Fresh bread kneaded together.

  Silk sheets against bare thighs.

  But erratic days become too much and bring

  hair pulling ENOUGH! That pressures

  the twist of conflicted needs.

  I learned to never trust you

  and I am at fault for trying.

  Immaculate Exception

  another song for Ruben.

  To this day

  your heat is engraved

  into the grooves of my fingers

  Remember

  we sang, Tomorrow!

  Our eager dreams stretched

  beyond the time you borrowed

  This month. This hour

  sorrow worships

  all your names

  And when this sour

  thing

  rubs raw young flesh

  I don’t want to go on

  and can’t . . .

  Go on.

  Oh to speak with you

  One. Last. Time.

  The only voice I hear is

  my own darkness

  Or worse. Nothing.

                             And I am sorry I never cooked you breakfast.

  Joey DeSantis

  Baby Names

  Let’s call him Baby Doom

  or maybe Tricycle Madness would better suit him

  or Lester’s Little Secret, Braunze, Fire Catcher

  Blood Drinker or The Dream Machine

  Samuel is nice too, I know

  but you ruled that one out months ago

  You also ruled out Jacob, Peter, Daniel, Addison

  and Joseph

  which was my baby name brainchild but

  oh well

  You are right to want something flashier

  like Superjerk, Gnashings St. Claire, Lydio

  Brother’s Bane, Davidson

  or even just Slice

  He will go on to do great things potentially

  Of this your blond-winged friend was certain

  so long, he said, as we pick just the right name

  And so we must ask ourselves

  would Cookies N’ Cream rid the world of evil

  or merely turn the other cheek?

  Could an angry Clementine overturn a money table?

  I think not, but Jesus might

  Why not Jesus?

  Or how about Jeezus

  Now there’s a boy destined for something greater

  a boy who could easily hold his own inside the ring

  maybe an Italian with a great sob story

  I can already see the headlines and the VIP tickets proclaiming

  Red Foam Drinker versus Little Baby Jeezus

  I see our root beer cups overflowing as our heavenly son

  deals RFD a left hook for the ages

  fated, unable to hold back, winning

  all the fruits of our careful planning

  Out of Time

  My father is flowing clockwise

  in a holiday sweater vest and a gold chain watch

  He is down in the groove, swimming through

  the electric grey rooms

  kept warm by the stove light, and on the table

  a bowl of ham and pea soup

  Immigration was his grandfather’s story

  yet he too finds comfort in the small

  At night, laying himself in the arms of his armchair

  he can at last afford to go nowhere

  My mother is flowing counter-clockwise

  still as beautiful as she was

  fifteen years ago, twenty years

  back when the sun and sky made a point

  to match everything that she wore

  I believe now that they even changed colors

  for her secret moods

  Had I known it then I might have seen her apart from me

  Her jade necklace is timeless

  Her laughter is timeless, his records and her red coat

  that he gave her that she always wore

  I grow

  I am the clock–the testament to the full length of things

  I tell it like it is

  The dinner plates with the hearts on the rims, they are timeless

  until another one breaks (not out of anger)

  Not out of anger, I dropped it

  Out of time

  She asks, How many are left?

  A wedding present, he says, it was our very first set

  How many are left?

  I point:

  Two

  We Can Sell the Antiques

  On most East Coast beaches

  the shorelines and their crowds tend to look the same

  So long as you don’t look at either too long or too hard

  or lift your eyes to see a lighthouse

  twirling about in some other town’s coat of paint

  you can fool yourself

  There is a mansion in Asbury Park filled with junk you can never quite unsee

  Six door knocker faces, a pair of red kissing manikin torsos, twenty-three beautician’s scissors

  dulling in the back of your brain’s dark closet

  sorry-eyed, turning undead

  all of it grooming a monstrous shadow

  until there might be anything in that house

  and everything in there might remind you of it

  Today it is crowded

  on the beach where kids seem to have only one kind of scream

  Small talk, heavy feet, dark eyes

  She must know that she is not the one walking beside you today

  but so long as she doesn’t risk everything with a look, two distressed searchlights, blue

  she can fool herself too

  Death Considers the Buttercups

  One track, one mind

  Death must glide along these buttercups

  without pausing to consider them

  even as they hug the train of his cloak

  in their harmless fervor to be chosen

  by truly anyone

  And yet, in a small and secret way

  hidden as his hands and feet

  that are weary for their journey’s end

  by the shed where his old man waits

  still humming in his wife’s wide-brimmed hat,

  Death does consider them

  The buttercups, who let him go just as quietly, no thorns

  leaving only a yellow signature (a suggestion) to be remembered by

  He would have sucked them dry

  or at least taken a few lazy, arching swipes at their heads

  but it isn’t their time yet and besides

  he still has a long way to go

  On Lent

  Low ceilings are still en vogue

  as is setting aside money in small increments

  to prepare for the wise and lonely years

  We all at times need God’s wrath or a Great Depression

  to keep our thoughts from becoming too silly or from towering precariously

  I vow to not be so outlandish

  with my spending

  and to apply this kind of discipline to future relationships

  so that one day I may find and keep true adult love

  For Lent I used to give up red squash

  which I hated just as much as the other colors of squash

  the purple, the green, the blue

  I still do

  I regret the bacon bits that ended up on my salad yesterday

  that were not supposed to end up there

  I pray for the strength to avoid the near occasion of bacon bits

  And to understand that true love is made up of sacrifices both small and silly

  True love is unsexy and is nothing to be ashamed of

  Last night I dreamed

  that something surprised me so much that I

  swallowed the whole world

  Knowledge, Wealth, and Power drifted silently across a lake in
my belly

  And while I considered hurling them back into the void

  I was scared that I might start a new world war and possibly get shot in it

  I had firmly resolved to never give up anything

  when a searching voice called out my name from deep inside of me

  and I felt a great relief at being judged

  Cameron Price

  Every Morning

  New moons fade to longing,

  filling the air with transfusions of autumn light.

  In the crevices of sleep, the world dreams

  of tossing a coin :

  heads, we wake up // tails, we keep sleeping.

  It is always tails, the doldrums of the covers.

  (listen) every morning a clear white note

  breaks out over the land : it’s the snap of a

  dream sundering.

  In that moment, everything wakes up :

                          moss undulates in a breeze that

                          is not there;

              the mice collect twigs and hair

              to build palaces;

        the deer gather to search out the

        most delicate rosebushes to plunder.

  And then it ends.

  Things revert to rising slowly, as from

  a daze or stupor.

  Some things feel more hopeless than others :

  maybe your back aches mysteriously or you

  worry habitually about the bills.

  But yet there is still that moment, every morning,

  when everything pulses at once, tributary to

  one rhythmic source.

                    Don’t blink // don’t sleep.

  We must try to rise and feel it every morning,

  to remember who we are.

  The Silence of The Dead

  The final cessation is

  a tomb, a stone cup, a chorus,

  flung far into a dream

  of black water and the rushing

  of exhausted exits.

  This is the hymn of listening,

  a secret hid from the world.

  In this cavern, cut smooth

  by centuries of bitter water,

  I find a pool of gaping shadow.

  The bones of every being that came before me

  sleep submerged and wait for a sign :

  they, too, listen

  for a revelation on the other side of the silence.

  I tread the stones around the edge,

  and watch the brittle hands of the dead wave

  like kelp in a secret current.

  I kneel and lean my face down to the water

  to kiss the menagerie of bones

  arranged in grooves of sleep.

  A slender finger bent in cold yearning

  reaches for my lips

  and their memory of warmth :

  a frigid caress.

  The wait rolls on in constant flow,

  in this tomb, this holy cup,

  the chorus of the dead :

  This is the hymn of listening,

  A secret hid from the world.

  Now I, too, wait and reach

  for lips that come to kiss the dead,

  the waiting,

  waiting for the end of silence,

  for the tomb to break open,

  for hope to break open,

  and breathe.

  L’Ancien Chanson d’Hiver

  A thousand yards of linen are not long enough to record this story,

  written on the skins of onions in yellow thread,

  sewn by fingers of light.

  I am in a place, existing in liminal spaces,

  like a shred of yesterday lingering in a patch of morning shadow,

  fleeing the noon eye.

  I am the concrete road, splayed like a compass,

  pointing towards your future : walk on.

  I am open, split like the gaping mouths of lions,

  my strength laying in the multiplicity of my pieces,

  the hydra of my being : I live.

  Come to this place, warm and humming :

  the perfume of a hornet’s nest in June,

  the smell of honey in a tree, raw and woody.

  Find me there, between the gaps of leafless trees,

  waiting like the smell of smoke,

  in dappled puddles on a wet path.

  I wait there writing my story,

  on the backs of beetles and the fingers of bats.

  I am there singing this poem through the pores of a leaf,

  the mouth of a dandelion.

  I am there like a thought, the memory of a still pond in winter,

  the sadness of the night passed away.

  So wait : be my friend.

  Sing this song with me in the hollow of my open hand.

  Add to my fullness, find me in the ancient song of winter:

  Attende-moi, aime-moi, et chante, mon cher, cher ami.

  David Walker

  Sestina for Housesitting

  Don’t you feel like the forgotten piece

  of luggage? The product of heel-

  scraping left on the rug before

  they all go off to forget

  the humdrum. Bottle

  of cleaner in hand

  like a sidearm weapon, you finger

  the trigger. It brings you peace.

  Much more than that bottle

  of Jack. Far from healed,

  you just want to forget

  the mess you found just before

  you went to bed. You think of before

  all this, when “scrubbing on hands

  and knees” was only a forgetful

  turn of phrase acquired piece-

  meal from easily-healed

  fairy tale characters bottle-

  necked into life-lessons. You think of the bottled

  up frustration that needs outlet before

  they return, the time you had to walk heel-

  to-toe along a night-lit road, arms

  outstretched like traipsing. Piece

  of cake, you boasted, forgetting

  this cop had no sense of humor. Forget

  drinking yourself numb. You need to bottle,

  compartmentalize each and every piece

  of envy you have of them before

  you snap and decide to hand

  the dog off to the heels

  of a stranger. You say he’s a good dog. Heel,

  you demonstrate, hoping the dog didn’t forget

  that command. Seal it with a shake of the hand.

  Good riddance. Instead, you grab the bottle

  of cleaner again and spray. You knew before-

  hand that you would be leaving pieces

  of yourself scattered around like shattered bottles

  and they would come home and say, “Before

  you leave, just so you know, you forgot a piece.”

  Helen R. Peterson

  Ablaut

  In the company cafeteria the man

  murmurs a tune to his daughter,

  alone except for a woman

  reading a book by the window.

  The toddler rings back the words

  out of tune. He rocks the child,

  diverts her attention to the tvs

  the fact that they’re all on CNN

  makes her giggle.

  He is relieved to quiet the song

  until a photo of a child, newly dead

  flashes on screen. “Look Daddy.”

  his daughter cries, attracted

  as children are to people

  their own age. “Yes, very pretty”

  The father says, and rocks his child

  “Isn’t she a pretty girl?”

  Mageirocophobia

  When grunions make their run to mate

  the
male sliding his body around the female, her tail

  dug deep in the sand, they are unconcerned

  about the parasites slipping between their scales

  the scummiest of waters flowing through their open mouths

  and seeping, filtered, from their gills. They don’t know

  salad bars are more likely to make a body sick than sushi,

  or that Aunt Mae will someday scrape the mold from their bodies,

  bury them deep in a tomb of batter, fry them crisp

  in oil that will leap at her wattled arms.

  Contributor Notes

  Jim Pascual Agustin writes and translates poetry in Filipino and English. He grew up in the Philippines and now lives in Cape Town with his Canadian-born wife and their twin daughters. His recent poetry books, Kalmot ng Pusa sa Tagiliran and Sound Before Water, were simultaneously published in 2013 by the University of Santo Tomas Publishing House in Manila. Due for release by USTPH is his new poetry collection, A Thousand Eyes.

  Jose A. Alcantara lives in Carbondale, Colorado. He started writing poetry four years ago after a quasi-mystical experience in a graveyard involving Dante, a dead woman named Guadalupe, melting frost, a raven, and some church bells. He was the recipient of a 2013 Fishtrap Fellowship in Poetry and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

  David A. Bart is a writer from Arlington, Texas. His poetry appears in the journals Poet Lore, Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, Margie, Cider Press Review, Illya’s Honey and The Weight of Addition (Mutabilis Press).

  Therese L. Broderick has spent many years serving her poetry community in Albany, New York, as an open-mic reader, teacher, contest judge, Board member, classroom guest, blogger, and Poet Laureate of a local tavern.

  Hannah Callahan was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, the youngest of four. She studied literature and printmaking at Bennington College in Vermont, and currently resides in Asheville, North Carolina. Hannah is a writer, collage artist, and extremely amateur thereminist. She is also the co-founder of falconswithcaps.tumblr.com. Her loftiest dream is to walk across country to Roswell, New Mexico to find a UFO.

  Monika Cassel is the English department chair at New Mexico School for the Arts, a statewide public arts high school in Santa Fe. With the support of the Lannan Foundation, she has developed a successful creative writing minor at the school. She is working on a manuscript of poems on her German family’s WWII history; her translations of the poet Durs Grünbein are forthcoming in Asymptote and Structo Magazine.