Timothy B. Dodd

The Wintry Wait to Work

 

A cold eight degrees at eight in the morning

as a mourning dove perches on the telephone wire,

Mona’s conversation with her new man

running under its talons. I see

 

a shattered flowerpot, glazed with ice,

lying in a lawn of discolored grass,

the long and twisty roots of its winter-dead

creeping along the ground.

 

At the corner bus stop the 58 doesn’t come,

the line that gets me to work,

to the flashy downtown high-rise,

to Louisville Gas and Electric.

 

Cars stop at the traffic light like in a video game,

stuffed with grey-haired obstetricians,

chubby day-care staff, and middle school math teachers.

I don’t breathe their smoke or feel their heat. I’m cold

to their George Strait and Stan Getz, can’t drink their coffee.

 

Above the avenue sits another dove,

a cooing stranger to the first, and the cars

scatter each time the light turns green,

whipping wind and pumping exhaust into my face.

 

Common advice says worry only about what you can control.

So I recall Kaufmann’s window ad on Market Street:

“$19.99 Solid Sweater Sale!”

Green, not grey, I think,

only because that’s what Mona would say.

 

 

Television Light

 

In the autumn forest I could

not find the screech-

owl that night, the rotating neck

in the moonlight, the fool’s

gold pupils hunting in

the crypt of darkness. But I

headed back at the usual

time, ready for a cup

of tea and the warmth

of blankets. My sister was

up, her leg hurting again, changing

channels on the tv. “Only movies

on are ones I’ve seen

before.” Our father came

down from bed, needing

an alka-seltzer. “Stop staying

up so late.” He turned and

left, squinting, in his white, holey

underwear, showing crack, and sister

asked why I had a lizard leg stuck

in the corner of my mouth. On

the screen two grouse pecked

in a thicket. I heard hands feeling

around in the dark hallway,

feeling for the switch.

 

 

 

The Girl on the Wall

 

The rural route winds

between clear brooks and wafts of manure

on this bridge connecting

livestock to distant modernity

where we delay for potholes, not tolls,

cattle, not red lights.

 

At the third stop a girl

sits barefoot on the stone wall,

idyllic breeze over healthy hair,

left hand in her aunt’s,

curious of the motorized giant

taking her mother in its belly.

Crystal blues peer into

the next world’s toy.

 

My memories reflect in the window,

the mysteries I boarded long ago:

Appalachian hollow turned to crowded metropolis,

suburban subdivisions to sub-Saharan Africa,

sickly pigs to stately pork, moonshine to Grand Marnier,

Budweiser commercials to Georgian supras.

 

Her venture will not take my route,

but neither can I return to hers.

If we stay put, do we shrivel?

If we go, do we lose our core?

 

I look closely at the girl,

see her through the glass.

She desires her turn

for a world of lights, of leaves.

Would I take all my photos down to start again?

 

 

The Withered

 

The heated fields bleed

in yellow brimstone,

framed by the perfuming farms

of our fatty nipples.

Crows, lost

and uncountable as they

waver in the sky

like the dark,

winged contours

of a dyed moustache

over a glib lip.

 

I have stumbled into

this golden age,

seeing its plastic

bifocals and chorus

as packs of dogs

howling through the dusk

of the heart,

bargains desired

for the fields forgotten.

 

 

Timothy B. Dodd

 

Timothy B. Dodd is from Mink Shoals, WV. His writing has appeared in Yemassee, The Owen Wister Review, Main Street Rag, The William & Mary Review, and elsewhere. He is currently an MFA candidate at the University of Texas El Paso.

Big Billy

Coalmaster, stoker of purposeful flame,

worker of the bellows of hell, adept

of the infernal majesty.

 

Mama visited him in Washington.

He was lobbyist for a lathe turners union.

They ate lunch at Ollie’s. A waitress fawned all over him,

said he had paid doctor’s bills

for her son; rank

 

humanitarian, Exalted Cyclops, klavern keeper,

you couldn’t get the n-word out of his mouth

with a shotgun.

 

He stole heat from fire;

water boiled and became vapor at his command, a change

of state; he was a keeper of dark mists, magus

of the four winds.

 

His steam drove the turbines that create

reality; he was a wizard of the first order, someone

 

who realized you could disembowel a man

and it would not kill him right away.

 

 

Bryan Merck

 

Bryan Merck has published in America, Amethyst Arsenic, Burningword, Camel Saloon, Danse Macabre and others.  He has fiction forthcoming in Moon City Review and poetry forthcoming in Triggerfish, Eunoia Review and others. He is a past winner of the Southern Literary Festival Poetry Prize and the Barkesdale-Maynard Fiction and Poetry Prizes. He lives in south Georgia with his wife Janice.

Grounded

He took his car and swerved

down

the side of the mountain,

up the side of the mountain, overlooking

the valley of trees, miles of green and farther away, the city.

He drove fast and we screamed joy. No music. Just the wind, high-pitched, shrieking, racing with us around bends, curves, inclines.

You flew.

Mustangs,

Thunderbirds,

Winged horses

 

Fell from the sky.

Long before crumpled metal and flames, they were fire, lava furies taunting the darkness with their light. Solar flares against the twilight universe.

She screamed when the blue-clothed messengers came. Inaudible sounds.

Molten feathers cannot achieve flight.

Porcelain seemed wrong to contain you

so I took handfuls and threw them into the pale blue from an incredible height

and watched grave dust line pristine clouds

until the invisible gathered it

and took you away.

 

Azure Arther

 

Originally from Flint, Michigan, Azure Arther learned early to deal with economic struggle by manipulating her experiences into fodder for her creative fire. Now a resident of Texas, and a grad student at the University of Texas, she placed second in the graduate level of the 2013-14 TACWT contest. She has been writing since she was five-years-old, and laughs at her first ten-line story, which was about three puppies.

Two Trees

Arbor vitae, meaning tree of life:

rooted in the sagittal section

of sheep’s brain –

little cerebellum and

white-matter trunk,

white branches tucked within it.

The branches bare, as in winter.

 

Another, in the Kaballah – perfect

orbs suspended, tied

to the ceiling, to each other.

Tattooed in the characters of a language

whose characters were indecipherable.

Its intricacy mesmerized: no roots,

no reaching branches. The strings

between spheres held like taut sinews

with no need for beginning or end.

 

Yours a galaxy, stretch of strange planets

holding each other aloft.

Mine a single, irreversible cut.

 

Courtney Hartnett

 

Courtney Hartnett is an MFA candidate in poetry at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. She graduated from the University of Virginia in 2013 with a BA in Interdisciplinary Writing, and her poems and prose have appeared or are forthcoming in Appalachian Journal, storySouth, Blood Lotus, and Dew on the Kudzu. Courtney was a finalist for the Crab Orchard Review’s 2014 Allison Joseph Poetry Award.

Kate Douglas

Eurydice

What would he say if he could see me like this:

stinking of nicotine, sitting in the dark

across from the fucker with fat fingers

who’s never seen anything like me before.

 

Would he kiss me

Or tell me to brush my teeth?

 

Nowadays I can drink a carafe of wine and not feel a thing.

I got all the mean, deep feelings a girl could want.

Does that count for something in a lover?

 

What would he say if he could see me:

“Just because you went down south for a few days,

it doesn’t make you a bohemian.”

 

Would he bring lilacs?

Would we drown in the silence?

Would he find anything irresistible left inside of me?

 

Maybe I can still forget about him.

There’s always that distant possibility.

 

 

The Man I Loved

 

He drifted out with the tide.

He burned away on the end of a cigarette.

Or maybe he went out for a carton of milk

And never came back.

 

It was a harmless kind of disappearing.

 

 

Kate Douglas

Kate Douglas is a writer and performance artist living in New York. As a playwright, her work has been produced at Ars Nova and Joe’s Pub. She is a recipient of the National Society of Arts and Letters’ Lavina Kohl Award for Excellence in Literature and the NJ Governors Award in Arts Education for her short play Treading Water. Her poetry has been published in Contrary Magazine, among others.

Driving Gone To Spring

small promise the mountains back deep

in distant dawn as too

 

now a truck slows from great swell

small and low, within

 

bladder is full and cells nervy enough

sing freedom

 

for empty gravel, for roads which run

and the dark differs

 

as all altitudes once, done and knowing this so

the brain springs

 

so settles this indifference as the shake sure

comes as the tuck back

 

and at just-almost, where green of the grass,

frost covers, all eyes for

 

and for boots dusty, red and glad

simply for the cover

 

a cap is pulled as the colder gets and gone

still as waits, the door is open

 

past hay patch and shot rang, and not far off

awaken have the birds

 

Mark Magoon

Mark Magoon writes poetry and short stories, and secret songs for his dog. His poetry can be found in print in After Hours and Midwestern Gothic, and on the web at DIALOGISTGhost Ocean Magazine, and The Nervous Breakdown. His creative nonfiction piece, Chef!Chef!Chef!, can be found at Burrow Press Review. He lives in Chicago with a wife far too pretty.