Originally published by The Hallowzine Issue 2.
I didn’t mean to leave, she says
after she is dead and body burnt.
But leave she did, and all that survives
her is a corpse of poems with limbs
cold, and a whisper that floats
just behind my ear, an occasional
tickle on my neck, a probing in my gut,
lodged like a thick wedge of sirloin steak
in my esophagus, that wrinkled, nagging
blockage of blood flow, of lethargy, the
inability to swallow. Did she know? they ask,
and I shrug as if it doesn’t weigh on me
like an equine hoof on my chest, pinning
me in place, shackled, tethered to her secrets.
Was it her choice, to go this way,
to forbid me the opportunity to fix
her, heal her, protect her organs from
crumbling into white ash?