When I asked him to
turn me on he said:
by Alexis Rhone Fancher
1. Turn yourself
on.
His voice had that
flat affect lovers get
when they’re done
with you.
2. You’re burning
through men, my mother warned.
Like there was a
limit.
Every day, a fresh
opportunity
to ruin some poor
man's life.
I was on fire.
3. I’d take a
bullet for you, he told me once.
And meant it.
I didn’t answer.
I tasted loneliness
at last.
4. And he, behind me,
palms on my ass,
riding.
5. (That night) I fell
asleep with the TV remote
between my legs.
When I awoke, he was
gone.
6. If he
knew what I would write about him,
he’d have hated
me sooner.
7. Sometimes, the
person you’d take a bullet for
is the one behind the
gun.
* * * * *
Author's Note: "for Michael Cohen"
"When I asked him to turn me on he said:" was first published in The American Journal of Poetry (2017)
Alexis
Rhone Fancher is published in The Best American Poetry 2016, Verse
Daily, Plume,
Rattle,
Literary Mama, Diode, Pirene’s Fountain, Tinderbox, Nashville Review, and elsewhere.
She’s
the author of four poetry collections; How I Lost My Virginity To
Michael Cohen and
other
heart stab poems, (2014), State of Grace: The Joshua Elegies, (2015), Enter
Here, (2017),
and
Junkie Wife, (2018). A multiple Pushcart
Prize and Best of the Net nominee, Alexis is poetry editor of Cultural
Weekly. www.alexisrhonefancher.com
Woooo--price of passion!
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