Poetry |

“Martial Arts” & “Coming Back”

Martial Arts

 

 

At the start of every lesson the teacher

asks, What’s your best defense

 

in a dark alley? Upstairs our son swings

his legs, kicking neatly like a clock

 

at the quarter hour, kick

kick punch into the teacher’s palms

 

while we wait in the bar below, knees

touching, watching the news with the sound

 

off. Someone is wailing but the sound

has left her body. Don’t go down

 

the dark alley. The kids stomp

and behind the bar the bottles

 

chime, a tremble

that ripples back

 

to the center of itself. Sirens pulse

across the woman’s face, the yellow tape

 

a border keeping

what no one wants to know.

 

My right knee against your left a small

pressure we’ve built our house around.

 

Everything I’m afraid of,

I’m about to name.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Coming Back

 

 

With keys in hand I stood

about to go in

but listening.

 

The sun lowering,

the tree

projected its blue

 

needles on my blue front door

and the porch needed

a sweep.

 

Some wind

lifted.

Everything

 

was as it seemed and also

in disguise, like

the bird

 

I’d never heard before saying

what while I thought.

The bent pine

 

working the lock.

Nearby, unseen:

What.

 

Just that, for a very long time.

Contributor
Erin Malone

Erin Malone’s second collection, Site of Disappearance, was a finalist for the National Poetry Series and is forthcoming from Ornithopter Press in October 2023. An editor, teacher, and bookseller, she lives on an island near Seattle.

Posted in Poetry

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