Before the War

Katrina Kaye

In the holy years of childhood,
we dressed in common uniform,
but spied only on each other.
Innocent games where you hid
and I sought you out.

I woke early to creep into unkempt yard
to feel the dew from long billowing grass
across my eight year old calves
and share the silence of morning.

In the hollow nights before the air raids,
I painted your portrait
using the light of the moon
and branches from a tree
too old to climb.

I prayed on only the consistency
of your pose as you looked beyond me.

When the August sun scorched the earth
we puzzled in the cool of basements,
making pieces wedge together
if we held them just right.

You hummed me a song
about starvation
that came to you in a dream.
Using your mother’s silver spoons
and the warped lid of a tin trash can,
I beat out a hunger
to be more than just alone.

It was the summer
of our childhood,
welded in innocence
and recklessness,
before the shatter.

Before the earth quaked with
the roar of metal beasts,
shaking leaves from trees
and scattering sparrows,
frightening us to our nests.

Before the sirens
shrieked their song of anguish
and sorrow into our ears,
leaving us blind and crippled,
groping for the
touch of a kind hand.

“Before the War” is previously published in The Fall of a Sparrow (2014).

the train

Katrina Kaye

I hear the vibrations
of the train

seething through the dark.

It takes me to another time,
when we lived in that dusty apartment

off of 4th and Jefferson,

entwined in our twin bed,
we were amazed we could hear the train

from there.

“the train” is previously published in Catching Calliope Vol 1 2014,

left behind

Katrina Kaye

at 4 am you
can’t sleep

anymore

with slow movements

gentle touch

you slip out of blanket
into cold stale air

I do not wake

yet I discern
your absence

my body chases
the warmth
yours

left behind

“left behind” is previously published in The Fall of a Sparrow (2014).