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by A.J. Huffman


 

 

Carnivorous Cannibal

 

squirrels, acting as if

they are on bath salts, devour random

pieces of my hibiscus tree. All claws

and teethly concentration. Petals, bark,

buds, nothing’s spared their savagery.

I watch them from behind

the screened porch door, meet

their unstartled stare. It clearly resonantes:

no fear.

I instinctively touch my face, wish

for a more solid partition.

 

 

a short black line

 

The Tree Was There

 

My sister laughs, now, 40+

years later, attempting to explain

how she once broke the cast

on her already broken arm.

The perfect example of stupidity, unrelenting

competitiveness, she was 8 and a half and following

our brothers’ lead, determined, as always,

not just to keep up but to outdo

them in their own pursuits. She succeeded, of course.

Her double damage sustaining an infamy

worthy of decades of retelling

despite its lack of causing

permanent scar.

 

 

a short black line

 

Nineteen Blessings

 

syllables

coffee

ifs

a standing prayer

nonsense

a song

the garden

children

never

language

a searching forest

voices

fists

aches

bones

words

dissolving

understanding

ink to paper

 

 

a short black line

 

I Am Glass

 

Half-empty, a mouth

open wide in welcome hope

of precipitation. There is always

too much desert to allow a spike

in my level. I have an aptitude

for arid. Hollow, my cactus

covering is more costume than

functioning form of life.

I remain, gutted

shell, rooted in quick-

sand, a sinking icon of economical

deluge. There is a possibility

I could swallow myself at any moment,

disappear inside

a choking outpour of dust.

 

 


a black line

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