To You Who Live in My First Home: Fredericksburg, Virginia

I hope you are a woman.

Your husband, newly wed, lives there too, but

you are a woman. Living, laced, in latticed brick,

you fill your cheeks with cherries on Cherry Street, Fredericksburg,

to prepare yourself for the sweetness waiting

to come with life in this home.

 

When cleaning the sticky cherry juice from

kitchen surface, do you wonder which lives got

unstuck from home linoleum? Which life broke

into your home, like my own, 1994?

Torn asunder from Motherland

to living fabric where

breath is taken on one’s own lungs’ terms.

 

Was your garden torn from Manahoac hands

in 1782 by gasping Motherland Europeans—

a few ancestors of mine—where you now plant and prune

roses in red, white, and blue? Have you ever found

those Manahoac bones in your housewife dig, to one day show

your son as dinosaur fossils?

 

Your son who will grow into the face

your husband inhabits. His bones, your eyes

gazing on son’s father:

like the world did on forefathers, playing power, 1775,

under Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.

 

The same umbrella under which my mother met my father,

Trinity Episcopal Church, built 1877,

harbored their love 1989,

saw the marriage ’92.

Dear housewife, have you ever been there?

 

When you traipse through the halls, running your hands

through the lingering, dusty air of what once was,

do you ever see the ghosts my parents say live there?

(In such an old town they’re everywhere),

and wonder which ghosts will move from

the moments passed in this Cherry Street home

to the haunted house of your memories?

My oldest ghost was sown, to prompt death,

in your backyard:

two-year-old fireflies, like

the golden dust stuck in your cherry-sticky housekeeping.

 

Have you heard of Fredericksburg’s Civil War haunt?

Will you take your family

to the battleground, 1862, for picnics, as mine did?

Brother (1996) and sister (1994) playing,

under siblinghood, next to the pasta salad,

over the memories, ghosts, bones of brother killed by brother.

 

Look at the nursery you painted yellow, 2015,

and remember my life.

Not the one that came to be, but the one that was

lost in this house.

fill y(our) home with past lives to be, and when you

discover your first child, bury your arms into the backyard’s soil

for a few days, next to the cherry tree. Let your arms root themselves

into the lives your plotted earth has known and mingle

your thin fingers with your child’s nourishment in

time.


LIZZY NICHOLS is currently studying English at Northern Arizona University, and her work has previously appeared in Prompt Literary Magazine and Cardinal Sins. She also writes for and speaks poetry in the band, The Grandpa Rosevelts. She has previously won the participation award in her high school science fair, and lives with her two randomly assigned roommates in Flagstaff, Arizona.

Rebecca

Narisa_Buranasiri-P1210809.jpg

Rebecca by Narisa Devakula
Acrylic on Paper Ι 24″ X 18″ Ι 2014

NARISA DEVAKULA is a senior at the Hotchkiss School from Bangkok, Thailand. A regional silver key recipient from the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards and a graduate of the Iowa Young Writers’ Workshop, she currently runs her school’s literary magazine, The Writing Block. Her writing and artwork have been published or are forthcoming in Textploit, Polyphony H.S, The Apprentice Writer, and several high school literary magazines.

Etymologies of The Divine

Waters swept the youngest away.

comets came crashing down upon the mountains,

mountains like teeth and comets like eyes.

Campfire sessions dulled as the winter went on.

A leper cried out for relief

shed her skin and waded her bones into the water—

a miracle. The word was new.

Mud became walls,

wheat maggot-rotted,

bison died of their feed,

the king gave the last of the meat to his son

who greased his lips and faded into Bellum’s breath.

Pomegranates stained the fingers of children like blood.

Grapes fermented into wine and led sons to the sea,

sailors cried out to the tempest, and were received by thunder

as their fathers dragged their myrtle wreathed sisters to the cliff’s edge

like heifers.

Arcadia descended into empires, and empires into antiquity.

The widow cast off her dregs at the sight of the cresting tides.

Music spewed forth from a shepherd’s mouth and moved

those in the mountains to pluck out their hearts as offerings to the sun.

And a still pool of water reflected the moon’s outstretched palm and rose

into waves, and I was very much afraid.


EMMA HOFFMAN, 18, is a student at Newark Academy in Livingston, NJ. She recently attended the Iowa Young Writer’s Studio and The Kenyon Review Young Writers’ Workshop. Her work has been published in The Louisville Review, Canvas, and Polyphony H.S.

 

A Postcard

i noticed        a glitch                         in the matrix

it happened               while you were

 

sleeping                     a quick burst                the air

outside                                  warping

like                            melted glass

 

the greeks said                       that the world

is a shadow    on a cave wall

the blurred silhouette            of the real thing

 

we are not     blind just         sheltered

 

a few years ago          a man               entered the movie theater

pointed a gun        at the first row        and fired     until     the credits rolled

 

 

the man         on the screen   points the gun  at the camera

i stare down   the barrel         wondering if i will not die

but instead                wake up                       in a different body

 

maybe the one                       standing                       backlit             in a cave

 

if i do,                        promise            to visit

enter cautiously         and pull the curtain     behind you

we have not   seen light         in a few years

and our pupils                       need time         to adjust


CAROLINE TSAI is a senior in high school. Her writing has been published in The Best Teen Writing Anthology of 2014, The Best Teen Writing Anthology of 2015, Crack the Spine, and is forthcoming in Polyphony H.S. and Vademecum. She is a Review Editor for The Adroit Journal, and has been recognized by the Foyle Young Poets of the Year and the Scholastic Writing Awards. This summer, she attended the Kenyon Review Young Writers’ Workshop and the Iowa Young Writers’ Studio. She also participated in the Adroit Journal Summer Mentorship. Caroline enjoys NPR, school newspaper, and traveling. Next fall, she plans to attend Harvard University.

You Could Never Stay Silent For Long

I knew you when you were a fisherman.

When your hands, chapped by years

of salt and sea and wind and rain

caressed the wrinkles from my face,

wiped away my fears,

sent me young from the sailboat

you could never say you owned.

 

I knew you when you were a trout.

When your silvery fins flashed

by moonlight or star, your lithe body

parting the sea better than Moses

dared dream when he begged

his god to cast off his chains.

 

I knew you when you were a poor child.

When you were begging for scraps of bread

on street corners. Urchins were your only

friends, but the night sky set you free

to dance alone in a world lit golden

by the smiles of your many faces.

 

I knew you when you were green.

When the sun couldn’t touch you

without gasping in delight at what

wonders it had brought forth, for the

acorn had flourished in brambles, now

its branches crested the top of the world.

 

I knew you when you were a fisherman.

When the chop and spray and rushing wind

tipped you from the hollowed out log

my grandfather carved for you with

a song and a promise. Castaways

never last long except in comic books,

and this was never a story worth telling.

 

I knew you when you dragged yourself

out of that pit you were born in.

I knew you when they dropped you

into that pit you stayed in.


LUKE HENTER is a high school senior from Charlottesville, Virginia. A proud graduate of the Iowa Young Writers Studio and Kenyon Review Young Writers Workshop, his work has been published in Textploit, Phosphene Journal, and Inklette. Both his poetry and prose have been recognized by the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. He likes dark chocolate and warm sunny days, harbors dreams of becoming a professional world traveler, and has an intense fear of spiders. His most prized possession is a rubber poison dart frog named Penelope.

Elegance

My town isn’t big, but it has a lot of remarkable places if you know where to look. On that day, I was going to one of them, a place where people go to hide things.

You head out on Walnut Street to where it turns into a dirt road, then follow that until you see a run-down metal building. The town stores old equipment there, the kind of stuff that no will ever come back to get: broken lawn mowers, old snowplows, and rolled up signs from the Snow Goose Festival.  It’s not locked, of course. There is an awning out in back with an old couch, where you can sit and look over the valley and the river and the cottonwoods. Mostly, kids smoke pot there.

That’s not why I go to The Shed, though. I usually go there to find the things other people have hidden. Now that I write that out, it sounds kind of creepy, but it’s not really that bad. Mostly, kids will hide porn or cigarettes or pictures of old boyfriends, if they are gay.  I don’t care about any of that. I’m usually looking for writing, confessions. When you grow up in a town like this, you want to read a tragedy that isn’t your own, and that rings true in a way that Fitzgerald or Hemingway do not in this part of the high plains.  My own tragedies are little ones. Since I got flattened in practice by David Cortez and bruised my leg, I’ve been relegated to back-up punter. The best writer in the school, Julie Harris, stopped dating me after the homecoming dance and now just wants to hook up in her car and not let anyone see us. All normal high school stuff, I guess.

I know my way around The Shed pretty well. Kids are surprisingly predictable about where they hide their notebooks and wads of folded paper. I go right to the most likely spot to hide some writing: under the Snow Goose Festival posters resting on a long rough wooden table. I lift up the heavy pile, and there it is.

The notebook is the kind kids use for class notes, with a flimsy green cardboard cover. It is slightly damp, and the cover sticks to the first page. The first page is blank.  I peel it back. The second page has one word on it: Elegance.

I stare hard at that one word, which plays the amazing trick of being a contradiction of itself in a thousand ways. After all, the notebook isn’t much to look at, and it is in the world’s most inelegant place.  And the handwriting looks like a boy’s, not a girl’s, and it’s written with a rough thick pencil line, not the lavender ink I usually find in these things.

The third page says this, and only this: I want something in my life to be elegant. The rest of the book is blank. The writer is going to come back and fill it in later, reporting on the Elegance Project once it is under way. I shove it back into place, then flop down on the couch under the awning and look out over the valley and the brown hills beyond. A turkey vulture glides over, and circles back.

At school the next day I can’t get that word out of my head. “Elegance” is a thing for New York or LA or maybe Cherry Creek, a fancy neighborhood in Denver where my cousins live. It’s not something you find in this town, which has a good cafe and a bad café and a gas station made of petrified wood and that’s pretty much it. It’s not a word that people use, except the math teacher, and it always seems funny, not serious, when he calls an equation “elegant.”

At lunch, Julie and I go to her car again. She sits in the passenger seat and I sit in the driver’s seat, even though it is her car. She likes it that way. We kind of have a routine, and I don’t think about it much, unless she starts crying. She stopped dating me in public when she started visiting our English teacher, Mr. Robertson, at home, and I am pretty sure I know why she is crying.  I don’t really know what to do, other than the routine, so I do that. I start by kissing the soft skin on the back of her neck, holding her hair like a lariat in the palm of my hand.

She dresses differently now. Girls in our school wear jeans and t-shirts or maybe a hoodie.  It’s not a dress-up place. But Julie is wearing something beautiful every day now. It is stuff that doesn’t come from here. Today she is wearing a white satin top with thin white straps. When I touch it, running my hand along the smoothness of it against her waist, the word came to me, and I say it. She says nothing, and then I feel her begin to cry, a gentle movement more than a sound.

At practice, the freshman who had displaced me, Luis Villareal, is doing most of the punts, so I go and watch the offensive line work. It isn’t my position, and I haven’t really watched them before except when they were on special teams, trying to keep me from getting slaughtered. It’s a small school, so the same big guys are on the offensive line and the defensive line, but they are working on blocking today. Coach Fajardo is showing them how to do react when the other team does a “stunt,” which is a play where the defense has two players cross over as they try to get to the quarterback. David Cortez and Tomas Fernandez are practicing the same move over and over, where they move towards one another and then apart, as if picking up the pass rushers. Coach is showing them where to step, and they follow his footwork over and over with their hands out front, fingers extended. It is fascinating, really, now that I really see it– on the balls of their feet doing a shuffle right, a bounce, and a swift step left as they watch Coach do the same. It is… graceful. It really is.

They have a late bus for the kids who do sports, which goes all over town. I wait by the curb with the other football guys and some runners and the girls’ soccer team. I look over at Tanya Rodriguez’s left leg as she checks her texts. It is taut and strong, and this sharp crisp line runs from her ankle to her knee, this lovely arch as she points her foot askew to the school and town and the valley behind us. The bus door opens with a hiss and we pile in. I take a seat in the front, next to Will Vasquez, like I always do. The driver of the late bus is Maria Fajardo, coach Fajardo’s wife. She does the same thing as always. First, she looks behind her, smiles, and says, “Everybody in? Are we missing anyone?” Then she closes the bus door, two folding leaves dancing together. Finally, she runs her fingertip along the big circle of the steering wheel, her bright red fingernail stark against the black vinyl. It’s lovely, that motion.

I tell Mrs. Fajardo to let me off at Walnut, and I walk out to the dirt road and The Shed. I have a half-hour of daylight, and now I can write. The sky over the prairie is crimson and pink. As I flop down on the old couch with the notebook I see the turkey vulture soaring away from town and back again, a slow high arc in the reddening sky.


LOUIS MILLARD is a sophomore at the University of Colorado. His hometown is Lamar, Colorado, which is the setting for this story. He likes to think that he is honorable, though that has never been officially recognized.

Saffron

The saffron colour draped her frail body, gliding softly around her waist. You could see hints of gold, glittering around the border of her sari. It was bright and beautiful, just like she was the first time she wore it. Her jet black hair was twisted into a bun, fashioned with a jasmine garland, on that day. The kajal made her almond eyes even bolder. All her sisters were jealous of her beauty. She was tall, slender and had a sharp nose. Her father used to call her Cleopatra.

The sari was to be worn for Diwali, just like she had done fifty years ago. Though she had changed with time, her sari didn’t. They were kept in safe conditions, away from her conniving bahus. They had their hands on most of her jewelry and all of her kurtis. She had saved her saris though for she loved them. She showered them with love and affection, perhaps more than she did on her family. The saris reminded her of all that she loved. Her family reminded her of all that she had lost.

She looked at the vanity mirror that was placed on her almirah. She had barely any time to look at it. She made sure she was busy so that she didn’t have time.

Today, she made time. She opened her long hair, which was once pure black but now, pure white. It flowed over her shoulders, down to her waist, softly and gently. She had forgotten how beautiful her hair used to be. As a young girl, she would run around the fields with her thick mane flying behind her. Now, her knees groaned with each step she took and her open hair would irritate her.

She touched her face. It was once soft and long. Now, it was harsh with wrinkled lines all over. Her eyes were draped with loose eyelids and her once smiling lips were set in a thin line. No matter how hard she forced them, they stayed in their severity. They didn’t smile when she got married, didn’t smile when she had her children and they didn’t smile when her family laughed. They stayed in their solitude.

She wondered if he would still find her beautiful, if he could make her smile? Would she have aged differently, had she aged with him?

She would have. She knew she would’ve.

Today, she would allow herself to remember him. After fifty years, she would bring him alive.

She moved towards the dark corner of her room and placed herself on a rocking chair. It once belonged to her husband. It used to be placed out in the courtyard and he would sit on it all day. He even died on it. She moved it into her room and placed it in a comfortable corner. People would pity her, thinking that she would sit on his chair as she missed him. Truth be told, it was simply comfortable.

She closed her eyes and let her memories flood her eyes.

She saw the day she met him, as a child.

She saw her younger self being completely enamoured by him.

She saw him, in his teenage years; tall, well-built, fair with dark black eyes. They always used to sparkle, especially around her.

She saw the day he confessed his feelings for her. She wore the same saffron sari. It was under the banyan tree, near a lake in the rain. She was so happy.

She saw the day when her father slapped her, angry at her for having a relationship with him. How could an educated girl fall in love with a village pandit?

She saw the day she married her father’s choice- an accountant. Smart man but nothing compared to her choice. Her choice was philosophical. She used to call him Tagore.

Her Tagore.

She saw the determination in his eyes. Determination to marry the girl he loved and not let her go. She saw her determination too.

She saw the day she was pushing through the crowd that surrounded the banyan tree, next to the lake, in the rain.

She saw her Tagore, painted red with his wounds. His eyes were closed in serenity as if he were just asleep.

She saw herself let go of all her tears. She saw herself hating her family; her brothers for killing him, her father for ordering his death and her mother for standing silently in the sidelines. She never forgave them. She stopped laughing with her brothers, stopped sitting with her father and stopped dancing with her mother.

She knew they missed their daughter but she didn’t care. She missed her Tagore. She’d dream of herself dancing, laughing and talking to him.

She suddenly shot up and went to the mirror. Her legs ran even though her knees cried out.

She closed her eyes and opened them. She saw her Tagore.

He played with her white hair, she saw him kiss her wrinkled face and pull her lips out into a smile, reminding her he had never left.


NAINA ATRI follows the philosophy of U Soso Tham: all rules are scattered bones that do not feel. It is the heart that feels and hence, writes. She’s always been interested in the human world, especially in things that she cannot touch but feel (mainly, psychology). Her favourite books include The Bonesetter’s Daughter by Amy Tan, Deathly Poems compiled by Russ Kick and the works of Devdutt Pattnaik.