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 Jun 2012 Jae Elle
JL
June's Gemini
 Jun 2012 Jae Elle
JL
Before
When concrete sweet lips
Put me to sleep

Fragmented
Fragile
Moments of happiness that
Slip through my outstretched fingers
To fall between the ocean waves
Splashing into the depths of your dark hair

Even now I could say your name
So easily it could slip from my lips
A precious thing

Forget it

Forget
The shadow you throw
Sketched out in front of the sunset

Your voice
I could write each
Silly
Common
Useless word on my skin

The cloluds are cut from construction paper
Orange red and yellow
The sun is falling to the sound of your laughter
Each breath I watch
The rise and fall

The smell of your perfume
Skin
Fingers
eyes
eyes
eyes
eyes
eyes
eyes
green as ivy
Stitch by stitch
Sew the seams
Of a heart
Once broken
 May 2012 Jae Elle
BB Tyler
THERE IS NO GOD in the eye of the storm
 May 2012 Jae Elle
K Balachandran
Mock war of words, aroused both,
rough and tumble fight-
shifted to bed,
*sweet animosity culminated in blissful silence
 May 2012 Jae Elle
Jane Doe
We called him Kansas because he reminded us of open spaces,
but we should have called him nothing at all.
He had a last name but we didn’t bother to learn it,
something all-American, midwestern and bland.
He had no hometown but a drifter’s restlessness in his limbs.


Kansas had a girl called Daisy-May, which wasn’t her given name.
It was said that she could charm the rattle out of the snake,
and we never knew if that was a a good or a bad thing.
Daisy-May reminded us of the Forth of July, all sparklers and rocket pops,
Cut-off shorts and bottles of whiskey.  She crackled like a firework display.


Our town overflowed with them, we were too small, too pure,
and they were too combustable. Daisy-May was as mean as they come,
and Kansas was ugly in the same way that Saturday nights are.
Knowing him was like being drunk past midnight, alone and walking
home past ***** neon and watching the stars pass you by.  


Every teenager in the county awoke at the moment of impact,
the night Kansas drove his car through that barn on route 20.  
We flocked like pilgrims to touch the twisted metal of the guardrail.
We followed the dead grass tire marks like the yellow brick road.
Daisy-May was lovely as ever laid out in white like the ****** herself.

On nights when it’s so dry that our skin turns to dust and blows
away, we think of Kansas and Daisy-May and how they caught fire.
Patron saints of our frustration, desperation, too ugly to be real.
Bottle rockets on the Forth of July. Shot from some lonely road
to explode lights in the sky, to blot out the stars for a moment, then die.
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