Night Descends
I tell the truth about my mother
in poems she’ll never read
How she calls often at sunset
words slippery slurred
Sliding through thirty years lost
in love drowned in Chardonnay
Yesterday home early
she turned the lock found him
Naked another woman
reaching for cover in their bed
Mother threw the key screaming
again fucking asshole
How she calls today at noon
words dodgy but deliberate
Treading water long enough
her voice breaks
Fireflies
Sight dims after twenty years
sewing cotton under fluorescence.
In fingerless gloves, she threads the eye,
prays for easy passage.
Glint from the silver thimble reminds
her of glow worms in a Texas summer.
Specks of light on pinewood,
brown iris rimmed in white.
She longs to be above the factory glare
where sunlight rolls through mist.
Rising from her bone, warmth spreads
like manna’s sweet, clear juice.
Tamarisk petals fall, barely touch her body,
blinking like fireflies.
Chella Courington (she/her) is a writer and teacher whose poetry and fiction appear in numerous anthologies and journals including SmokeLong Quarterly, Lavender Review, and Hecate. A Pushcart, Best Small Fictions, Best of the Net, and Best New Poets Nominee, Courington was raised in the Appalachian south and lives in California.