Them,
Not Us
by
Tina Barry
We
hold fast to the bed’s corners, afraid our bodies, these new old bodies, have
forgotten how to love in its center. We don’t recognize our shapes, amorphous
now, or the tattoos that waited patiently to appear: Purple train tracks down
the belly. White slashes on a collarbone, the branding of unruly cells removed.
We
look into each other’s eyes, avoiding what’s below. Talk about anyone who isn’t
us:
The
woman whose daughter, well into her twenties and so full of promise,
self-imprisoned in her room.
A man
who drove a truck through the picnic grounds, families springing right and left
like panicked grasshoppers.
A
friend who walked a mob of tiny dogs, entwined in their leashes, angry at each
other for being too near, loathing the one that peed too slowly. The dogs
stared up at him, a towering hyper-breed whose face they searched for-- it must
have seemed like miles -- into the sky.
* *
* * *
"Them,
Not Us" first appeared in Olentangy Review.
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