By Jessica Dionne
Amid blue flowers, I cried for what I never had.
A verdant violence.
All of my worries are two-handed and humming.
The chambers of their abdomen
a counting of loss.
The milk-white hands of your mother
we’ll never pass down. I once called desire
the wrong title
named it need, forgot the difference
and decided the distance was a small bee
lost in smoke.
There are raptures that won’t come for you
And raptures that will. A one-winged
caelifera
on a path of unconcerned spirals.
Out by the lamppost, screaming bright circles—
an infestation.
Each one an anxiety, escaped from the throat.
Jessica Dionne is a PhD student at GSU and the production editor of New South. Her chapbook Second-Hand Love Stories is forthcoming from Fjords Press. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Moth (IE), Narrative, Forth River, Meridian, SWWIM, Rust + Moth, Banshee (IE), and Mascara Literary Review (AU).