Two Hundred Years to Die
~For Rob
You guys need
to go, huh? he asks,
and I look from
my husband to my empty tea cupand back to him. I nod.
We haven’t seen each other in years,
enough time for me to unpack a life,
a whole marriage.
But now that
I’m back in town
we made time to
meet in this new coffee shopto be the loudest people here,
down the block from the old coffee shop that closed up
after I graduated college and now sells cell phones
to boys and girls who seem far too young to be all alone.
I watch time bend and weave down Forbes Avenue,
a parade of
different lives.It arches around the globe, away from me.
We get up.
I’m sad now
that this is really the end, he saysalmost to himself, but I feel it down to my core.
When we hug goodbye, I feel suddenly lost.
The grass is spreading out below my feet too
quickly.Packs of students walk around us. We are just ghosts.
I look up at the Cathedral, and back down at my hands.
We agree to write.
We agree to get together againwhen I’m back in this city that now seems so far from Brooklyn
that I might need a spaceship just to return.
I want to tell him that I’m sorry Colorado didn’t
work out.
I’m sorry his
friend died.I want to tell him sometimes the dead come to visit.
Do not be afraid,
but I don’t.
Instead I look forward and from the corner of my eye
I can see every choice I’ve ever made blow away from me like dead leaves.
Somewhere a
whole universe has begun.
We hug and he
leaves and I don’t look back.
My husband
slips his hand into mine,together we glance at the bus stop by the library
where we used to talk when we were young and scared
and slowly falling in love.
Somewhere a
whole universe is ending.
Certain trees
live for six hundred years.
Two hundred to
be born,two hundred to exist
and another two hundred to die.
Somewhere else
this has all just taken root.
There, it is
only the beginning and not the end.
Photograph, Age Eleven
In the
photograph
the girl
wears a hard
look
wound tight
standing by her
bike
gripping the
handlebars,
nearly
eleven
about to peel
her childhood off
like a wet
bathing suit.
Her face says what she does not.
She is
cautious
when the
neighborhood boys call to her
to show her the
fish they caught
in the lake. It
circles and circles in the bucket.
When he places it on the board
and swings the
hammer down
she jumps and
learns how easy killing is.
The air is
thick with chlorine and wet leaves
and she stares
at the grass
stuck to his
leg,
the hair on it
turning dark, darker toward the thigh.
She tries not
to look at the space between his legs.
It scares her
as much as the now dead fish.
To think this creature just alive
now dead
forever
its mouth still
open
almost calling
to her.
Inside, her
heart beats
she can feel it
with every inch of her
but inside the
fish, it is dreadfully still
and that
difference is all she can think about
while she
stands there, transfixed
doing nothing
but trembling in her years.
Ally Malinenko has been writing stories
and poems and novels for awhile now. Possibly too long. Occasionally she gets
them published. Her second book of poems entitled Crashing to Earth is
forthcoming from Tainted Coffee Press and her first novel for children, Lizzy
Speare and the Cursed Tomb, was recently published by Antenna Books. She can be
found blathering here: http://allymalinenko.com/
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