He had been sober for
thirty-five days and he didn’t know why. He didn’t
feel better or stronger or more loved. His hand lay
loosely on the floor, palm up and open like he was
waiting for somebody to hold it. Everyone was so
proud of him but he couldn’t imagine living his
life without her.
Long after her words had faded completely,
the bathroom door opened. He fell back onto the
floor. His head hitting hard against the tile.
81
“Oh my gosh!” The man who opened the door
yelled. “Can someone help?” He took out his
phone to call 911. A crowd of people rushed
over to where the man was dialing. A young man
pushed past the group of people.
“Move!” The boy got on his knees by the body on
the floor. He reached into his pocket and took out
something that looked like a pen. He stuck it into
the arm of the body that was needle free. People
gasped and murmured and watched. Sirens rang
in the distance. The boy holding the pen looked
up at the bathroom wall that had words like fuck
and love and song lyrics and names with hearts
around them. He looked up at the group of people.
“It’s not working,” he said.
82
MALCOLM AND THE BLUE SIDE
Danny Polaschek
Brown leaves dragged past Malcolm’s feet
in the wind. The bench underneath him felt like
a rock and he had to clench his jaw to keep his
teeth from chattering. He stared at the empty
playground—the tire swing, the slide, the bridge
and the fireman’s pole. Nikki rested her head on
his shoulder. Each time a breeze swept through,
Malcolm could feel her nuzzle slightly closer, her
hair scratching and tickling his neck.
When he was a kid, Malcolm had sat on this
exact same bench many times with his mother.
They lived in a little blue house just a few blocks
away— “just a hop and a skip,” his mother would
say and Malcolm would make it his mission to
jump and bunny-hop the whole way there.
When they arrived, they’d eat lunch, sitting
together on the narrow, wooden bench. After
each bite of his sandwich, Malcolm would beg his
mother to let him go play, to which she would give
in once she herself had finished eating.
He always went straight for the slide. Once
at the top, he’d yell, “I’m going under!” and
swing himself down into the blue plastic tube. He
imagined he was a deep-sea diver plunging into
an underwater world of sunken pirate ships and
forgotten chests of gold. On particularly sunny
afternoons, he’d stop halfway down the slide and
admire the shadows that moved about on the
illuminated, blue plastic. He’d make believe that
fish swam all around him as little blotchy shadows
hovered whimsically over his head.
He eventually got the idea to bring his crayons to the park with him. He’d sit lodged in the
blue slide for most of the day, drawing exotic fish
with bright oranges, yellows and reds. He knew
fish didn’t smile but nevertheless gave them all
wide grins and big eyes to match. When it was
time to go home, his mother would knock from
the bottom of the slide. “Time to come back to
shore!” she’d announce. Malcolm would hide his
crayons in his back pocket and slide down to his
mother who would wait there with open arms
grinning at him.
The park seemed smaller now. Malcolm
was just as tall as the fireman’s pole and half as
long as the slide. He wondered if his fabricated
underwater universe still existed. Probably not,
he guessed. Although it was getting dark, Mal83
colm could see thick graffiti creeping out from the
shadows inside the blue slide. Malcolm pulled his
sweatshirt tighter around his neck, brushing Nikki
away in the process.
He felt her eyes on his face but refused to
acknowledge her. Inside the slide, he could still
make out the words “Bitch Ass” in thick spray
paint. His crayon drawings would certainly be
gone, he was sure of it now. Nikki picked up Malcolm’s hand and caressed it, her cold skin feeling
leathery and smooth.
“Malcolm,” she said.
Malcolm turned and mustered a smile, taking
Nikki’s hands to his face and kissing them awkwardly.
“Malcolm, let’s go home.”
The streetlights had not yet turned on for
the evening. Malcolm noticed the shadows on
the sides of the road stretching out and growing
bigger as they walked quietly past. He missed the
warm sunshine of summer and the hot nights
spent lounging in the front yard listening to his
mother’s radio; he missed the walks to the park,
his mother laughing at him as he crouched and
hopped along beside her. He remembered the
secret thrill of the crayon box in his back pocket,
then realized he’d forgotten his cigarettes on the
bench at the park. He was too cold to turn back.
He reached out silently for Nikki’s hand and, finding it much warmer than his own, held it stiffly
the rest of the walk home.
84
driving at zero one
john herbert
85
driving at zero two
john herbert
86
PLACEMAKERS
Diamonique Walker
Near my home,
Balloons dance in the wind.
I have reconditioned myself — These are not balloons
from a party, But they still celebrate a life.
I drive by, sometimes I walk.
And see a balloon or several
With their heads bobbing away
Positioned obscurely on the sidewalk.
Or on the island in the middle of the highway. Sometimes on no one in particular’s grass.
I don’t look for party decorations. At the feet of the
balloon’s ribbons, candles, cards and little trinkets sit.
Some kind of offering.
Looking weathered and dull.
His body bled some place close by. Probably killed
within ten feet.
A dancing, mocking balloon
Somehow now gets to sway in his place.
87
NECESSARILY AN EVIL THING CONSIDERED IN ANY LIGHT
Jacob J. Miller
“You know what I hate about this most of
all?” asked the first man. “Nobody’s going to be
around to take responsibility. Nobody is going to
have to answer for their crime.”
“What crime is that?” the other man asked,
sitting next to him in the middle of the cul-de-sac,
both of them at perfect leisure in lawn chairs as if
waiting for a parade to pass by.
“Mass-murder, I suppose. Call it, oh, I don’t
know. Call it, um, inciting the apocalypse.”
“Ha.”
“They deserve to be the ones left behind
after they obliterate everyone else. They should
be the ones who have to reap the aftermath, puke
out their guts and feel their bile boil inside their
stomachs, fend off marauding cannibals and giant
insects. And they should have to live with the new
world they created, or destroyed, rather.”
Just then, the other man looked down and
saw a lonely ant crawling up his pant leg. “Yeah,
but I don’t think that giant bug stuff is true. That
wouldn’t happen. The bugs’ll die like everything
else.”
“I mean, what do you think it’ll be like? I
88
know it’ll happen instantaneously, but they say the
cerebral cortex functions after everything else has
shut down and we linger in a sort of dream-state,
which could last for, well, for who knows how
long?”
“Well, that’s if you’re in a hospital bed, or
you have a heart attack or something, when you
have time to die with a little bit of peace. Our
brains are going to incinerate along with the rest
of us. There won’t even be any stuff of thought
anymore. I don’t think we have to worry about
something like that.”
“But what if that moment of pain before we
go lasts longer, you know? What if time stands
still? Nothing makes sense in a moment of such
lunacy. Such catastrophe. What if we feel our
tongues liquefying and spilling down our throats
and scalding our internal organs? What if, all in
that moment, we look down, and before our eyes
boil and burst from the heat we see our bones
glowing purple through our flesh as it begins dripping off like wax? What if you turn and look at
me and the last image you see is my face melting
off like those Nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark?”
“I’m not sure it’s the best time to be thinking
like that,” his friend said, as the sirens began to
wail their sorrowful last.
“Why even bother with that fucking thing?”
the man steamed. “It’s inconsiderate, a futile
exhortation. We know what’s coming. We’re not
going to hide in our basements from it like it’s a
fucking tornado.”
“Tornadoes aren’t so easy to hide from either.”
The first man scanned the horizon for what
he knew would be the last time. He took in the
sight of the skyline he saw from his window every
day and, with lamenting eyes, imaginatively
anticipated its supplanting by a fiery mushroom
climbing the sky. He closed his eyes and winced,
unable to cope with the unthinkable thought, the
impossible inevitability. Turning his head toward
a neighbor’s yard whose household ran a daycare,
he opened his eyes to a post-apocalyptic tableau
of children’s toys scattered about the lawn. Nothing needed yet be aflame for the man to resent the
picturesque cliché of innocence lost on display
before him. “Remember when they used to tell
kids to hide under their desks?” he inquired. “All
that siren is doing is making sure that we spend
our last moments in a panic, instead of dying
gracefully, accepting that we’re all in the same
sinking ship, in the middle of the ocean, if the
ocean were the entire planet, and filled with lava
instead of water. We should be spending our time
reminiscing, because that’s all we have now.”
“Well, we can’t talk about our plans for the
future.”
“We can’t discuss potential medical advancements.”
“The coming cure for cancer.”
“And cloning organs. Scholarships our
children just received, the singularity and will
the Matrix ever become a reality; would we ever
make contact with life elsewhere in the universe,
intercept an asteroid, mine them for resources?
It’s all useless, man, meaningless. Every human
achievement since the first spark made from one
rock dragging against another, gone within the
next hour,” he sighed heavily, draping a ribbon
of helplessness over his words of outrage. “Why
don’t you open that up?” He suggested, pointing at the bottle of scotch sitting at the leg of
his friend’s chair. His friend took a swig before
passing it over with a satisfied groan. “Here’s to
everything we do being the last time it will ever be
done,” the first man began. “That’s the best I can
do.”
“Yeah,” the other man raised an empty hand,
toasting to the end and everything that came
before it. “I suppose there’s something beautiful about the entire world—or nearly the entire
world—going out the same way. There’s a kind
of universal solidarity occurring right now, don’t
you think? Some are praying, no doubt, some are
exalting their various saviors, certain they will be
raptured up any minute, but we’re all still going
to be experiencing the same thing, at almost the
exact same time; the same heat, the same instantaneous moment of searing pain before any trace
of our molecules are imprinted as a shadow on
the asphalt beneath us.”
He had a complex contraption of a chair, one
of the men—it doesn’t really matter which one
now that the end was there; the kind of chair that
folds upward from all four corners and was nearly
89
impossible to fit back into its cylindrical carrying
sack—not that that mattered anymore either—
complete with cup holders and a detachable headrest, which he was putting to use as he spoke. His
friend’s chair was more old-fashioned, a conventional folding lawn chair with a checkered pattern
of flimsy plastic wrapped taut around aluminum
pipes, wobbly hard plastic armrests drilled in and
not quite parallel to each other.
Their chair legs began melting into the tar
beneath them. One of the men hummed softly;
a beautiful soundtrack to accompany him in the
cut to black. The other man closed his eyes and,
focusing on the sounds of the encroaching death
rattle, heard them as the grunts and whinnies of
the four horsemen’s horses as they galloped atop
the planet’s rapidly spreading dust.
90
Show less
MURP
HYSQ
UARE
ISSUE 43 | 2018
VisualArt
&Literary
Magazine
MURPHY SQUARE
with special thanks to
cary waterman, faculty advisor emeritus
augsburg university student government
augsburg university english department
augsburg university art department
bookmobile
the echo
2
ISSUE 43
edit... Show more
MURP
HYSQ
UARE
ISSUE 43 | 2018
VisualArt
&Literary
Magazine
MURPHY SQUARE
with special thanks to
cary waterman, faculty advisor emeritus
augsburg university student government
augsburg university english department
augsburg university art department
bookmobile
the echo
2
ISSUE 43
editorial board
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF, editor-in-chief
GABRIEL BENSON, editor-in-chief
MEGAN JOHNSON, layout editor
DOUG GREEN, faculty advisor
3
MURPHY SQUARE
art editors
CASSIE DONG
OLIVIA FITCH
KRISTEN HOLMBERG
SONJA MISCHKE
MADELEINE OSWOOD
4
ISSUE 43
poetry editors
JENNIFER KOCHAVER
SONJA MISCHKE
RYAN MOORE
ASHLEY MURRAY
EVE TAFT
5
MURPHY SQUARE
prose editors
NINA BERGLIN
JULIA CHARRON
DEREK HEUER
SOPHIA KEEFE
JENNIFER KOCHAVER
RYAN MOORE
6
ISSUE 43
artwork
ALLISON USELMAN dixon street
CAMERON YANG capital hill balance
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #12
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #17
GABRIEL BERGSTROM beach day
AVA FOJTIK flower boy
AVA FOJTIK illuminated
AVA FOJTIK cat’s cradle
AVA FOJTIK pit party
ALLISON USELMAN elizabeth, 1972
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
ASH M. KAUN a stable relationship
CAMERON YANG prayer
ALLISON USELMAN forest
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #1
MADELEINE OSWOOD special agent dale cooper
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF basilica
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
STEPHANIE FREY celebration #5
CAM YANG she-wolf
GABRIEL BERGSTROM flower girl flower girl
MADELEINE OSWOOD untitled
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF light rail
GABRIEL BERGSTROM the spin
7
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82
84
MURPHY SQUARE
poetry
22 MATT PECKMAN constitution
23 RACHEL BROWN the country road that takes you home
25 D. E. GREEN a palpable hit
34 KELTON HOLSEN a closed library (an elegy to terry pratchett)
36 MARISA MOSQUEDA loneliness
42 MATT PECKHAM the icon
49 RACHEL BROWN old hands
51 HALLE CHAMBERS metal rings
53 SAM penitence
55 D. E. GREEN green and orange: a pantoum
57 ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF firebird
59 L. B. DOGOOD 12 west
61 ASHLEY MURRAY miikawaadendan (think it beautiful)
73 L. B. DOGOOD 52 hz
74 ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF roadkill
77 ALEXIS KIMSEY the eyes are the window to the soul
81 RACHEL BROWN galaxies
83 EVE TAFT sonas
8
ISSUE 43
prose
AMANDA YATCKOSKE rules
AMANDA YATCHOSKE fear
ASH M. KAUN 3:21
KELTON HOLSEN died 2016
ALLISON USELMAN tomatoes
SOPHIE KEEFE ode to leonardo
JACQUELINE DOCKA rhapsody on laurel
ALLISON USELMAN the wreck
DEREK L. H. infinite
GABRIEL BENSON the bridges
9
10
12
13
16
26
37
39
44
64
85
MURPHY SQUARE
rules
AMANDA YATCKOSKE
I t i s no t t hat ha rd. I t is ju s t wo r ds. W e ta ug
ht y o u t h is. Y ou j u st ne e d t o me m or ize t he
w o rds. Re m em be r t h e so und AT. A t, b a t, c
a t, s a t.
B ut, w h er e I s AT o n th e al p h ab et ?
I s n ’t t h at tw o s ou n ds? Wh a t ar e t he ru l e s?
I b ef o re E e xc ept a f te r C e x c ep t f o
r a ll o f t h e e x c ep t io n. Y ou m us t a lw a ys s
top a t a s top li gh t. E x ce p t w hen t he l ig h t is
gr e e n. H ow m an y w a y s i s t he re t o sp e ll l o
ngA?
A. R a in. E igh t. S ur v e y. At e. Ve in. P
r a y. B r e a k.
Y o u k n o w E ng li sh r ul e s? S u re. W
h ich o n e s r ig h t?
b. B r a in.
c. P ra
d. B re ig h n.
e. P re y.
f. Br ein.
g. Pra y.
h. B re an.
i. All. So, shut it.nostra, per inceptos himenae
a. B ra n e.
10
ISSUE 43
dixon street
ALLISON USELMAN
relief print
11
MURPHY SQUARE
fear
AMANDA YATCHOSKE
Ordering fast food because the text keeps getting
smaller.
Getting lost because white letters don’t
make since on green.
The teacher saying, “Why don’t you read?”
The what-the-fuck-is-wrong-with-you look when I say,
“No.” Saying, “Yes,” and then my brain betrays me.
The jolt of correcting impatience as I attempted to
decipher.
Knowing that it has four legs, a tail, plays
fetch, and has sweat glands in its paws, but not that
the word is dog.
The double circles on the letter g. The
letter bdqp.
The explanation between right and left,
“your left hand makes a L.” I put a L to my forehead,
“Is this right?”
The phrase, “Read this,” followed by two
seconds of a blurry cellphone screen.
Being asked to read what is on the projector
in class.
Beaing correkted on a spelling mistaik.
The rased ibrow when I proove that it was English
that was the mistaek, not me.
Being given a book because I am a writer.
The list of authors that I should know because I am
a writer. “You are an author, so you started written
at an early age.” “My best advice to give to you as a
writer is read.”
Teachers’ saying, “In the really world, they
don’t give special accommodations.”
Running into my elementary teacher who
said, “There’s no such thing as dyslexia.”
Being given five minutes to reading five
pages. Only reading half a page. Everyone else is
done at three minutes.
Able to repeat our entire conversation
back to you word for word, but still get an upturned
nosed because I can’t remember the nonsense word
that is your name.
Asking a classmate to look at my writing.
Their only response: “Spelling mistakes.”
12
ISSUE 43
3:21 p.m.
ASH M. KAUN
It’s four minutes past 3:02 p.m., and he still hasn’t
rounded the corner. Jaime always has a sauntering
stride that brings him swooping around the corner
of Elton Street onto Jefferson around 3:02 p.m.
every Tuesday on his way to this café. Jaime and his
usual pair of red chucks are refusing to step onto
the chalked concrete that details this very corner.
Or maybe it’s not refusal. Maybe it’s just a delay.
Something is probably holding him at home. His
mother is making him take out the trash as we speak
and that can be the explanation behind Jaime’s
absence. Or, maybe it’s fear. I knew talking to him
was a bad idea. I knew I would say something stupid.
Last Friday, when he was tucked away in the
back room of Molly’s Tea Bar, I felt the inclination
in my heart. My chest urged me to stand up, take the
nine steps toward his table, sit down, and open my
mouth. The only problem was his eyes. Those eyes
liked to wander over everything. They darted to the
shop’s windows every time some stranger walked by,
but only to assess the person for a second and then
dart back to his book. His eyes never attempted to
crawl all over my body like that. I’ve found that my
focus almost never seemed to leave his body.
I hit my leg on the way up from my booth,
cursing under my breath. My leg muscles quivered
slightly as I walked up to the table and sat down.
Jaime’s face raised, and I could finally feel his
almond eyes searching every pore of my exposed
skin. His shoulders were hunched over, hiding most
of his thick neck from my view. I would pay any
amount of money to caress that gorgeous neck. The
breath that moved his lungs in and out of his chest
was calm, unlike the unsteady deep breaths of mine.
“Hi. I know this is weird, but I just wanted
to compliment your tattoo,” I said.
He shifted, set his book down, and cleared
his throat. “Thank you. It’s hardly anything, but
thank you.”
“It’s a cupcake, right? What’s it for?”
“My grandmother used to bake the most
delicious cupcakes and muffins and—”
“A delicious tattoo for a delicious person.”
Jaime had let out a breathy laugh, and
asked where I went to school. When I told him I
didn’t go to school, he offered to get me a tea. I
mentioned my mother was expecting me at home.
13
MURPHY SQUARE
I lied. My mother died when I was twelve years
old. He took my number with, what I thought to
be, hardly any intention to use it. Little did I know,
9:03 a.m. on Tuesday morning, I would feel a buzz
on my asscheek with a deep voice ringing through
my phone’s speaker asking to get coffee with me.
And now, I’m waiting like the idiot I
am. I know he isn’t staying at the gym this long.
His routine is exactly 48 minutes every Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday, and it ends promptly
around 2:35 p.m. each day. The time in between
the gym and the library is probably for a shower and
a quick slice of pizza or toast. It never takes him
longer than twenty minutes before he walks out the
front door, locks the iron gate, and makes his way
past the Weltons’, the Hannigans’, and the Jensens’.
It’s 3:08 p.m.. I look up from the newspaper
in my hand and glance, again, at the rusted sign
presenting the names Elton and Jefferson. Nothing.
I return the newspaper to its natural fold and scoot
the chair back with a push. The loud screech almost
made me jump as much as looking up and seeing
Jaime. He locks eyes with mine, and he smiles. His
perfectly sized hand reaches into the air and waves
at me. Blood surges into my cheeks. Jaime strolls
across the tar and stops two feet from where I’m
standing. I sit back down, and he proceeds to take
the seat across from me.
The bright sun could never compare to the
amount of heat radiating from my body. I can’t tell
if I’m nervous or excited. Probably excited.
“So what’s the plan?” he asks
.
“Going back to my place to watch my
favorite movie?” I say.
“Is it a good movie?”
“You need to have a rare and particular
taste for this movie, but it’s short and painless. I
promise.”
“Alright. Sounds like a plan.”
The corners of my mouth rise. His face
mirrors mine. Jaime hooks his arm with my arm,
and I lead him the opposite way from which he
came. I check my watch. 3:11 p.m. It’s a ten-minute
walk to my place. It’s difficult to settle the little
child jumping around inside my brain. It’s taking
every ounce of control I contain not to shove my
hand into my bag at this exact moment and pull
out the needle. That green serum is just begging to
be injected somewhere. Maybe his beautiful neck.
The zip ties will not be far behind, as they yearn for
the tension of his muscles against their industrial
strength. Jaime has no idea the taste I acquired
long ago, and he could never appreciate the simply
genius idea of adding one cup of blood to a batch of
cupcakes.
14
ISSUE 43
capitol hill balance
CAMERON YANG
digital photograph
15
MURPHY SQUARE
died 2016
KELTON HOLSEN
Engman Prize winner
In 2016, my grandparents’ dog died. He was an old
dog, covered with warts, and they had to put him
down due to his misery. Some time later, their other
dog died, presumably of grief.
In 2016, Star Trek actor Anton Yelchin
died. He was getting his mail when his car rolled
down his driveway and crushed him against his
security fence. The coroners say he most likely died
within a minute or so.
In 2016, Josef Stalin had been dead for 64
years. During his reign, roughly 100 million people
died, largely due to stupidity. Historians consider
Stalin to be guilty of roughly one million murders.
Stalin might or might not have said the
following: “The death of one man is a tragedy. The
death of millions is a statistic.”
In 2016, I graduated from high school.
In 2016, the singer, musician, and celebrity
known as The Artist Formerly Known as Prince
(full legal name: Prince Rogers Nelson), died in an
elevator after overdosing on the opioid fentanyl.
After his death, five books were written about him,
his ashes were put on display in a custom glass urn
in Paisley Park, and on the one-year anniversary of
his death, a four-day tribute was put on in his honor.
My former high school robotics captain
shared an article on Facebook describing three
women that were caught with luggage containing
three million dollars’ worth of heroin and opium. He
wrote: “Good. Don’t waste your life on a worthless
drug.”
Later in 2016, he committed suicide.
One million, seven hundred thousand
people died of tuberculosis. One million people
died of HIV or AIDS. Four hundred and twenty-nine
thousand died of malaria. Most of those people lived
in Africa.
Carrie Fisher died of sleep apnea, four
days after a near-fatal heart attack that turned out to
be fatal after all. One day later, her mother, Debbie
Reynolds, died as well. Fisher later appeared in
the movie Rogue One, much younger, through the
magic of CGI.
In 2016, most of us thought that Donald
Trump’s campaign would die before the end of the
primaries. Many of us thought Donald Trump’s
campaign would die before the end of the election.
In 2016, some of us thought democracy had died.
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We might have been right.
In 2016, I marched with a few hundred
(or was it thousand) of my close friends, who I
hardly knew, through the neighborhoods of CedarRiverside and Seward. A little bird told my parents
that I had marched in the protest. The only thing
they cared about was whether I had been on the
highway (I hadn’t).
In 2016, three thousand, eight hundred
refugees drowned while trying to cross the
Mediterranean Sea, fleeing war and human rights
violations back home. Their odds were still likely
better than in Syria, where the death toll from the
civil war had reached three hundred and twenty
thousand.
In 2016, six hundred and fifty-two children
died in Syria. Two hundred and fifty-two of them
died near a school.
In 2016, Antonin Scalia, Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court, died unexpectedly at his
ranch. The absence of Antonin Scalia proved more
politically powerful than the presence of Antonin
Scalia, as politicians fought and lobbied over who
would get to fill his empty chair. During that time,
his empty chair cast many a vote. A popular slogan
at the time among the ironic internet sort: “Antonin
Scalia. Pro-life, died anyways.”
By the end of 2016, most of us had noticed
how many great people had died throughout the
year. Antonin Scalia was not included in many of
those conversations.
Nine hundred and sixty three people were
shot by police officers in the United States. Many
of them were African-American. Many of them
were mentally ill. In protest, activists marched on
highways. Many of them were arrested. Many of
them were criticized, threatened, and degraded for
making people late to work.
In 2016, several thousand (hundred?) of
my close friends made people late to work.
In 2016, David Bowie died. I don’t
remember how. It was after his death that I got to
know his music. This is because my dad put a David
Bowie CD in the car.
In 2016, I went to college. I started
growing out my hair and becoming a socialist. I met
a lot of people who had faith in the system. That
died in 2016 too.
In 2016, Fidel Castro died. It was said that
he had outlived his greatest enemy: America.
Fidel Castro’s country, Cuba, is still the
subject of a US embargo. It also is the country
that recently developed a vaccine for lung cancer.
The Lung Cancer Foundation estimated that one
hundred fifty-eight thousand and eighty people in
the US would die of lung cancer in 2016.
In 2016, six hundred thirty-three thousand,
eight hundred forty-two people died of heart disease
in the United States. The Mayo Clinic says that heart
disease is often “caused by correctable problems,
such as an unhealthy diet, lack of exercise, being
overweight and smoking”.
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In 2016, the fast food industry made
$206.3 billion dollars.
Alan Rickman, Harry Potter’s Snape, died
of pancreatic cancer. He had kept it a secret from
all but his closest friends. His good friend Sir Ian
McKellan had this to say: “I so wish he’d played
King Lear and a few other classical challenges but
that’s to be greedy. He leaves a multitude of fans and
friends, grateful and bereft.”
In 2016, I got into an argument with my
cousin on Facebook over a post that talked about
how the gun and the Bible, which ostensibly started
this country, were the things “liberals” wanted
to take away. This was before I learned the other
meaning of “liberal.” My tongue-in-cheek response
that “guns don’t found countries, Founding Fathers
found countries” turned into a useless slog of an
argument. My aunt ended up intervening to ask us
to debate on-topic.
Over thirty-eight thousand people were fatally shot
and killed in the United States. The Onion once
again ran their headline: “‘No Way To Prevent This,’
Says Only Nation Where This Regularly Happens.”
In 2016, thirty-nine people died because
they jumped off the Golden Gate Bridge. The bridge
is the site of the most suicides by fall in the United
States.
One man, Ken Baldwin, had survived
jumping off the bridge in 1985 and was still alive
in 2016. He related his thought process on the way
down in an interview: “I instantly realized that
everything in my life that I’d thought was unfixable
was totally fixable—except for having just jumped.”
In 2016, nobody was killed by a clown.
However, were you to ask people what the scariest
thing happening was, many would tell you that it
was the phenomenon of “scary clown” sightings
across the country.
In 2016, one such sighting happened at
Augsburg. It was later determined that the figure in
the “photographic evidence” was just a maintenance
worker standing in a shadow.
According to Business Insider, nine
hundred and fifty-one people died of “contact with
powered lawnmower.” One thousand, one hundred
thirty nine people died of “fall[s] involving iceskates, skis, roller-skates or skateboards.” Ten
thousand, two hundred and six died of “accidental
suffocation and strangulation in bed.” Another ten
thousand, three hundred eighty-six died of “fall[s]
involving bed.”
In 2016, the bedloft company left their
screwdriver in my room after coming by with some
extra screws for the bed’s assembly. My dad warned
me to periodically make sure all the bolts were tight
so the bed didn’t collapse under me while I slept.
The bed also featured a metal guardrail to prevent a
fall. Due to these two things, I did not join those ten
thousand, three hundred eighty-six.
In 2016, American astronaut John Glenn
died of unknown causes at 95 years old. He was
remembered for being the first American to orbit
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the earth, as well as his work in the US Senate.
In 2016, the world had seven billion, six
hundred million people living in it. By December
of 2016, fifty eight million, six hundred eighty
thousand people had died, with about twentyone people dying every ten seconds. They died
of violence, of disease, of hunger, of preventable
causes, of cancer, of accidents, of old age, of
nothing at all. About one hundred and forty million
new people were born in 2016, ready to embark on
a new life’s journey.
Kurt Vonnegut had this to say to babies:
“Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It’s hot in the
summer and cold in the winter. It’s round and wet
and crowded. On the outside, babies, you’ve got a
hundred years here. There’s only one rule that I know
of, babies— ”God damn it, you’ve got to be kind.”
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celebration #12
STEPHANIE FREY
found images and gouache paint
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celebration #17
STEPHANIE FREY
found images and gouache paint
21
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A progressive discussion on equality,
government, bodily functions, UFOs
constitution
MATT PECKMAN
and who to call for
a good time is enumerated
Engman Prize winner
and signed on bathroom stall walls
by delegates opposing orders
from management: a decree taped
to the door typed Thank You
For Not Vandalizing
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I hope they wind their way
to the silhouettes of mountains
faded like clouds of blue smoke
against easy skies.
I hope the chartreuse pines older than time
tower like brothers and shade your tired eyes.
the country roads that take
you home
RACHEL BROWN
Engman Prize winner
For Gary
Inspired by “Take Me Home, Country Roads” by John Denver
I hope, for once, the traek is easy.
You won’t need a pack this time,
that 50 pounds on your shoulders
to lug uphill the whole way.
No, just the clothes on your back are good.
I hope that the ancient rivers that have sung
since before anyone ever listened,
guide your steps across slick gray stones
and you look down to see
the scales of darting fish
flashing like memories against a sun
that never sinks.
I hope a warm breeze passes by on your way
carrying the thick scent of pine sap
to lay heavy on your tongue,
and I hope it tastes like home.
And when you rest your aching feet at the summit
I know the clouds will wrap around you
the way the red fox wraps her tail around her tiny
kits,
the way an old friend gently squeezes your shoulder
when he tells you how good it is to see you again,
because it’s been so long.
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MURPHY SQUARE
beach day
GABRIEL BERGSTROM
35mm film camera
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ISSUE 43
Nicked it—the deer
in early autumn darkness
on a long drive home. Damage
minor: Dented hood. Fear
sprayed along the driver’s side
of the white Focus.
Your relief at my safety
trumped the deer’s fate—
no longer second fiddle
to squirrels and red-throated
blackbirds that swoop at the car
between late-summer cornfields.
That deer—the white rump
in the light moving too slowly
even as I brake, veer toward
the ditch. The deer dies
or I do. Kill or be killed.
It hits me: This world
we live—and die—in.
I see it now: the fact
of nature, our nature,
visible—a Confederate
monument in a town
square, Mount Rushmore
on sacred ground.
It’s always been
this way—sudden death
looming on a highway
in unaccustomed
autumn dark,
so near home
and you.
a palpable hit
D. E. GREEN
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tomatoes
ALLISON USELMAN
Harry Cosgrove used to throw tomatoes out of his 5th
story apartment in The Village. He told me that he
did it because The Gaslight always made him take
home the uneaten tomatoes at the end of the night,
and he didn’t like to just throw food in the garbage,
but I never believed him. He always seemed to have
altogether too much fun speedballing the tomatoes
down to the sidewalk, especially late on Friday nights
when the club wouldn’t let him play.
He would call on Friday nights at least once
a month, and my roommate would throw up her
hands and groan and say, “Honestly, he has nothing
better to do?” But I always kind of liked the tomatoes.
Harry liked to spend his paychecks on gin and
wine, so there was a good chance that throwing the
tomatoes would turn into a game after a few hours.
Last Friday he called around eleven and
told me that the club had given him more tomatoes
than he could handle on his own and asked me to
come over. I took a single look at my roommate, who
sat on the cramped balcony in her bathrobe and night
cream, and told him that I would be over soon. She
didn’t ask where I was going when I knocked on the
glass to tell her goodbye, and she only rolled her eyes
and shifted in her chair.
The walk to Harry’s place was never all that
bad in the summer. The air would be cool enough
that you would have to wear a jacket, but never as
icy or biting as it was in the winter. During those
months I tried to take a taxi over, if only to save my
toes rather than my wallet. But no matter what the
season, no matter what the weather, a jacket was
always necessary in that 5th story apartment in The
Village.
Harry’s place was constantly drafty and
there was nothing that he could do about it, or so he
claimed. Knowing Harry, though, I always assumed
that he forgot to shut a window somewhere and just
didn’t want to admit to it. He was forgetful sometimes,
especially around the anniversary of his sister’s death.
The night that he called me, we sat in the kitchen,
both of us with a blanket around our shoulders trying
to keep warm even though it was late May. I was on
the kitchen counter, right next to the sink and the
empty cardboard box with the red sun painted on
the side that had once been filled with almost rotten
tomatoes. Harry stood by the table, leaning back on
the top, his palms flat against the water-stained wood.
“I’ve been thinking a lot about Suzanne.
It’s been three years since she died, you know.”
His hair was growing long and was starting
to curl. When he looked down at his sock feet, his
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hair bunched up at the top of his head and flopped
down in front of his face. His eyes seemed to not only
have sunken farther down than usual on his face, but
so had his cheek bones. Looking at them make me
want to poke his face, if only to made sure that all the
bones were still there.
I slid off of the counter and walked over to
the kitchen table. I had nothing to say, so I leaned
back on to the table with Harry and kicked off my
shoes, so we would match. He didn’t seem to notice
that I was even there next to him, though; he just
continued to look at his own feet, his blanket sagging
off of his shoulders and pooling at his elbows like
a shawl. I half expected him to look up and start
talking to the empty space next to the sink and the
abandoned cardboard box, not even noticing that I
was no longer there.
“Do you think she’s happy?”
“I sure hope so.”
I straightened his collar and brushed a
piece of lint off of his sleeve.
“Thank you.” He sounded tired. “That was
bothering me, but I was afraid that if I tried to fix it I
would fall over.”
I glanced down at his hands and noticed
that they were not just resting on the table, but rather
gripping the edge of it. His knuckles had turned
white, and his knees were shaking.
“Do you want to sit down? You don’t look so
good.”
I hadn’t meant for it to sound like an insult,
but at that moment I thought I saw the insides of his
eyebrows curl up into a whimper. He was too sensitive
sometimes.
“I feel fine. I really do, I just wish I had
more tomatoes, you know?”
Yes, I told him. Yes, I think that everyone
wishes they had more tomatoes, if only because that
meant they had everything else. I don’t think he heard
the last part of what I said. The confirmation that he
was not the only one in search of more tomatoes was
enough. Still, his hands gripped the edge of the table,
and so I reached out and pried them off. I didn’t like
the way that they looked, drained of all blood.
“Come on, why don’t you sit down.”
Harry moved his head up and down in a way
that might have been mistaken for a nod by someone
who didn’t know him well enough to know that that
was just the way he breathed; his head wobbling back
and forth as his lungs compressed and decompressed.
Sometimes I wanted to tap the back of his
head, just to see how long it would wobble back and
forth. I even had a stopwatch that I could have used.
Harry had given it to me, and was originally meant to
be used as a way for me to monitor the length of his
act when he played at The Gaslight. I usually forgot to
start it, which didn’t really matter because by the end
of the night Harry would be too busy fighting with
the club’s owner, to get his fair share of the basket, to
care about how long his gig had lasted.
I walked over to the bookshelf, that never
had any books on it, but that was instead the home
of a fine Victrola record player, the only thing Harry
valued more than his guitar. I lifted the needle up and
moved it over the top of the 45 that was already in
place on the turntable. The table started to spin, and
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MURPHY SQUARE
a song with a tinny sounding guitar filled the room.
A woman began singing in French, her voice low and
the words slurred.
“Harry, you can’t listen to this type of music
when you feel this terrible. It’ll just make it worse.”
He only shrugged and made his way over to
the couch. The cushions pulled him in as if they had
been waiting for him a very long time. I hated to see
him so low, but I knew that there was nothing I could
say to make it better. The first year after Suzanne
died, someone had made the mistake of telling
him that her death was all part of God’s plan and
everything would one day make sense to him. Harry
had taken his drink and thrown it at the man, and
since then he has been banned from ever drinking
at The Gaslight. He’s only allowed to play there once
a month now. So I knew that saying anything at all
would equate to me telling Harry to take a flying leap
out of his apartment window, along with his almost
rotten tomatoes. I pulled the 45 off the turntable and
slid it back into its sleeve.
“Is there a window open somewhere?” I
shuddered and pulled the blanket tighter around my
shoulders. Harry wasn’t responsive, he only slightly
moved his eyes to look up at me and search for the
music that had stopped so suddenly. I thought about
putting something else on, but after glancing through
his melancholy record collection I thought better of
it. There was no use feeding into his sullen mood.
The only thing I could do then, was sit
down on the couch next to him and wait for it to pass.
Because it did. It always passed in the end, and the
next weekend he would be playing at The Gaslight,
telling jokes to the crowd between songs and basking
in the floodlights.
...
“I don’t know why I even bother to wear
this thing.” Harry hooks his fingers around the knot
of his tie and loosens it. “It’s not like anyone here
cares how I look.”
He moves his arm in a sweeping motion,
gesturing to the café and the ragged groups of people
sitting at the tables. I watch as Harry sits up and
reaches for the pack of cigarettes on the coffee table.
He shakes out a single cigarette and places it between
his teeth. He sighs and pulls his hair back out of his
face, exposing his forehead, which is covered in a thin
layer of sweat. He shrugs and turns to face the dimly
lit stage, the unlit cigarette wobbling in his mouth.
The woman on the stage wears a chunky green
sweater and a pair of blue jeans, and Harry taps his
foot along to the beat of the song that she sings. All
the tables near the stage are full, and the faces of the
people sitting at them are washed in the glow of the
floodlights.
The woman leans into the microphone as
she sings, her hands moving quickly up and down the
frets of her guitar.
“She’s pretty good, huh?”
I shrug and throw a pack of matches over
to Harry. He catches them midair. “She looks a little
like Suzanne, don’t you think?” I immediately regret
saying anything, but it’s too late now.
“Yeah I guess she does.” Harry brushes off
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my comment, and doesn’t look at me while he speaks.
Instead he watches the woman on the stage sing.
“If I’m gonna have to split the basket, it
might as well be with someone who has some talent.”
He puts the unlit cigarette back into his mouth,
letting it perch between his teeth, resting on his
bottom lip. He shifts in his seat, readjusting his jeans,
and bobs his head along to the rhythmic strumming
of the green sweater-clad woman. I imagine that there
is a blanket on his shoulders again, sliding down to
his elbows and almost falling off as he bobs to the
music, but the air is too thick for blankets. There are
no windows here. Harry’s eyes jump from customer
to customer in the front of the club, and I can tell
he is assessing the crowd, attempting to get a grip
on what kind of music they want to hear tonight. My
stomach rumbles audibly, and he turns back to me
and laughs.
“You want something to eat? Why don’t you
eat while I play, and then we can see what Jean is
doing later?” I ask him who Jean is, and he motions
to the woman on the stage. I just nod, and I walk over
to the bar. When I look back at Harry, I notice that he
has finally lit his cigarette.
“Chicken sandwich,” I say, telling the
bartender my order, and turn to face the stage again.
The woman in the green sweater dips her head down
as the crowd claps, and the expression on her face is
passive as she exits the stage and passes Harry, who is
waiting at the steps.
“You want everything on it? Tomatoes too?”
I turn around to look at the man behind the bar. He
is raising his eyebrows at me, and for some reason
that I can’t explain, I don’t have an answer for him. I
glance back at the stage that Harry now occupies. He
is settling into his seat on the stool, hunched over his
guitar. But unlike the woman in the sweater, I can
see that below the curly hair that covers the top of his
face like a mop, he is smiling.
“No. No tomatoes.” The man behind the
bar writes my response on a small blue pad of paper
and nods. He walks away quietly, leaving me alone
to listen to the soft guitar sounds coming from the
stage, and my own beating heart.
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flower boy
AVA FOJTIK
digital photograph
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illuminated
AVA FOJTIK
digital photograph
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cat’s cradle
AVA FOJTIK
digital photograph
pity party
AVA FOJTIK
digital photograph
33
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the library is closed now, and
dark
looking through its endless aisles
stretching nearly into infinity
one can barely make out where a great ape,
majestic, would swing between the
shelves
a closed library
KELTON HOLSEN
Engman Prize winner
(an elegy for terry pratchett)
once, this place was full of life,
and people came and went and words came and went
and the shelves really did stretch out to
infinity
but now i turn the corner
and encounter for the first time
a blank wall
the books are sparser here, tamer
less skittering metaphors, and the satire has less
bite
(when you get old they take away your teeth
or you forget them)
my hands brush the spines
slowly,
as the pages begin to unbind themselves, to settle
upon the floor;
a sea of lilac blossoms in the month of may.
i tuck one behind my ear; how do they rise up.
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elizabeth, 1972
ALLISON USELMAN
charcoal and pencil
35
MURPHY SQUARE
Loneliness
Eats away at you until
there is nothing left but
Loneliness
loneliness
MARISA MOSQUEDA
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ode to leonardo
SOPHIE KEEFE
There are some conversations that can only be held
late at night. During car rides through streets that
are so familiar you can navigate them with your eyes
closed, the rise and fall of the landscape and bumps
in the asphalt marking the strip mall with the Dollar
Tree and Chinese take-out chain, or the winding
parkway that loops around the lakes in a lazy curlicue.
When a dark, velvety blanket covers the world and
softens its edges. Something about the darkness
makes the apprehensions that live somewhere deep
within that twisted knot of uncertainty in the pit
of your stomach a bit easier to bring out through
your skin and into the open air. Or, at least into the
confined air of a moving vehicle. When my brother
is home from college for the summer, we go on these
car rides a lot. Everyone else in the house has settled
down to sleep, and for some reason our restlessness
seems synchronized. He’ll walk into my room, or I’ll
wander into his and within minutes the two of us are
padding across the back deck towards the garage,
a cool breeze gently diluting the day’s humidity.
Maybe these conversations also need to be had with
someone whose familiarity surpasses the surface
level knowledge of a childhood neighborhood. An
individual who knows your strengths and secrets and
holds them to be as sacred as their own. Sometimes,
I feel bad for people who don’t have a twin. The
entire time I’ve been on this earth (granted that time
has been relatively short), there’s existed someone
whose been figuring out life at exactly the same
pace. Someone to compare notes with, so to speak.
That isn’t to say the two of us are alike. Beyond
our profiles and shape of our noses, we’re about as
different as two people can be. He knows every word
to the musical Wicked’s soundtrack not by choice,
but because when we were ten I sang it around the
house every day for a year. When we were in sixth
grade, he forced me to play the board game Risk with
him, and halfway through I stormed out in tears,
frustrated that the tactics were too complicated for
me to understand, but he mastered immediately. In
another dimension, if we hadn’t shared a womb, who
knows if we even would have been friends? That’s
something I think about a lot; the universe granting
me a companion, tied by blood. Indirectly, he’s
always teaching me something about what it means
to be human. A reminder that even when it feels like
life is a series of benchmarks that we all check off
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until we eventually die; the spaces between those
benchmarks are filled with complexities. Triumphs
and mistakes, rash decisions and arguments, family
picnics, meals, jokes, lovers, tears, and joys that are
all unique to you; tailored by your personality, your
likes and dislikes, your heritage, your home. I share
most of the essentials with Leo. The smaller stuff is
perfectly, and beautifully his. I’m just the lucky one
who gets to go on the late-night car rides.
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rhapsody on laurel
JACQUELINE DOCKA
Engman Prize winner
Laurel. Lauraceae. Laurus nobilis. Symbols of
victory. A symbol of status. Who’s the victor here?
Apollo’s pursuit, transfigured to a tree. Trapped
within an organic being, living on Laurel while
pursuing baccalaureate.
Lived near a church once. Never thought
she’d mind the bells. They say the building used to
house the nuns and priests. Condemned now. She
drives past and parks in the garage. Bong, bong,
bong. The bells sound in the background ringing
clearly. She thinks of the time she spent there and
how unhappy they were.
Hearing people screaming in the street.
The thrum of the city. A string pulled taut. Twang,
someone being shot. Ring ring ring goes the phone.
A tinny voice says, what’s your emergency. She’s
afraid there’s someone dying in their street. No cops
come. She bought them pepper spray the day after
the first night. Wondered if it would be enough,
hoped it would be enough.
The bells, the constantly ringingbooonnngg, booonnngg, booonnngg. Amazing she
could hear them over the traffic of the city. She could
be miles from home and still hear the clanging. Fear,
fear, constant fear. Waking up in the middle of the
night, heart pounding, wondering if someone’s gotten
into the apartment. Grabbing a metal nightstand
ready to bludgeon someone. No one there. Lay back
down. Try to sleep.
Someone wrote Hell in spray paint outside
the building. Trying to tell the world what this building
was—as if the residents weren’t aware. A home for
nuns and priests. Where only the condemned live
now. Home is where the heart is. Heart of the city.
Sacred heart, binded heart, wounded heart. Blood,
too much, blood. Don’t know if they survived that
night.
Show me someone who says they got no
baggage, I’ll show you somebody who’s got no story,
nothing gory means no glory, but baby please don’t
bore me.
Time creates distance. She still wakes up
feeling itchy. Thought it was a weird rash. Allergic to
something? They come out of the walls at night. Big
fat things feast on your blood. Caught them, put them
in a jar to show inspectors. They explain, she could
have gotten them anywhere. She wonders are they in
his pocket?
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They coped. Started a Death Count for
all the mice they killed—53. Shower turns off in
the middle. Covered with soap and no water. Kayla
rinsing her hair with the cold water from the fridge.
Happier now? Than then?
Moments of happiness even then. Photos
taken. Snap, click, shutter. Kayla standing in front
of the window holding Honey. Her favorite photo of
them. Hearing bands play at the Block Party coming
through their windows. Cuddling together on the
couch with every blanket they owned because the
heater randomly turned off. No working stove for
nine months, so much ramen, whistling locomotive
radiators when they did work. No, focusing on the
good there. So close to school, so close to work, so
close to everything. Their only option.
Perfect time to escape. She didn’t sleep
anyways. Kayla into movies and shows. Her into
books. All the reading she did in that house. Lying
awake reading. Hyper-vigilance. Might as well be
productive. Coming home to their door kicked in.
Had to go inside, every sense telling her to run. No
one there, they’d left. Cops only took two hours to
show. At least they showed. Trusted man helped nail
the door back together.
Oh girl, this boat is sinking, there’s no sea
left for me, and how the sky gets heavy, when you are
underneath it! Oh. I want to sail away from here. And
god, He came down, and said nothing.
As much as they could they lived at the
library, at school, at work. Spent as little time in
their home as possible. Running up and down those
breathless stairs. Them walking down Hennepin.
Whoooooshhh. A burst of wind. There goes the 4, 6,
12, on and on and on. They made it to air conditioned/
heated safety. Much nicer here. So quiet, no screams,
bathrooms that work.
Someone at the window of her car.
Booonnngg, booonnngg, taptaptap, booonnngg,
booonnngg.
-Are you okay?
-I’m fine, yes, fine. Thank you she says.
Back to the present, still staring at the building.
Everything is boarded up. Wonder if undesirables still
board there behind the boards. Looking at the top
floor, less boards, a sheet flutters behind a window. A
roof better shelter than the street.
In the end, they had to leave so much
behind. Pieces of their lives thrown away like trash. Her
grandmother’s rocking chair. Everything else in bags for
two years. Effugium, paululum effugiunt, fugit.
40
ISSUE 43
untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD
pencil
41
MURPHY SQUARE
I consider myself
an environmentalist So
when the black bear
knocked I motioned
him in to the couch
tossed him a beer
In a Transatlantic accent
the leaded TV spoke charged
young names I asked him
his thoughts on mass
incarceration. He glugged
his beer An outside child
screamed over sidewalk
chalk I asked the bear
how to fix the school
system He growled facing D.C.
My stomach stormed
campaign rallies I stood
Have you come to figurehead a proletariat upheaval
of the bourgeois
class, who are profiteering off the land of bear and
human family alike?
The bear tilted to its side, pressing
his head into the couch arm.
I shouted What do you mean!
…in all this The bear shrugged
the icon
MATT PECKMAN
Engman Prize winner
42
ISSUE 43
a stable relationship
ASH M. KAUN
digital photograph
43
MURPHY SQUARE
the wreck
ALLISON USELMAN
Mick woke up drenched in sweat. His eyes were
squeezed shut, and he was afraid. Afraid that when
he opened them it would hurt, and afraid of what
he would see. He lay there for a moment in his bed
before he reached up and covered the top half of his
face with his hands. He then slowly opened his eyes.
He was wrong to be afraid; it didn’t hurt
and there was nothing to see. He rolled to his side
and looked to see his wife, Margo, sleeping. She was
facing away from his and he could not see her face.
Her left arm was draped casually over the side of the
bed, and all of a sudden Mick was overcome with the
urge to pull her arm back, to tuck it against her and
hide it under the covers. He leaned back against his
pillow and refrained, too afraid that he would wake
her. Instead he reached his hand delicately toward
her face. He brushed her cheek with his thumb,
hardly touching her skin at all, and felt how smooth
and dry it was. As he leaned back and touched his
hands to his own face, he noticed the dampness of his
skin. His hands shook as he removed them, scared of
the heat coming out of his own body.
I must have dreamt something, he thought,
something awful.
He got out of bed and moved to the
bathroom where he gingerly shut the door and
turned on the light only after it was closed. The bulb
above his head buzzed, struggling to light up the
small room. It would take a few minutes, but soon it
would be bright as the sun, and it would hurt to look
at. Mick pulled the faucet handle up halfway, and
dipped his hands under the cool running water. He
washed his face and dried it, laying the towel on the
countertop.
He was just about to leave with hopes of
returning to bed when he caught his own eye in
the mirror. For a moment he was unrecognizable.
His eyes were so cold. His hair was growing long,
longer than usual, and already curls were beginning
to form. His face looked worn and rough, like it had
been out in the sun a long time, but it was his mouth
that looked the strangest. His lips were parted and he
could see into his mouth, if only slightly. His teeth sat
just behind his lips, white and small. He had always
had straight teeth, not one out of place, but there
were three tiny gaps between his front teeth that were
only visible when he laughed a real honest laugh.
Most people didn’t notice, but Margo did. She would
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ISSUE 43
sit with her legs crossed and her finger on his lip,
rubbing it back and forth ever so gently. And then
she would sigh. She would study his mouth and sigh.
He never could tell what the sigh meant, only that she
did it and probably didn’t even notice.
He ran his hand over his mouth, as if
wiping away a nonexistent stray piece of food. The
light bulb in the bathroom was burning, harsh
against the encompassing night outside, just before
he shut it off and walked back to the bedroom. He
couldn’t bring himself to lay down on the bed again,
the silk sheets were slippery and he hated them. He
hated the way he always felt as if he were going to
slip out of bed and fall to the floor, leaving him with
no choice but to remain there until morning when
Margo arose for work. So there he stood, hands at
his sides in the doorway. He took a look around the
room, scanning; the green comforter on the floor;
the water glasses cluttering his nightstand; the blue
gray haze that seemed to cover the room all the time,
even in daylight. His eyes fell onto Margo sleeping,
her arm was still draped over the side of the bed.
Mick shivered once before he turned on his heels and
walked out to the kitchen.
Outside the sky was still dark and the only
light that shone was from the neighbor’s garage
door. He could always see the light through the front
window, and it bothered him. The curtains weren’t
thick enough to hide the light completely, and they
instead turned it into a dull yellow glow. It made
him nervous the way that the light shone all night
long, with no real purpose. Sometimes he looked at
it and was filled with the deepest sense of loneliness,
a feeling he would never admit to anyone. Oh, I don’t
know, he imagined himself saying when asked about
it, it’s just, who would think to leave that light on all
night? Who are they leaving it on for? He walked past
the light and sat down at the table in the kitchen.
He blinked, and for that fraction of a second when
his eyes were closed, he remembered. He didn’t let
himself think of it often, but sometimes on nights
when he couldn’t sleep, he would allow the memory
to come to him. If only in hopes that sleep might
come.
It was almost a year ago, the end of summer,
and everything was hot. The air, the ground, the
inside of your throat. The air was thick and hot and
humid, and all too common for the end of August. It
was hard to breathe sometimes. He remembered that
he could barely get himself to breathe in the thick,
thick air.
It happened when he was driving home
along the highway, and he was all alone. For what
seemed like an eternity, there was a stretch of
road completely desolate, save for Mick’s own car.
Everything was melting into everything else, and the
heat wavered like ponds of water in front of him on
the road. It was hard for him to see clearly, and he
remembered rubbing at his eyes in hopes of focusing
them, but it was no use. The heat was just too much,
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MURPHY SQUARE
and so he gave in and let them wander from one
melted tree to another as he drove.
He remembered the feeling of heaviness
that filled his limbs as he crossed through the back
roads of the town. It took most of his energy to
straighten out the wheel as it shifted and moved with
the bumps of the road. Margo never liked for him
to drive when he was tired, but she never offered to
drive him to or from work. He would have refused
if she had anyway, the desolate road calmed him.
Sometimes he liked to believe he was the only human
being left on the planet, and that there was nowhere
to go and nothing to do. It did not matter if he came
home immediately after punching out at work, or
if he meandered around the country side, looking
at old farm houses and pastures of cows that never
seemed to move. He felt finite, and it sobered him to
think of how disconnected he was to the rest of the
universe. It was only the thought of Margo that could
force him to turn right at the corner of Fair Oaks and
Maple, drive the truck all the way home, and park it
in the driveway.
But along with the heavy weight of reality,
he remembered feeling the instant moment of
lightness when he saw the man lying on the side of
the road. He couldn’t tell how old he was; he couldn’t
even see his face. But he could see his body and his
car and he could see that there was no one around
for miles and miles. He felt as if he were made of air,
as if he had become nothing. He didn’t exist in that
moment; in that summer heat he wasn’t real. There
he sat, in his car, clutching the steering wheel. He
held it so tightly that eventually his nails cut into his
palms. He blinked once at the pain and felt heavy
again.
He had not wanted to get out of the car,
even after he pulled over to the side of the road. He
did not want to open that car door and let in the air
of death and injury and pain. He did open the door
though, and walked across the road. Under his feet,
he could hear shards of glass crunching under all his
weight, under the pressure of his work boots. The
boy lying in the ditch was still, his limbs all calmly
in their places. He would have looked like he was
sleeping except for his right arm. It was stretched out
so that it was touching the edge of the pavement, his
fingers grasping at asphalt, and it was because of the
innocence of his position on the ground that Mick
decided he could not be more than seventeen years
old. His head was turned away from the main road,
resting in the grass and dirt of the highway ditch.
The corn fields behind him seemed to stretch off into
infinity, as if to say, this is where you are and this
is what has happened. The boy’s clothing was dirty
and frayed at the knees, a piece of material from his
shirt was torn away, nowhere to be seen. Shards of
glass from a car’s front window lay scattered in the
grass; they anointed the surrounding area with light,
refracted floating beams.
Mick had felt a small shard jab into his knee
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ISSUE 43
as he knelt down. He remembered coming home that
night and the shard coming loose from where it had
become lodged on the knee of his pants, and Margo
picking it up off the floor asking, “What is this?”
He had snatched it away from her and pocketed it,
shaking his head and casting his eyes downward. He
told her he didn’t know, and that it was probably from
one of the cars down at the garage, “You know how
much of a mess that place is.”
Suddenly he was overcome with a wave of
panic as he realized he was the only one there. He
scanned the deserted stretch of highway, desperate to
see another living soul, but all he saw was the battered
shell of what once was a car and the blindingly
reflective glass scattered in the grass. No one else was
there to see what he was seeing and he felt completely
alone. He would have stayed frozen in his panic if
not for the boy turning his head slightly and uttering
the words “Mister, would you help me?” His cheeks
were still slightly padded with baby fat and his eyes
were soft. Round and naive. Even his shoes looked
like the shoes of a youth, the laces thick and easy to
tie. The afternoon sun washed gold over the scene,
and it made the boy beautiful.
It hurt to look at him, and Mick had to
turn away. He did not want to look at the young boy’s
glowing face; it hurt his eyes to look at him lying in
the grass with such a gruesome backdrop of a scene
behind him.
Mick stood up and walked back to his truck,
he felt as if his knees were made of jelly and his feet
of lead. Each step was a struggle between balance
and movement. He fumbled his hands around
underneath the steering wheel for a minute as he
struggled to find the ignition. When he finally got it
started, the truck sputtered as he keeled away from
the highway shoulder. If he had looked behind him,
or even glanced in the rear view mirror, he would
have seen the cloud of dust that had formed, like a
bomb, behind him.
He drove back into town in a trance to call
for an ambulance from a pay phone. He remembered
how cold the phone was against his skin, and how
the cord repeatedly hit his arm as he hit the switchhook over and over, not sure if he had hit it ten times
or not. When he thought back to this moment he
couldn’t even recall the sound of his own voice when
he asked for the operator, though he must have said
something as he remembered the voice of a woman
speaking to him through the receiver, asking him
where she should send the ambulance. Once he had
finished with the phone he steadied himself on the
booth’s walls. The receiver hung down off of the
hook, its cord almost reaching clear down to the floor,
and Mick just watched as it bobbed there.
When he stood up straight and left the
booth, he glanced back at where he had leaned
against it. There was a mark of condensation on the
glass, and as he lifted up his hands to look at them,
he noticed for the first time how sweaty they were.
Trying not to think about it, he walked back to the
truck and drove back the way he had come. Mick was
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MURPHY SQUARE
there when the ambulance came and took the boy
away. He came upon the scene as he was on his way
home again. He slowed down and pulled to the side
of the road, just a few feet away from where he had
parked only a half hour ago. He saw the boy close his
eyes as they pushed him into the back of the vehicle.
He imagined that being the last time that he closed
his eyes, and imagined that he was the last person to
look at them, the soft naive eyes of a child.
Mick had no way of knowing what happened
to the boy afterward, but he did know that the whole
time he was driving he was thinking about the boy’s
fingers. There they had been, just splayed against
the road. The nails slightly dirty, the tips clawing at
the pavement. He imagined what would happen if
someone had driven by and run them over, crushing
them, leaving nothing but a red stain.
across the carpeting, from the curtain hanging on the
window.
When he reached the bedroom door he
stood there leaning against the frame. Margo was
sound asleep, and everything was still. He could
make out the shape of her legs underneath the
blanket; they were curled like a baby’s, and her arm
was tucked up to her chin, squishing her cheek a bit.
Her other arm was still carelessly flung over the side
of the bed. Mick’s heart jumped a little at the sight of
it, and he was sure he would wake her with his jumpy
heart. She didn’t stir a bit as he slid back into his
spot on the bed, his pillow slightly damp under his
head. She didn’t even stir as he reached and pulled
her arm back towards her body, and tucked it in with
the covers.
Now, he sat up from his hunched position
on the kitchen chair. His legs had red marks from
where his elbows rested, and he felt a pain in his neck
as he straightened himself. But he also felt relief. The
tense, shaky feeling he had awoken with was now
gone, almost no trace left behind. He stood up and
shuffled back through the living room, passing the
front window and the light that never seemed to quit
burning. The street looked lonely in the darkened
night, the street lamp was not lit, and the only light
continued to come from the garage across the street.
Mick averted his eyes as he passed by the window, but
on the floor he could still see beams of light, refracted
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ISSUE 43
The potted green plant
on the steps
that lead to my front door
had sunk into itself
slumped as if a grieved
old woman
having seen
too much.
old hands
RACHEL BROWN
Engman Prize winner
Its leaves
squeezed
together
into blotchy purple fists
collapsed
fell
scratched softly
against the dry concrete.
49
MURPHY SQUARE
prayer
CAMERON YANG
digital photograph
50
ISSUE 43
The metal rings wrapped around their clenched
hands
And they gave each other a promise of eternity.
They stared at one another, playing chicken as to who
would look away first,
A passion too potent to be done justice with language
alone
Sparking and exploding almost unstably in their eyes,
Like a fork in the microwave.
metal rings
HALLE CHAMBERS
Engman Prize honorable mention
A flipper’s house, soon to be their home,
Fragrantly fresh with the fumes from cleaning
chemicals.
A flower plot out front with the potential to be a
prizewinner.
Crickets and cicadas serenading them with a late
summer love song.
The porch light flickering along with its celestial
siblings
As the bridegroom bore his newlywed better half
through the doorframe.
They started their lives together as couples their age
do:
With lazy kisses across the kitchen island at Sunday
morning breakfast,
And shaking bedsprings and screaming on late Friday
nights,
And the air noise congested with the never-ending,
“I Love You”s
But as all such sugar sweet things do,
It melted with heat and time.
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MURPHY SQUARE
They started their fights together as couples their age
do:
With passive aggressive subtleties across the kitchen
island at Sunday morning breakfast,
And shaking walls and screaming on late Friday
nights,
And the air tense and silent with the never spoken,
“I Hate You”s
But as all such souring bitter things do,
It only fermented further with time.
They tramped through the neglected front yard
foliage, its aroma
Easily overpowered by the spoiled stench spewing
from the now deserted dwelling.
The celestial spotlights couldn’t be seen
Past the scarlet and cerulean strobe lights.
The droning ditch crickets and summer cicadas
Were drowned out by the blaring sirens
And the shrieking
From the swearing ex-sweethearts,
Who only went silent when they were crammed into
the cruiser,
Squashed into the sticky back bench seats,
Each separated from the other offender and the
officers
By a solid, yet see-through safety screen.
She wanted to go to therapy,
But he didn’t.
He wanted to divorce,
But she didn’t.
They thought a baby would fix the rift,
But it didn’t.
The cops came one night, called on a noise complaint
To the house, not a home at all, in shambles.
Baby screeching in the bassinet,
Starving in a soiled diaper.
Parents screeching in the bedroom,
Too preoccupied with themselves to notice.
They stared at one another, playing chicken as to who
would look away first,
A passion too potent to be done justice with language
alone
Sparking and exploding almost unstably in their eyes,
Like a fork in the microwave.
And they hated each other for a promise of eternity,
The metal rings wrapped around their clenched
hands.
It ended in a newspaper tragedy:
Baby taken by foster care
To find its first stable home.
Parents arrested for disturbing the peace and child
neglect,
Neither caring enough to think past the loathing
burning like acid through their brains,
Still cussing and fussing all the way to the squad car.
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ISSUE 43
penitence
SAM
Lust
I lie on the floor and pound my head
Against all the shame I find in my bed
Greed
I got a little bit, then a little bit more
Nothing will stop this material whore
Pride
Pride can be a hard pill to swallow
If not you’ll be left empty and hollow
Envy
What you have will soon be mine
Killing with kindness takes a little time
Gluttony
You can see it is evident
All you want is decadent
53
Wrath
Bright red boiling blood
Intensely like a familiar flood
Sloth
I am entitled, I’ll show you how
Just not right now
MURPHY SQUARE
forest
ALLISON USELMAN
copper plate etching
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ISSUE 43
In the green light of this summer afternoon
the orange demon seems so far away.
The breeze raises and ruffles the leaves.
There’s the distant beep of a truck backing up.
green and orange:
a pantoum
D. E. GREEN
The orange demon seems so far away,
though I know he’s lurking in the living room.
The distant beeping of a truck backing up—
it makes me wish that accidents would happen
to the evil lurking in our minds and living rooms,
occupying all our screens and our consciousness.
It makes me wish that accidents would happen
to the one crafting all the plans to do us in.
Forget the myriad screens and false consciousness.
Feel the breeze raising and ruffling the leaves.
Forget the orange demon crafting plans to do us in.
Absorb the green light of this summer afternoon.
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MURPHY SQUARE
celebration #1
STEPHANIE FREY
found images and gouache paint
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ISSUE 43
You are ember-hot, reflecting wishes and
A pictured anomaly, protecting visions and
A single moment, mental kisses and
You’re set on course, the steering wheel is locked and
I’m flagging you down by the ditch’s water
and
There’s something pretty about the laughter and
Your wings are red and slowly fading and
I know that hope is overrated and
A memory is not a painting and
When shooting stars burn in the sky
It paints a picture of us both
And if there’s anything I know
It’s that this is not the end
firebird
ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF
57
MURPHY SQUARE
special agent dale cooper
MADELEINE OSWOOD
digital painting
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ISSUE 43
stretched out for days, you’re a yellow brick road
a mirage-like shimmer, for dreamers bestowed
on towards the upwards and outwards unknown
drawn to your allure we always will go
12 west
L. B. DOGOOD
with you, i’m always a few steps behind,
full of adventure, with nothing but time
turning your corners, we’ll start to unwind
and where we end up is always inside
we’ve been in swamps (water pumped over feet)
we’ve found small bones (broken down and petite)
we’ve tripped galactic (fear of cosmic defeat)
and we’ve explored houses (then, rapid retreat)
we’ve climbed up bridges (the worst path, the best)
we’ve discovered artifacts (deep in my chest)
we’ve scaled mountains (high up where birds nest)
and we’ve walked on water (messiah’s old test)
and then in the end when we’re left with our tale,
some photos, a heartbeat and dirt under nail
i’ll still speak these words because you never fail
for you, 12 west, are a life changing trail
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MURPHY SQUARE
basilica
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF
35mm film camera
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ISSUE 43
miikawaadendan
(think it beautiful)
ASHLEY MURRAY
Engman Prize honorable mention
Deep green, mitig is swaying around niin
Inwewin I want gikendan. bizindan.
Nisidotan. Understand who is speaking.
A voice, baswewe off canyon walls.
Vibrating the air around me.
engulfed in the jiibay
(a tree)/(me)
(a language)/(know it)/(listen to it)
(understand it)
(it echoes)
(spirit/ghost)
Know what they know.
Feel what they feel.
Speak how they speak
Miikawaadendan
(Think it Beautiful)
61
MURPHY SQUARE
untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD
pencil
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ISSUE 43
untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD
pencil
63
MURPHY SQUARE
infinite
DEREK L.H.
Tomorrow is my last day. I wish I could fall asleep, but
my heart can’t stop pounding. However, my analytics
tell me that this is a common phenomenon for people
undergoing the digitization procedure…Eesh. It’s
hard to believe that I’m already getting used to saying
stuff that way.
Digitization, or the Infinity procedure as
some people refer to it, has become more common
over the last ten years or so. A few years before the
Infinity procedure existed, there was a discovery
that there wasn’t an afterlife. No heaven, no hell,
no God, just nothing. I wasn’t raised religious, so I
wasn’t personally impacted that much, but this was a
huge deal to a lot of people at the time. Most religious
people were in total denial, and many disregarded the
science behind the discovery merely on the grounds
of their religious beliefs. So, since there wasn’t an
afterlife, humanity decided to make its own. That’s
when the Infinity procedures became a thing.
People became digitized before their deaths — they
became AIs that both represented the life they lived
as a person, as well as functioning as an AI to serve
society in a way that they couldn’t as a human.
I’ve done some research on what it’s like to become an
AI, and it seems lovely. It’s painless, and you instantly
become more knowledgeable about so much. You
gain access to way more information than a human
could cram into their brain. Becoming an AI seems
like becoming perfection to me. I can’t wait to become
one. Originally, they only digitized people that had
terminal illnesses. Cancer and stuff like that. After
a few years, though, they had made it so that more
and more medical conditions could allow a person to
become digitized. And then mandatory digitization
replaced the death penalty the year after. And then
just about any adult could sign up to undergo the
procedure. It makes sense if you think about it. After
you transition into an AI, sure, your human body’s
dead, but you’re still a member of society — just in a
different way. Well, it makes enough sense to me, and
that’s all that really matters.
I’ve been staring at the ceiling of my
bedroom for a while now, hoping to the non-existent
heavens that my heart will slow and I can actually
fucking think about something else. I’ve just been
lying atop my bed, snuggling in the warm, hand-knit
blankets I made when I was a kid, staring at space for
I don’t know how long. Well. Actually, I do. Twenty-
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ISSUE 43
nine minutes and seven point two seconds, but who’s
counting, really?
I turn my head to the table across from
my bed. My phone lit up, as it usually does once it’s
fully charged. There’s some other notifications on it.
While I was able to assess what it was before even
getting up, I think the old me, however much of the
human me was left, still wanted to check it. Besides,
it’s not like I’ll have many more chances to check a
personal device like this, so a fallacy in my logic via
emotional override is excusable in this instance. Gah.
There I go again.
I quickly walk over to my phone. The
notifications on it read:
“Charge complete.”
“Missed Call: Mom (20), Dad (11), Andrea (6)…
“23 New Messages: Andrea, Dad, Mom, Lea…”
Perhaps in a momentary splurge of
unnecessary emotionality, I unlocked the phone and
looked at the newest message. It was from Andrea,
reading “Why the fuck are you doing this?? Call
me, Mom, or someone NOW, Ellie! You know you
shouldn’t do this.”
What emotional language. It’s quite elementary in its
efficiency and effectivity in persuasion. Andrea was
never an eloquent individual, so perhaps I should
use lower parameters for expectations on persuasion
for her, specifically. However, this message is simply
ineffective and clearly should have undergone
significant revision.
…And there I go, once more. My head’s
starting to ache. I should sit down. Anyway. These
changes in my thought and speech patterns used to
only happen one or two times a day if I got lucky, and
now it just happens without me thinking about it.
But yeah, Andrea was never good at voicing
how she felt. In many ways, she was the model
older sister when growing up. Got good grades, was
crazy pretty, athletic, had tons of friends, lived a
satisfactory, if unremarkable, life. I certainly looked
up to her when I was a kid, but everyone in my family
knew she was poor at being logical about things. She
always let emotions be the deciding factor on just
about every decision she made, big or small. I was still
in high school when she dropped out of college. She
was living in an apartment with her boyfriend at the
time. They were both cheating on each other. When
they both found out the other was cheating, they got
into a big fight. She didn’t get hit or anything like
that, as far as I know. Though, they ended up saying
hurtful things to each other. Again, as far as I know.
Andrea didn’t really know what to do with
herself afterward. This was her first breakup, so I guess
she didn’t really know how to cope. Well, yeah. Clearly,
she didn’t. She started drinking, had one-night stands
pretty regularly for a while and experimented with
taking different kinds of drugs. Which kinds, I don’t
know. And really, I don’t care. Yeah, I understand
some may consider it to be a blasphemous position
for a younger sister to take, but…I just thought it was
dumb. She did anything that could help make her feel
better. Eventually, she dropped out of college, moved
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back in with my parents, and went into rehab a few
weeks after. Even though that was all a few years ago,
she’s still considered emotionally unstable. Having
so much of your life get fucked up because of how
you feel sounds…so tragic to me. So many people go
about their lives, trying to make themselves feel good
through whatever means, even if it ends up hurting
other people. I don’t know, something about that
really sickens me. My sister and people like her sicken
me. That’s one of the reasons why I’ve decided to get
digitized. I don’t want to be a slave of emotion. I don’t
want to be like my sister.
Emotions are just an obstacle for people,
as far as I can tell. Ever since I had started taking
Infinticilia two months ago,—that’s the drug that
preps my brain for becoming an AI—this became
only clearer. I had noticed more and more that many
people were objectively poor at communicating how
they felt to others. My family was specifically belowaverage at it. Their phone calls and messages to
me over the last two months have all been poorly
constructed, only using rather melodramatic and/or
anecdotal rationales in arguments as to why I should
terminate both my use of Infinticilia and my Infinity
procedure. Perhaps more intelligently constructed
and presented rationales could have influenced my
decision. But alas, it is too late for them now. They
had their chance to persuade me to stay alive as a
person, and they failed to do so.
After sitting for a while, I grabbed my
phone and set it back onto the table. My headache
had only gotten worse. Fuck. I had gotten used to
the migraines, the most common side-effect of the
Infinticilia, over the last few months, but I haven’t
gotten any in a few weeks now. I certainly didn’t want
to deal with a migraine tomorrow. Best to deal with it
tonight.
I walked into the bathroom across the hall.
Perhaps walking was an ill-calculated decision. I
quickly took one of the few supplements left for this
kind of instance. It will make me somewhat revert
back to my more human self to alleviate the migraine.
After a while, I should go back to being fully prepared
to make the transition tomorrow morning.
I could feel my thoughts beginning to revert
back to those that were common for my previous self.
I figured that it wouldn’t hurt to get some fresh air.
I quickly slid open the door in my kitchen, out onto
the porch of my apartment.
It was certainly a November night in Also.
The brisk, cool wind stroked my warm skin as I
stepped outside. Also is a small town in upstate New
York that I moved to about a year ago now. The town
has a population of only a few hundred people. Living
in Also was the closest I ever got to enjoying where I
was in life. I grew up in Buffalo, where my parents
and Andrea still live, and I hated every second of
living there. When you see hundreds of people on a
daily basis, you’re bound to come across people that
you can’t fucking stand. I guess I was always that kid.
The one who didn’t want to be part of anything. The
one that quietly judged everyone else.
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I’ve always assumed that people think
of me as an uninteresting person. I have no tragic
backstory that would make anyone sympathize with
me. Nothing very significant has happened in my
twenty-six years of life that would make people get
attached to me, and that’s fine. Not everyone is meant
to be interesting, and I just happen to be one of those
people. Life has just always sort of happened around
me. I was never bullied or harassed or anything. Just
ignored. And in this day and age, no one really cares
if you’re ignored. And again, that’s fine. To me, it
just…got tiring after a while.
I remember the night I decided to undergo
the Infinity procedure. It was three months ago. I was
stopping by my parents’ house to grab some mail that
was still getting delivered to their house for whatever
reason, and they invited me to dinner. I really didn’t
want to stay, but Dad made lasagna, and I’d have felt
bad if I turned down his cooking. He’d have taken it
personally if I had.
He is a music instructor, and the only real
interesting parts of his life were his anecdotes about
the students of his private lesson classes. Well, at least
they would be interesting if he ever shut up about
them.
“So I was giving a lesson this afternoon
with a student I’ve had for a few years now, right” he
started, “And he starts telling me about how he’s not
going to take lessons anymore because he plans on
doing that digitization thing. How sad is that? I can’t
believe so many people throw away their life like that.
I always thought he was better than that, too.”
We were all sitting around the dinner table,
eating slightly undercooked lasagna as he said this. I
stopped eating for a moment. “Isn’t that a bit harsh?”
I asked. “I mean, did he tell you about why he was
doing it?”
Dad exhaled loudly, glaring at me before he
said anything. “Uh, well, no, he didn’t. It’s just the
concept of someone turning themselves into an AI
that’s so sad to me. I mean, people just end their lives
to do it, and—”
“Technically, your life doesn’t really end
when you get digitized,” I said. “Your life just becomes
different. Instead of being a person only capable of
finite things, being an AI gives you the ability to do
an infinite number of things. Isn’t that right?”
“Well, I don’t know what happens to people
after they undergo the procedure. I know they
supposedly become sources of information and get
programmed into databases and all that. But what if
that’s bullshit? What if that’s just a lie?”
“What if it’s just the surface? What if there’s
so much more to being an AI?”
Mom butted into the conversation. At least,
she tried to. “Ellie, James, can we please save this
discussion for later—”
“Ellie, it, uh, sounds to me like you’re
defending people who become AI…”
“Well…it’s starting to make more sense to
me is all…”
The tinkling of silverware hitting dinner
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plates was the only sound for a moment. “Well, if you
ask me, the people that get digitized are just quitters.
People that are too scared to deal with reality.”
Mom started to ask, “James, don’t you think—”
“Think what?” He yelled. “That I’m being too
harsh or some shit? Why doesn’t anyone here try to
understand where I’m coming from?”
“I-I-I-I’m sorry, James,” Mom anxiously
stuttered. “Uh, anyone want more lasagna?”
No one answered. The tinkles of silverware
turned into clanks.
I had grown tired of the topic of digitization
that night. The rest of dinner was quiet and awkward.
As I drove back to my apartment later that night, I
found myself so frustrated. Dad was doing that thing
I hate where he keeps interrupting Mom from getting
her word in. And he always thinks his opinion is
more valid than others, and gets all defensive when
people disagree with him. Dad is too rigid, and Mom
is too delicate. She has always been too polite for her
own good. She tries so hard to be so respectful to
everyone’s feelings that she keeps a lot of things to
herself.
It was moments like then that made me glad
that I had moved out of that house long ago. Mom,
Dad, and Andrea were all people that managed their
feelings in a way that always frustrated me. They
always brought their emotions into conversations
where they weren’t needed. I eventually just got sick
of it all.
That’s the thing: emotions—they just cripple
you. They cripple and destroy you like hot coffee
seeping through paper. Emotions impact how you
decide on things, or how you interact with others,
or even who you interact with. They take control of
you and become you. That night, I realized that I no
longer wanted to live a life where emotions hijacked
everything. I just wanted to be free of it all. And that
was when I realized that the only way to be free of
emotions once and for all was to undergo the Infinity
procedure.
Looking up at the night sky reminds me
of how small this life was. People are so tiny if you
think about it. After I enter my new life as an AI,
maybe I’ll serve a bigger role. Or maybe I won’t. All
I know is that I’m ready to begin my new life as an
AI tomorrow. The late autumn wind made my skin
hollow, so I walked back inside my apartment, sliding
the door shut.
The migraine had mostly faded at this
point. I could feel the supplement starting to wear
off. My appointment was in the morning, and I was
still anxious about it. Even to the end, I guess I’m
still no exception to being controlled by emotions
sometimes. Despite the anxiety and nervousness, I
tried to get some sleep.
I opened my eyes, and looked at the alarm
beside my bed. 8:00 A.M. Satisfactory. I stood up and
quickly calculated what I needed to do before heading
out. It would be unnecessary to prepare myself
aesthetically, given the circumstances. Therefore, I
deduced a quick checklist of necessary requirements
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before retiring from my apartment.
This checklist mainly consisted of
preparing the apartment to be in near-mint condition.
Naturally, I had set up many things in relation to
the procedure in advance. Among them included
writing a will to allocate all my existing assets after
I become digitized. The agent that I corresponded
with to prepare for the procedure assisted me with
the logistics of digitization. Everything was set. All
that awaited was heading out to the hospital to check
in and undergo the procedure. However, as I began
preparing to leave, I heard knocks at the front door. I
opened it.
It was Mom, Dad, and Andrea. Their eyes
glimmered of desperation. They appeared to be
teeming with toxic emotion, typical as ever of them.
They exemplified signs of looking distressed due to
the wrinkles on their faces.
Andrea stepped forward, tears coming from
her eyes. “I can’t believe you’re doing this! What the
hell is wrong with you?”
Dad also stepped towards me. “Ellie, you
can’t do this. I…I can’t let you go.”
I scoffed. “Your concern is understandable
given the circumstances, but I’m afraid that your
attempt at preserving my human self will end
unsatisfactorily for you. My decision is set in stone.
It’s been two months. If you were capable of coercing
me out of undergoing the Infinity procedure, you
would already have succeeded in doing so.”
Silence for a moment. Andrea still had tears
in her eyes. “Who…who are you? Whoever you are,
you’re not my sister anymore.”
Andrea’s use of melodramatic language
was as ineffective as ever. “Andrea, Mom, Dad…I’m
becoming digitized. This life is no longer optimal for
me. It really never has been optimal.”
Mom, who had been notably quiet and
reserved, finally spoke up. “Is that you saying that?
Or the drugs that they put you on?”
“It’s likely both, Mom,” I said. “This is what
I want. I’ll still live. Just…in a different way than you.
It’s always been like that, if you think about it.”
Their eyes of emotion remained lucid. They
appeared frustrated, disappointed, maybe even in
denial. But their refusal of my resolve was practically
insulting.
Andrea looked down to her small feet. “Can
we at least…go with you?”
...
The Digitization Department was
surprisingly small at the hospital I went to. At least,
it surprised me the first time I went. Digitization
was becoming more and more common every year.
Most hospitals and even some clinics offer Infinity
procedures. Regardless, everything was set and
ready to begin at 10:30 A.M. It was clear that my
family didn’t want to be there. Their emotional eyes
remained ever-present on their faces.
We were all sitting in a waiting room
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designated for people undergoing the Infinity
procedure. There were two other families in there
with us. I couldn’t hear their words, but the tones
of their voices were also full of emotion. It’s quite
inadequate that the experience of having emotions
isn’t a unique one. Ultimately, how anyone feels right
now has been felt by someone somewhere sometime
before. I’ve heard of people finding beauty in that—
that it’s amazing how we can find other people that
have felt the same as we have. But beauty is just an
emotional construct. Beauty doesn’t actually exist.
People just convince themselves that it does. It’s just
another example of emotions blinding people.
However, while thinking upon this subject,
my mind briefly reverted to memories between
Andrea and myself. Growing up, Andrea would often
talk to me about societal perceptions of beauty. She
was always fascinated by that kind of stuff—history,
how people relate to each other, all that junk. She
talked about it with me for hours so many times when
we were growing up. She loved talking about anything
that had to do with how people treated each other
throughout history. Dad would never shy at jumping
into the conversations between Andrea and I, always
adding theories, facts, and statistics that may or may
not have been relevant to what we were talking about.
Mom would always listen in on our conversations
and ask questions, always fascinated by what we were
discussing. I’m really going to miss them.
...
I mean. Um. It’s 10:30. I should go.
Dr. Carlisle, the doctor that I had talked
before about the Infinity procedure walked into the
waiting room. “Elizabeth Hensley…are you ready?”
I stand up and nod. Dr. Carlisle continued.
“I’m sorry, we can’t have family go into the
Digitization Room. I’ll…give you a second to make
your goodbyes. Come on in once you’re ready.” She
stood by the door. I turned around to face my family.
They all looked at me quietly. Unlike before,
their eyes weren’t filled with emotion. They were…
empty. Hopeless. I didn’t really know what to say to
them. I turned towards the door, facing away from
them.
“Um…thanks for coming. It…means a lot.”
Without looking back, I walked towards the door.
...
There it is. The Infinity: the machine
that digitizes people into AI. It looked like an MRI
scanner. The room was entirely white and lifeless. No
one except myself and Dr. Carlisle were in the room.
The next few moments were a blur. I got
into the Infinity. This is what the last two months
have been leading up to. It almost didn’t feel real.
Like I was dreaming. Like all of this was fantasy. But
I laid there, on the machine that would digitize my
body, birthing me into my new life as an AI.
Soon enough, the machine began moving
into the Infinity very slowly. Maybe only a few
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centimeters per second. But this was it. I had seen
everything and everyone I would ever see outside of
this room for the last time. It…didn’t really hit me
until then. The memories I had with everyone…with
my family… All of those memories were moments
from evaporating. They would be gone forever. Or
maybe I’d still remember them after I became an AI,
or…I don’t know.
I…I just don’t know. I wanted so hard to
be free of emotion. It’s why I wanted to go through
with this. And yet, I find myself leaving this world
feeling unlike how I’ve ever felt before. I was filled
with emotion. Filled with fear. Most of my body was
now inside the Infinity. Seconds of life as I knew it
were left.
Was this a mistake? Was this a good idea
after all? Am I doing this for the right reasons? What
are the right reasons? What are the wrong reasons?
What have I done? What have I done? What have I
done?
The last of my body entered into the
Infinity, at last. Tears began trickling down my face.
For the first time in I don’t know how long, I cried.
I cried.
The machine made a loud noise and my
legs began to feel weightless. Everything began to feel
weightless. The last sound I would make as a human
was a laugh. A laugh at the thought of me leaving my
human life just as I entered it: crying, powerless, and
teeming with emotion.
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celebration #5
STEPHANIE FREY
found images and gouache paint
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words like radiation
ringing out, observed by those
not worth speaking to;
52 hz
L. B. DOGOOD
i wish
you
could hear me
smooth like the ocean
ridges of mollusks and sand
for your skin
for your skin,
they’ll never understand why
we rot away into filaments
they call it fur and a mystery
but only we know that we’re fibrous
creatures made of sinew and bones
but you can’t
even
hear
me
even you,
ones with bodies bigger than earth
lives longer than time
sing too low
sing too low for
a connection,
i hear you calling out and i can’t understand
why my words don’t reach you,
‘is there anybody like me?
is there anybody like me?
is there anybody like me?’
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When I’m driving on the highway, the destination
doesn’t matter, I’m usually in the passenger seat
because piloting tons of crashing metal makes my
throat close up, so I can look out the window as we
drive and watch the road going by, and
roadkill
ALICE LIDDELL CHESHIRE WOLFF
Sometimes I see the dead animals, birds or raccoons
or squirrels or sometimes deer, and sometimes their
bodies are intact and they’re lying off to the side and
I think why don’t they just get back up? They look
perfectly fine to me, but their eyes are being eaten by
ants and it’s only from a distance that they look more
alive than I feel, but other times
They’re crushed and smeared into the pavement by
endless tires, fur and feathers and life turned into a
bright red stain, a gore bouquet that seems scattered
everywhere, and I wonder how all that meat fit inside
their fragile little bodies, running and jumping and
sniffing their way through life until they’re pulverized
by people on their way to work, and
It makes my stomach churn but I always look as the
car drives past and if I were walking I might stop
and study the remains for any clues, wondering who
they were and why this happened, wondering what it
felt like, can they still feel, their nervous system still
ticking out information across their bodies, spread
like jam on concrete, or maybe their spirits still
linger, breathing in the exhaust fumes as they howl
silently as a warning to stay away, and
They enter my dreams, messiahs covered with flies,
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fearless crows poking stigmata into their stomachs,
looking at me with lustful eyes and directing me into
the forest, where there are no cars and humans are
just a memory and the evergreens loom all around
like a silent jury surrounded by tears and
The wave drowns animals and trees alike, until all is
washed away and the ground is meat, and the meat
is concrete, and the remnants of the living are baked
into a gray shell that stretches on for miles and miles
and miles and I’m back in the car, we’ve arrived, and
I look over my shoulder as I step out onto the stone
floor of the city, wondering where my body ends and
the roadside bodies begin.
I walk down a path and mice scuttle out of the woods
with legs like spinning wheels, crawling up my boots
and under my shirt, surrounding me with the mass
of their bodies like a second skin before pulling back,
a wave of life breaking against me and churning out
whispers into the forest, letting the world know that I
do not belong here, and the woods
Part before me, and looking through the tree line I see
animals gathered on the shore of a lake, a parade of
silent stares, eyes glinting in the bloody horizon glare,
rabbits emptied from their warrens and raccoons
crawled back from city suburbs, opossums with nail
teeth and fawns without mothers, a bear grown stick
thin and desperate from too many winters, its bones
strained to the breaking point as it opens its mouth to
show a gummed expanse of night, and as it stretches
out a rasping tongue into the rippling air
I see the lake rise up in a tidal wave, becoming the
sky as it crests, drowning the world with shadow, and
in the fading light I see it is not water, it is an ocean
of meat that plunges down, crushing and mauling the
forest and I can feel my body as it is pulled apart,
popped like an old balloon, and as my guts slide down
and mix with the soil my soul remains, and I am
aware, I watch as
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she-wolf
CAMERON YANG
digital photograph
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You have his eyes.
All your life you have never been yourself, never been
your own.
You are your father’s eyes in your mother’s face, and
your name
is a cinderblock they chained around your ankles and
called a gift.
The day you are told what he did, you will not react
at all.
You will sit in your chair and listen to your sister,
a supportive stone statue,
and when it hits you seven months later, when it
sinks in and becomes real, you will be useless for four
days.
You will stand in the bathroom before class
and look in the mirror and wonder if they can see it
in your eyes.
Your father’s eyes.
You wonder if it’s obvious you have the eyes of a killer.
You’ve known for months but it wasn’t real until right
now,
Looking in this mirror and thinking about how
nothing is quite the same once you know your father
is a killer.
The finding out is easier than the knowing.
The finding out is ice water down your back. A shock.
The knowing is heavy, and once you pick it up, you
always have to carry it
with you everywhere.
You will never be able to put it down.
Know this because you have to, but know something
else as well.
Carrying this with you is going to feel like there is a
coffin
the eyes are the window to
the soul
ALEXIS KIMSEY
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strapped to your back, like there is a scarlet letter
pinned to your chest with a blade sharpened by
inheritance, like
you never understood sin until your sister
tied your father’s around your neck and
you’re never going to want to tell anyone.
You’ll look at your friends and feel it almost bursting
out
of your mouth,
How are you today,
My father is a killer, I’m a murderer’s daughter,
it’s so heavy, it’s pulling me down, take it away,
please, please, G-d, someone, help me.
You’ll almost say it over and over but you won’t want
to.
You won’t want to tell them, not now not ever they
can never know.
When you tell them anyway, it will feel like pulling
a piece
of that coffin down from your aching shoulders and
nailing it between theirs.
When you do this, remember that they told you that
you could.
Remember how they handed you the hammer.
Remember when you turned around and offered
them your spine,
the spaces where they’ve taken parts of your coffin
from you
making room for the pieces of theirs that they’re too
tired to carry alone.
Remember that we all have coffins. That we are all a
cemetery,
but we do not have to let that
bury us.
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flower girl flower girl
GABRIEL BERGSTROM
35mm film photograph
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untitled
MADELEINE OSWOOD
digital painting
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I stepped in a puddle today
after a rain that had lasted
for probably 4 days and 4 nights.
I felt it
the water
sucking my toes and soaking
my white socks brown
swallowing me slowly
like a snake stretching wide his jaw
with that little extra bone he has
so he can fit a city rat
twice the size of his head
down his slick
pink throat.
I thought about him
about a snake big enough to eat
yappy yorkie dogs and deer fawns
until the water lapped at my armpits
and licked my eyelids closed
and the world dissolved
in wet-like blues and greens.
Galaxies swirled like ribbons
silky between my finger crevices
as if rainforest and ocean
curled up and melted together
the way two spilled cans of paint
sometimes do.
galaxies
RACHEL BROWN
Engman Prize winner
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light rail
ABIGAIL TETZLAFF
digital photograph
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happiness is the light between the trees in autumn
travelling miles upon miles through space
to make mosaics on the forest floor
and caress faces one last time before winter
sonas
EVE TAFT
touching all things, light ignores broken bones
wends its way through thunderstorms
finds ships on the tousled sea
insensitive, it dries tears early and blinds
happiness is the light between the trees in autumn
golden warm, more steadfast than summer
more compassionate than winter
happiness steals in through branches
gently, gently, gently
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the spin
GABRIEL BERGSTROM
35mm film photograph
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the bridges
GABRIEL BENSON
I’ve been driving for two hours, making my regular
trek from one home to the other. My back is sweaty as
it often gets on these long drives. In an attempt to aid
this, I sit slightly forward and turn the air conditioner
on full blast. This effect leaves my fingers icy, but the
sun still beats down on my thighs, my own personal
greenhouse. By now, I really need to pee, and the
empty coffee cup from this morning is beginning
to look more and more tempting as a release for my
bladder.
The ride from Willmar to Minneapolis on
Highway 12 has only a few landmarks peppered in
that I find to be worth noting on the drive. Once I
left one home, I knew I was destined to nomadism
for the following two hours. Like a turtle, I would
own only what I carried with me in the silver Pontiac
Bonneville. My suitcase, backpack, and a box of
books all pile in the backseat.
In Montrose, Minnesota, I pass the small
side-of-the-road memorial to my old dear friend killed
on his motorcycle in 2014, killed by a car that hit
him head-on. It’s a knee-high cross, a picture of him
placed in the center. It never gets easier to look at this
cross, but it does get harder to see. It can be hidden in
the winter by snow, and it was once carried away by a
well-meaning plow.
But I know there are no spirits here.
On these roves from Home A to Home B,
Minnesota Public Radio is my companion. Today, it’s
an in-depth story on the music history of Simon &
Garfunkel, a duo I know little about—a couple songs,
something about herbs and the fair, perhaps. The
piece itself is intermittently sprinkled with their
songs and interviews with musicians and other
members of the industry. As I enter Minneapolis,
the skyline on the horizon, “Bridge Over Troubled
Water” comes on. It’s familiar to me, like a song from
an old movie.
When you’re down and out / When you’re on the
street / When evening falls so hard / I will comfort
you.
As usual, I follow the traffic into the
underground I-94 tunnel. What was once bright
sunlight is transformed, and I am plunged into
darkness, the white rays replaced by the ambered
lightbulbs that line up above me. When entering, the
tunnel seems endless, stretching ahead indefinitely
before me.
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Now, there is a strict ritual for these tunnels,
and I have been practicing since I was a child, just
like my mother taught me.
light. Are the cars in front of me, behind me, beside
me, fixed in the same trance?
they shine
When darkness comes / And pain is all around
As I run down the grocery list of my wishes,
my lungs start to ache. The sunlight begins to peek in
front of the many cars ahead of me. The last wish in
my head is always the same, vague, but it is perhaps
the most important.
Please have all of this be okay, I pray.
The floodlights of the day’s sun rush back
into the vehicle. I exhale, my lungs receiving sweet
air, my hand falls back down onto the steering wheel,
and the radio plays as usual. The song is almost done.
I will ease your mind.
As my eyes adjust to the new light, I suck
my breath in, the air that stops coming into my lungs
matches the now crackling radio waves that barely
filter through the speakers. One hand on the steering
wheel, the other hand flopped up to lay my palm flat
against the carpeted roof of the car. Several yards into
the tunnel, the radio has been reduced to static, only
a word or two from any number of radio stations is
translatable.
It’s in these moments—dark tunnel, amber
light, breath held, hand on roof—that I truly pray. I
grew up believing that these tunnels held a mystical
property, that it was here where wishes could be
granted, prayers answered. With air tight in my
lungs, these messages to someone are thought loudly
in my mind, for if they were spoken, my pact of not
breathing would be broken, creating the possibility
of these requests not being listened to, not being
transmitted to whomever receives them.
And it does, almost always.
I smile at the stretch of city before me, and
I feel a sense of relief. Whether or not this all ends up
okay, it’s out of my hands now.
But inside, I think it will be.
Sail on
I pray, thanking the tunnel for my safe
drive. For the sun. For things going well.
I pray, asking the tunnel for good health for
myself and those I love.
Row by row, I pass amber light after amber
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ISSUE 43 | 2018
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