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M
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Username: mjm

Post Number: 3795
Registered: 11-1998
Posted on Monday, July 18, 2005 - 8:30 pm:   Edit Post Delete Post View Post/Check IP Print Post    Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)

Honorable Mention
Vagrancy
Laurie Byro

Her disease was busy
making lesions in her brain.
She sat on her couch, eating Ben
and Jerry’s, dodging guilt about how
her day had been. It was Valentine’s Day.
She was starting a love affair.
She was embracing the easy and tough
all at once, tired of writing poems
about deer in the woods, or snow falling.
She was thinking about endings.

Her disease frightened her. The thought
of need and dependence depressed her.
She bristled when the well-intentioned
changed the subject, avoided her eyes,
stopped picking fights, gave in too readily.

The couple went out and bought a Kugel.
There happened to be one, purple like grapes,
for sale on a wooden table and somehow
even in February, there was a quickening
to the seasons, a faster pace as if she
had to hurry and not miss anything.
There was a pair of jeans from a London
Boutique, fringed and funky, studded
with a Swarovski crystal, a day’s paycheck.
This was the first week she had injected
the medicine, plunged it into her belly,
her thigh. She was afraid of dying
too soon to wear them out or of winding
up in a chair to which they would pay homage
to her courage. She bought the jeans, brought
them to a tailor, rushed two steps ahead
of her future.

Meanwhile, and she liked that word
(used it a lot in poems) tasted the sweet “l”
of it. Meanwhile, she wondered if the woods
and the deer without someone to narrate
its changes, would wither or startle, steal
someone else’s imagination.

She would dutifully write about this
current attack on her brain, her body,
She would write of this vagrancy.
Meanwhile, she would pick up her tablet
filled with paper from those trees, these woods,
lined and spiraled, empty until now
so that she might record her emptiness.

A deer standing in a grove of birches
licks the barb in her side, is startled
by the familiar taste of her blood.

It is snowing. It is still snowing

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