Pocket Change

I tried to selvage the interstice of your

atomistic view, particles never touching, always isolation

at the core of our existence.

I tried to tailor the tattered tapestry of your arcane inner thoughts,

lace-up a labyrinth of lament with love,

and silently suture

a sanguine sackcloth of self-immolation,

But the thread that

unraveled

left a hole in the hollow pocket of your heart

where weathered coins kept getting

lost.

There are covert costs to seamstress work,

worth the price

if only the wrinkled recesses

hadn’t been hidden

deep

down

in the lint and ligatures of your life.

Real pocket change,

a chimerical cuff at the

frayed edges

of a weightless wound on each sleeve,

where I worked to stitch up

a surreptitious inner seam.

What if my coins had been dollars?

More love, more labor?

Would the cost have been enough

to keep you

in the currency of

life?

 

Audrey Towns, a literature and composition instructor in the heart of Fort Worth, Texas, dismantles the nature/culture and human/nonhuman dichotomies in her prose and verse. New materialism her muse, landscapes her canvas, and the connection between the human and nonhuman her essence.

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