2016-03-31

Geraldine

I can’t remember if I’ve said any of this before

but, Geraldine, the world is our police procedural.

Morning’s detective holds his breath above the sink.

One night each week, scenes plash the wall

and our eyelashes resemble the bottom fringe of chain link

pushed back to reveal some last evidence: a torn fingernail

shaking in the flashlight’s jiggly yolk and shell.

My advice: don’t trust anyone who disparages memory.

They never lost theirs, Geraldine, or never lost enough

they felt their body become evidence—not like us who’ve heard

dry migrations of police in the light on the curtain.

There are times when you won’t know whom to trust,

but always believe the forgetful Geraldine.

When a gun goes off, they know their way around what’s lost.

Unlimited Text

I’m messaged strange metaphors for this life.

The wind on KK Ave offers unlimited text.

Air trucked and trundled under pageload sky

while small muscling grass tightens against

rehabbed buildings of the 5th Ward’s recent revival.

Maybe metaphors are the social arrival

of a once down neighborhood, or the quiet violence

we sew in speech pushing it toward the little laugh.

But this is just the quick read.

I refresh for more comments

and tap to expand the exhausted aftermath

of a passing bus. Its longform shakes.

Its one thing leads to another’s daring escape

passing by the way a metaphor appears at rest

advertising no-contract plans, unlimited talk and text.

ORD

According to Genesis, to catch my flight

I had to stay up all night

and evening and morning were the second day

and darkness crowded the face

of the waters as it helped adjust the straps

of the emergency oxygen mask.

According to Virgil, in Book VI

Aeneas crossed the last threshold

striding the rainbow-colored hall

of the O’Hare terminal

and shades receded in the lake of hair and dust

that rippled the tile of the concourse.

According to whichever book it was,

the seventh day, fate was so still it was skittish

bursting into light-headed applause

for the train about to be created

in the station at Jackson Boulevard.

A wheel of morning and evening pages

scattered as I stood for the arrival

of my day of rest.

Max Schleicher works as a copywriter and digital marketer in Chicago. Poems of his have appeared in Prelude, Zocalo Public Square, and other magazines. He can be found @maxschl.

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