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kaylimarie
kaylimarie
small earthworm who stays underground when it rains
I can hear my mother calling through the cracks of the door, her own hands split, bleach bottles leaning up against crinkled wallpaper. “What are you doing in there?” gets distorted by the freshwater sea I have created, bubbles escaping from my mouth relaying “baptism." But my mother does not invite her friends or clutch the camera hanging around her neck like it could choke her nervously, and I do not feel the wave of divinity wash over me, cleanse me of the sin of birth. But, instead, I tilt my head beneath the faucet, and water settles on my cheekbones and across my bare stomach and clings to my hair, curling itself like Velcro to my matted locks, and it weighs me down like a liquid stigmata. Like a conscious sponge, I feel the pressure and lapse further and further, clutching the edges of the bathtub, the womb of my mother, the weight of the red sea, once parted, sifting through my hair and along my wrists, following more of a path than I can find. “What are you doing?” repeats my mother as her bleeding limbs cup me out of the water. No one claps, hands my mother a bible. She does not smile when dusty, cracked pews flood and cleanse with water. Born again— that’s just it: I never knew life in the first place.
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Apr 25, 2017
Apr 25, 2017 at 12:57 PM UTC
Suicide in a cathedral
outside, a kingfisher falls from a snowy tree and plants the blood from his frozen wings. inside, i see the plunge and, as i stand, feel my stomach drop down to my feet. that bird’s been dying for so long, its song whistling flatly through its beak, the tiny flash of color for my days expiring, suffering, visibly diseased. my sigh of relief for ended anguish flows like a frozen river from my chest. should i revel in my freedom? should i be grateful for my breath? outside, a vulture comes, and inside, i fall back into my now-cold seat.
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Mar 1, 2016
Mar 1, 2016 at 3:56 PM UTC
terminal
I woke up naked somewhere between you and me. I must have been a tiny spider, curled up, unfolded my limbs, sweat adhesive for the sheets. Liquefied myself again. You play with my tongue, melding with my spit and my lungs. I must have been a wind chime, swaying silently, chest quivering, bare ******* showing, wrists cracking, still trying to unwind. I woke up naked and swallowed you whole.
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Jan 19, 2016
Jan 19, 2016 at 2:21 PM UTC
Xanax
Constantly aware of my input and output, I am the most inefficient worker bee. Fur wet with honey, I cling to the insides of hives and lose my wings, unable to peel them back away from one another. A fortress much more a home than a homicide, rose thorns are hardly my sting, so I weave in and out of their buds and barbed wire. I am not supposed to feel a thing. I die for my cause. I am what I make. I forage in the afternoon, and then free my sting from my skin decidedly.
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Nov 9, 2015
Nov 9, 2015 at 12:39 PM UTC
Dew, Honey, Blood
Abridged in still uncertainty, autumn swept up its weeping leaves. “You’re the red leaves on the tree,” paused, breathed in, “and I’m the green.” Of the fall, you thoughtfully said, “one is dying; the other, dead.”
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Oct 19, 2015
Oct 19, 2015 at 9:52 PM UTC
Complement
Dread the fertile limbs of the forested paths, clustered not beyond doubt, but melded back to the earth by wrath. You dismiss: “it’s too bright,” that is, my ghosted figure and snuffed out embers, and your own face blanched by pseudo light. Axe me, but dread the two of us— love, loving, loved— dead.
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Oct 12, 2015
Oct 12, 2015 at 9:52 PM UTC
Love, Loving, Loved
The family dog is dying. On Saturday, they press her ****** paws in cement, and the eldest daughter swallows some accidentally. The middle son is in the backyard raking leaves when he tells the neighbor. The words snag along the electric plot line and crumble to bits beneath his teeth, brushed back and forth into the leaf pile. On Sunday, the mother unfolds the quilt that the kids use to make forts onto the kitchen floor. Her muffled pats on fabric a motion to the coffin, the dog spins in a single circle, then lays down to die. “This way she will be warm while she is still with us—” The eldest daughter vomits the cement up in the nearby sink. On Monday, the father slides his hands against his dog’s ribs like a xylophone, then pulls back, afraid to sound like the morning alarm. The family dog is dead. The youngest daughter takes on the role of licking her paws, dried prints on the tile floor where she lays down to die.
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Oct 12, 2015
Oct 12, 2015 at 12:46 PM UTC
Fall Death Notices
You breathe in. A kiss: how do you take your coffee? I prefer it sweet and warm against my lips. I breathe in. A story: coffee grinds pour out into wet garden soil, later staining the clothes of my kneading daughter. She prefers water to coffee, sober and clean, though studying dribbling coffee like a drip of morphine. How do you take your coffee? I reply. A revelation: most mornings I make it fresh, but the *** brewed overnight somehow tastes sweet.
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Oct 9, 2015
Oct 9, 2015 at 3:05 PM UTC
Wake
The umbrella is by the door, still coiled up and dry, save for dust droplets. I swear, the last time I moved it from its resting place it was heavier than before, absorbing stagnant clouds and exhaling anticipation. We both sigh. I count the raindrops that do not come, the flowers’ dying petals an upturned flag on the mailbox. There are letters to send; the postman should be here soon. I curse my arthritis before the weather; I have to hold my breath when I climb upstairs. Petrichor is at the door. I am playing an outdated forecast, watching the clouds rolling in.
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Oct 9, 2015
Oct 9, 2015 at 2:51 PM UTC
The Dry Monsoon