Nightingale & Sparrow

Author: meganrusso

  • Milk, Bread and a Few Essential Groceries

    Milk, Bread and a Few Essential Groceries

    Rob McKinnon

    The town was once a thriving centre
    when the paddocks were lush
    the crops had been bountiful.
    At harvest time there was a boom,
    with money to spend
    the shops were full of locals and visitors.

    At first, hopes were that the drought
    would only last a short time
    as they had done in the past.
    Politicians from where the rain still fell
    and the grass was green
    had told them so,
    it had been a long time now since
    they had visited the town.
    What was once an occasional event
    had dragged on and on
    until it had become clear
    that it there had been a permanent change.

    The streets of the town had once
    been teeming with children,
    but only a few older locals remained.
    No one bothered with “for sale” signs anymore,
    no buyers wanted houses in the heat and dust.
    A row of empty shops filled the main street,
    places that were once meeting hubs
    for chats and catch ups by the locals
    had become just voids.

    Wendy’s shop was last one left open.
    In the old days the shelves were fully stocked,
    with only a few regular customers
    she only stocked milk, bread and a few essential groceries.
    She did not know how much longer she could continue,
    with no jobs and no money in town
    she barely covered the bills,
    but she was determined to struggle on
    because this was her home
    and she had nowhere else to go.

    Rob McKinnon

  • Fever

    Fever

    Judy DeCroce

    a humming sound impatient
    like a shell held to the ear

    waves of heat brim
    a constant reminder
    of a storm within

    an ocean’s roar and shrink
    and the tide waiting

    I know its persistence
    burning as its beach

    Judy DeCroce

  • what’s left

    what’s left

    Linda M. Crate

    you told me once
    i didn’t have a temper,
    do you feel it now?
    in the flames of my immortal
    wings?
    or perhaps in the fires of my dragons?
    i know you must feel the heat
    of my rage
    i haven’t quite disguised it
    does it disquiet you?
    or do you think you will quiet me
    with sweet honeyed words
    full of insincerity?
    silver tongued devil,
    i know the fangs of your
    death and darkness,
    but i do not despair because
    you have not yet met my monsters;
    i will destroy your darkness
    with all of my light
    and the heat of the fangs of my monsters
    will destroy what’s left.

    Linda M. Crate

  • Aliens

    Aliens

    “For D.”

    C. Cimmone

    I called Ruth today.​

    I told her I was sitting at the pharmacy in one of those uncomfortable chairs and I found
    myself staring at the pipes in the ceiling.​

    I heard the tapping of computer keys and the muffled voices from the drive-thru window. I heard paper rustling and staples tapping. I heard shuffling steps. I heard the humming of the air vent above me. I felt my phone vibrating in my purse.​

    The white pipes in the ceiling were traveling east and west. The pipes were racing high and making sharp turns into the walls. The brackets hugged the pipes with all of their might while the screws received no credit for their duty.​

    The larger pipes hovered over the smaller pipes like whales carrying their young. The smooth metal was light and free. The lights of the pharmacy, round and bright, did not reach each pipe; therefore the shadows between each bend in the pipes offered peace from the sorting of pills and angry customers.​

    I explained to Ruth that I had become transfixed by the white pipes and the ceiling hovering over my medication. I was pulled away from the ground and my feet; I was relocated to another part of my mind.​

    “And somehow,” I explained, “I thought I was home.”

    The pharmacist called my name and broke my stare from the whales above us. I approached her and she greeted me with ease. She confirmed my identity and for a moment I was home. I knew who I was and peace and comfort dripped off of my fingertips and onto hers as we exchanged the white paper bag. ​

    “And then,” I told Ruth. “And then, I turned around to see the waxed tiles of the pharmacy floor. I could see through the glass door.”

    I went on to tell Ruth that I was quite positive I had gone mad. And with this psychological breakthrough, I had carried myself back to work and cried in my car to the tune of the radio. ​

    “I was awake, Ruth. I was awake, and I thought I was somewhere else.”

    Ruth was my friend. She had been for a while now and she understood why I told her I felt alone. ​

    “I know I am not alone. I was with people the past few days. I was with friends, yet I feel
    alone.”

    Perhaps I did not feel alone, exactly, I explained. Perhaps I felt alienated from those who do not get confused about what city they are in as they wait in a pharmacy. Perhaps I am the only one who imagines dragging around my husband on a catchpole, much like a rabid animal who craves more hostility.​

    Ruth explained that she, too, felt alienated. She had carried her son, new and fresh, to church each Sunday, as I had carried my husband – wild with chemicals and needle sticks. No one noticed we brought visitors to church each Sunday. No one sees these types of visitors. ​

    Most of the church, and the pharmacist for that matter, do not know why I had to leave my home. They do not know the sounds of my family before my husband disappeared into another world. They do not know that I ran for my life – children in arms with one set of clothes – and fell into the puddle of a town that I wanted no part of.​

    Most of those who Ruth smiles with at the church do not know why she believes this life has given and taken all it will. They do not see her son in her arms, as he sleeps in a corner of the cemetery where the large limbs of the oak trees sway over the smaller limbs like whales carrying their young.​

    C. Cimmone

  • The Quintessence of Fire

    The Quintessence of Fire

    Stephen Mead

    Enter flame, its elusive petals.
    They become real & you could drink them,
    be lit with their hues.
    Such nimbuses pulse, drawing air in,
    luminescence wrapping round,
    a vampirism kiln
    sucking, swallowing, reeling
    back out…

    Such hunger
    gives off a sulfurous aura.
    Cobalt gas yawns, an unpredictable
    breathing thing.
    It lives as turbulence, truth.
    Its blazing is nature, opposing
    neutrality, glamour, rituals.

    See it grazing, moving across lawns?
    Bursting to eddy, the conflagration
    seems sacred. To focus on its bowels
    means discovering Pompeii, the burnt
    ends, the ashes…

    Falling, every tip drops
    a climax, a kiss.
    Next they head seaward,
    having cleared the landscape.

    Here regeneration’s bleed, wavelengths
    of burners, their innermost eyes.

    The evolution is fascinating, an enigma
    to behold. Imagine it
    separated from gaseousness,
    thrown into cold space——

    Fire, a sphere, that coin
    twirling, twirling,
    this side of it, a black hole,
    this other…your door.

    Stephen Mead

  • Manufactured Seasons

    Manufactured Seasons

    Prithiva Sharma

    I’ve slept in your heat,
    You’ve woken up in my ice,
    And our sleep cycles have been reduced to seasons
    Where spring never comes;
    It’s either the scorching sun or an icestorm

    I wonder why they name cyclones after just one person—
    It is never just one somebody who erases a community
    It is always an entire community which ensnares that which it fears,
    Which it rejects

    Our identity is like that (or as you say, our iden-titty is like that)—
    It is a community full of wilderness that needs to be civilized,
    It is a religion full of Satans that needs to be christened
    It is a house full of both of us with our weird couch (named Dorian),
    And our discolored walls, and us

    One day we will wake up together, in different sides of the same bed,
    Our feet curled around each other because we
    Want to not have cold feet at least at night—
    We will walk out of the house at the same time, with our hands intertwined
    And no one will look at us, except for the barista at Starbucks
    Who will tell us that we’re the cutest couple she has seen this morning,
    And so she will give us a discount of 2 bucks

    One day, we will, but today?
    Today we wake up together, in different sides of the same bed,
    Our feel curled around each other because
    We want to not have cold feet (even though it is the middle of summer,
    And the air conditioner barely works)
    And we walk out of the same house as two different people at two different times
    So no one would know that at night, we are the same body
    Heating up even in the hum of the air conditioner

    And when I say I love autumn, you’ll change the bedsheets to a rotting red and
    Mustard yellow; when you say you miss the cool, I’ll finally get that
    Air conditioner repaired
    And in the middle of a Sunday work marathon when we both
    Exclaim how we long for spring,
    We will go and buy enough flowers to weave a quilt with.

    Because if seasons don’t come to us, we’ll bring them.

    Because if man can make love, then we can make seasons too.

    Prithiva Sharma

  • I’ll Forget You

    I’ll Forget You

    Julianna May

    I’ll forget you in a day or two;
    the way your hand cupped
    my neck’s nape, drew me close
    like strings of a knapsack
    pulling together.

    I’ll easily forget your freckles,
    constellations covering the space
    of your cheeks.

    Each brush of your hand
    on my shoulder, knee,
    burned the wooded maze
    around my heart.

    I won’t dwell on the ways our tongues
    danced a tango quickly
    to the beat of my heart.

    I will forget you in a day or two
    despite the fire dancing
    through my body.

    Julianna May

  • Fire

    Fire

    Kevin A. Risner

    at the age of four / my house was a lightning rod / the roof bulged toward the purple sky / a magnet to saturated clouds / with eyes closed it sat alone / a lunar landscape / windows held wildfire as I walked closer / eyes focused on the upper floors / where I slept / the flames were brooms sweeping in the churning rhythm of a washing machine agitator

    at the age of seven / I saw a scene at the start of a film / a man unlocked the front door / briefcase in hand / full of work to finish that night / turned the knob and opened the door / the collected energy of the fire within blew the door off its hinges / engulfed him completely / and that was his sole role / I think if that would happen to me / stand at the threshold / reach for the door handle / open it the tiniest crack / wait for the heat to come / I’d believe the wind would save me

    at the age of thirty / I wake up in a sweat / July seems so far away / from the reality I want / nightmare anviled my brain / we want to have so much more time handed out to us / every minute / every day / but we open doors and become consumed by everything in the next room

    Kevin A. Risner