DEAR LONG HAIRED WRINKLED BUTCH WOMAN WITH A COCK WHO I AM GOING TO BE
pleased to see you in my dream last night on a
bike in the center of a dim kansas street
to see your gray hair hitting your shoulders and your
arms old and muscled in a tanktop, sunspotted
i will do my best to get out in that sun for you. pleased
to do it, as soon as the wind clears out the cold
and i can live on the lake, deep green sun flat against lilypads,
grit in my toes from hemlock dust
turning to mud on the rocks. fly out to l.a. even,
a mystery of surreality and too much sun, i’d rather
too much than not enough and this applies
to most these days. pleased to hear your voice deep
and scratchy with use. i’m trying to talk more. there’s a
way to open up my tongue so it fits you in it
right in the center, spider’s egg waiting to open in my mouth.
you might still fit my blue suede coat
good for a walk, for an interview, for a ph.d. pleased to see
where you take it who else you kiss
in it. kissing is always a moral good and a positive health outcome;
conditions of employment include
wage scales, vision and dental and a kiss
on the lips. pleased to see you check your phone impatiently
sometimes i go on with a joke too long. if i’m talking
to myself, which i am. pleased just to see you tonight stuck
in kansas with me, two single-speed bikes to spin us impossibly back
along the highway away from empty football field-blue
and the chase that’s going to start when you wake
me up. and pleased to see the stubble along
your chin, i’ve been wondering when i
will start to plant it there grown like those lilypads along the turquoise
like two shades of sun on my shoulders and the weather spots next to
my eyes, already started. hey you say i’m all for reflection i know
you’re in a weird place but we should get outta here before
the chase starts and i say yes sir you ask
if i know how to hotwire and i say no sir
and you roll your eyes, say just hold this i’ll do the messy parts.
i hold your phone flashlight and you do the messy parts
and we throw the bikes in the trunk and you drive
and the sky gets bluer and blacker and you reach a somehow-tanned
hand toward my shoulder and wake me up
so the chase can start.
Taylar Christianson is a poet from western Washington State. Their work has been published in Rogue Agent Journal, Sinister Wisdom, Sweet Tree Review, and Jeopardy Magazine, where they were awarded the Don and Elaine Westhoff Jeopardy Magazine Award for Poetry in 2024. Their poetry tends to return to patterns of viscera, saltwater, repetition, junk, and women with problems.
