Local Honey

Katrina Kaye

She is selling local honey
out of the back of an 84 Dodge.
In tight worn jeans
and a crochet halter,
she wipes a sticky finger across her thigh.

I know her.
She drinks straight
from the comb.
She lets sugar sit on white teeth
savoring the rot.

She mesmerizes passer bys,
with a saccharine smile
and taut abdomen.
Trying to make an honest living
to accommodate an immoral code.

Honey,
I know you better.
I know what that caramel hair
looks like when it is unwashed
and stiff from too much sugar.
I know the sick syrup residue
the leaks down
the back of your throat.
The taste you can’t quite shake.

This remedy, homegrown and handmade,
healed burns and soothed wounds.
We candied it with
our own hands and tested it with
our own lips swelling
our immunity to foreign bodies.
We didn’t need anything more,
just this sweetness which stuck us together.

The flavor, the thick,
still reminds me of you.

She accidentally smiles at me,
lifts her hand to wave,
before catching herself,
looking away,
and returning to the hive.

Light Pollution

Katrina Kaye

This gift, bestowed to you
in flashes of lightning upon brittle twigs.
Your father’s fist in your mother’s womb,
we gave you light for the first time.

Children,
you took this spark and ran with it.
What started as two infants
warming themselves beside the fire of Eden,
erupted into a string of florescence
that hide the heavens man once learned to count by.

You drew a line between Mother Earth and Father Sky
with a shield of stinging light,
a golden fleece covering my body from his stare.
And I haven’t seen the stars in years.
I missed the way your father gazed at me,
embedded me in a black comfort
even before I birthed you from my seas.

We haven’t touched in a millennium.

But I still like to look to him once in a while,
reflect his eye blue skies in crystal lakes you’ve yet to soil,
count the stars he scattered into the letters of my name years ago.

I never thought our children
would push us so far apart.

We never conceived as we cradled you from crib to crawl
the tear that would come between our horizons.

The first time we allowed you
to stay up all night,
reading by candlelight,
you properly thanked us
by charting nebula and plotting the
position of planets.

You wrote an ode to your mother,
stung tinsel of gold around my belly,
to radiate against the fall of opaque sky,
but I am no longer the center of your universe.

This gift,
intended to shield you from the pitch,
keep the monsters at bay, warm your feet,
you manifested into a weapon.

You tended a minor glow, fanned your flame
into a storm across my body,
unstoppable,
until I can no longer be seen by father’s bedroom stare.
You made an artificial day of my favorite midnight.

Were you jealous of the way he touched me,
the lightning jagged and curl that connected us for a split second?
Or was it your fear of the darkness,
of the unknown, of death,
that made you wish away the night’s sky.

That made you think you could battle it
with 24-hour convenience stores
and swing shifts and nightclubs.
Distract the view of Milky Way with glowing neon.

You are destined for self-destruction,

Now, I never sleep,
and all my gentle warnings are wearing thin.
I haven’t been able to see past you in years,
you’ve seeped into every sky I’ve ever known,
infiltrated my blackest reserves.

You are too damned bright.

I thought you would fill the gap between us,
I wasn’t expecting you to shield him from me completely.
I search for him in deserted lands
far from your touch,
Africa, South America, Siberia,
among the open plains and mountain tops,
where the night still knows secrets.

Where no synthetic light will keep me up
or blind me from his constellations,
where I can still remember the name of the
creatures he conjured for my entertainment.

Children,
there are good things that happen in the dark,
and what this mother wouldn’t give to feel father’s embrace
one more time.
For one moment,
stop pumping your fists
against your father’s nocturnal mood.

We all need some time in the away from the light.

It is time to put these children to bed,
so this mother earth can once
again be enveloped in her father sky.

Take a moment,
slip into slumber
and don’t turn to me
when I slide into your room
and turn off that light,
reclaiming all I gave you.

“Light Pollution” is previously published under the title “Electricity” in Roi Faineant (2022).

Walking Dead

Katrina Kaye

Burn it down.
Salt the earth.
Don’t let darkness rise.

Six feet in hallowed soil,
a crucifix,
a blessing,
should keep him.
Yet you still feel
his grip on spine
and your face
still radiates
the heat of his hand.

Not everything dead
stays in the ground.

Earth shakes,
dirt recedes,
and light of a full moon
can illuminate his rise.
He creeps in shadow,
circles corners of room,
hides behind recycled picture frames,
lurks inside a closet
half emptied.

You still feel him.
You flinch at sharp words,
loud noises.
You leave the lights on,
wake with a start when a car speeds by.
Some nights you shiver
as through still expecting
the turn and slap of front door
and warm tequila breath
on your neck.

Let the ground be sanctified.
Keep flowers on stone,
hands wrapped in prayer,
and when he creeps near your door,
don’t invite him in.
Let  pictures wilt,
flowers gather dust,
turn to ash.
Stake  demons in the back.
Shake the curse
like excessive water,
and move out of shadow.

Take heed. Take care.
Fire. Salt.
Renew. Repeat.
Because you know,
not everything buried stays underground ,
and a bullet squeezed through temple
can’t always keep the dead,
dead.

“Waking Dead” is previously published in They Don’t Make Memories Like That Anymore…. (2011).