By Elizabeth Levinson
We were a summer of water,
flashing silver fish,
what minnow was a shiner,
a dace,
a chub,
a larval salmon
along the shoreline,
we were loose limbed
in the waves,
on the sandbar,
knees planted
on shifting ground,
we were sun bruised cheeks
and love bruised thighs,
we were read eyes, redeyes.
We were love slick
and love sick and soon,
before we knew it,
summer was over and
we were washed up,
bleached white and
picked clean,
bones cold to touch
in the autumn air
bones soon to be spread
by the icy tides
and winter hungers.
Elizabeth Joy Levinson is a high school teacher in Chicago. Her work has been published in Whale Road Review, SWWIM, Cobra Milk, Anti-Heroin Chic, and others. The author of two chapbooks, As Wild Animals (Dancing Girl Press) and Running Aground (Finishing Line Press), her first full length collection, Uncomfortable Ecologies, will be published in the summer of 2023 (Unsolicited Press).