Issue 87

Koniec

[]

I can never see that river again. I should have guessed 
the last time would be the last time. Walking there 
I smelled the riverbed, its desperate stench
released by the sun bleaching it as it does bone. 
Down the solitary road began our village. 
Feral cats spread eye infections among themselves. 
Rye stalks shuddered in their drought. Little beasts sipped 
from the river’s shallow veins. Defenseless arm,
my grandfather told her, you are almost finished 
running, eternal rest is nearly 
here. Already ants have moved in to feast 
on the cabbage butterflies pesticided into this 
shallow grave. Pale wings torn through, and through 
again, to nothing. And for the last time

he called to her: Biała moja— rzeczka moja— Biała moja

Miriam Milena lives in Seattle. She has been the recipient of a Brooklyn Poets fellowship.
Miriam in a black shirt with dark hair in front of a desert landscape
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