B. W. Beardsley
a r m
a fractal of itself the integer of nucleated substance meat of bicep tricep
tendons hackneyed & tethered the ripple beneath a substrate
that indurates flesh with capillaries deep buried in contusion
littered with synovial fluid humerus waterboarded   a mess
of stagnant blood socket enraged deep
ache spliced open a crumpet pried apart crisped in the toaster blackness
lingering capsule of shoulder excoriated as if the sucking
yearn of maggot to putrid skin
* * *
SHARDS OF MISSING MEMBERS
A wedge of me, lost.
Scent, lingering near mother's clothesline, sun,
A rare May event inching from mud season slime that grimes the road
Low lying portals into sway, crash,
Father's expletives, and the soon to be missing
Muffler.
But I am on the tree line, wind,
An imperative, the desiccated leaves from November rattling like
Some Halloween ghost unsure what — or where — to haunt.
And yet, I am inching back to the house, stealth an invention of my nine-year-old Self, secrets lacing my dungarees, fiction brewing my brain,
Maples swaying, needles of pines nudging my arm, and that smell —
Clean clothes levitating in the air
Scenting somewhere near, where I was.
she left the house this morning
she left the house this morning
skirt / bracelets / lip gloss
groceries for her birthday lunch Br>
home within an hour exhausted
she clapped her hands
i so cited by people coming for my birthday
and then they weren't'
it was something—an illness—a forgotten appointment—
she was holding a box of pasta in one hand and reaching inside the grocery bag with the other —her hand got stuck in the handle and was flapping against plastic and she looked at me —eyes charcoal —brows scrinching toward her nose —
her hand stopped flapping
took a step toward me
B.W. Beardsley received her MFA in Creative Writing from Goddard College. Her work has appeared
in the Pitkin Review, Pentimento Magazine, Interfictions Online as well as The Examined Life Journal
(University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine). She currently serves as a poetry editor for Clockhouse
Literary Journal.
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