Bayleigh Fraser

MACHINES

I’d give you anything,

my father used to say after he raped me,

bone-white church bulletins buried

in the stoked flames warming us.

You’re driving me home like an auction

you’ve lost, going on about war,

its machines, how and when

each vehicle grew its armor. The books

on your dashboard read the shadows

seeping from the lamp-lit night.

One day you’ll never see me again

and I want to kiss you for it,

soft like sirens driving on distant streets.

I have twisted my body like a screw

without an anchor. I have buried years

in an ocean, where once my father

pointed out each passing boat,

his fingernails chipped and sharp like wire.

I named them: loud, loud, loud.

I could hear them in my sleep.

Your hand feels hot on my bruised thigh,

snow melting under your engine

fast and all at once,

the way I wish you could love me.

I learned how to swallow

love, a plate I broke while my mother was away.

I learned how a wound opens, his hands

guiding each shard over the map of my skin,

my voice spilling out like oil waiting to be cleaned:

I’ll give you anything, anything.

—from Poets Respond

September 23, 2018

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Bayleigh Fraser: “#WhyIDidntReport.” (web)