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 Sep 2014 khwaja
Morrelle Martin
Some poems are pretty
about dreams or life or love
But I mostly prefer poems
Like the underside of stuff

I like poems like fruit, ripped open
and getting in my eyes
Like the underside of rocks, crawling and alive
I like poems like the inside of apartment buildings
Like my parents, talking in their room
and hearing them say my name
Like waiting for the bus and edging away
from the drunk guy who keeps talking to me
I like poems like long lines at the DMV, like
the music they play in grocery stores
I like my poems pale, with their ribs sticking out
shadows under their eyes from years of sleepless nights

I like ugly poems, poems that look like me
 Sep 2014 khwaja
Tom Leveille
she was leaving
and got the gumption
to see me before she did
so we went to dinner
she sat, crumpled
at the edge of the booth
playing with her silverware
hands sweating
our knees barely touching
underneath the table
they shook like the day we met
they shook like floodgates
when the clouds get upset
her hair was drawn back
into an apology
and she didn't answer
when the waiter asked for drinks
she pans, tilts
looking for the restroom
but doesn't get up
covers her mouth
to hide her furled chin
i cut her a piece of bread
not sparingly
i didn't want to ruin the symbolism
of cutting a gangrenous thing
from ones self
she half wept out "tell me a joke"
i thought to say "look at us."
that's it. that's the joke.
the premise & the punch line
sharing some silence
here in this ominous moment
so thick with goodbye
you could touch it
i said "when they asked what the name was for the wait, i should've said "awkward, party of 2"
but that's not the joke
"knock knock"
she whispered "who's there?"
i sat for a moment and said
"so we've come full circle.. we're even in the same seats, from all those months ago"
her lips quivered
and she hid her mouth
"i just wanted to hear a joke"
she said
i came back with
*"if i fell for you in a quiet restaurant & no one was around to hear it, does the laughter of children i drempt we'd have make a sound?"

— The End —