Her husband has a tiny flaw
in his heart, a leaky valve.
In bed beside him at night
she listens to his blood
drip. Listens
to the labored breath
of pipes, walls, bricks.
Expanding, contracting.
In the morning
one icicle
hangs from the eaves.
It's perfect,
says the husband.
But she knows
it's an omen
of something
brewing or
breeding unseen
beneath lath
and plaster,
beneath cellulose
panels that disintegrate
like paper. Tomorrow
the lady of the house
will weep
in a plumber's arms,
the latest
in a long line of men
who have passed
through here
bearing bad news,
as plumbers
always do.
-
Issue 64
-
Editor's Note
-
POETRY
- Jose Angel Araguz
- Weston Cutter
- Liz Dolan
- Andrew Grace
- Elizabeth T. Gray, Jr.
- Alex Greenberg
- Carolyn Guinzio
- Kathleen Hellen
- Susan L Kolodny
- Daniel Lawless
- Susannah Lawrence
- Cynthia Manick
- Lyndsie Manusos
- D Nurkse
- Merit O'Hare
- Kryssa Schemmerling
- Sara Slaughter
- R. T. Smith
- Nicole Tong
- Marcus Whalbring
- Mimi White
-
FICTION
-
ESSAY
- David Rigsbee On The Poetry Of John Skoyles
-
REVIEW
- David Rigsbee reviews My Tranquil WAr
by Anis Shivani
- David Rigsbee reviews My Tranquil WAr