Katrina Kaye
Every woman has
a Persephone story
because every woman
has gone through hell
at least once and many
were put there
by the men who
loved them most.
“Every Woman” is previously published in Rabbits for Luck (2016).
Katrina Kaye
Every woman has
a Persephone story
because every woman
has gone through hell
at least once and many
were put there
by the men who
loved them most.
“Every Woman” is previously published in Rabbits for Luck (2016).
Katrina Kaye
This room is broken blackbird with misshapen wings.
You are cheap hotel bed sheets,
rough to the touch,
slipping too easily off the corners of a mattress
too hard for the spine.
I am crushed pomegranate seeds
popping between tongue and teeth,
a temporary stain shared on lips.
These gestures are swollen feet and strained nerves.
The pressure of thumb
on throat as we take this kiss
is assurance your intentions
are not to break me.
We slide and sling like cocktails and olives,
one sipping off the other
until we are both helpless.
The cuss of your breath on my neck,
and the pinch of thumb on thigh,
conjures dread for the morning’s rippling cold.
These window panes are splitting sunrises
and eleven am check outs.
While you rise, I retrace promises you carved in
tender flesh of eyelids and inner arm.
Pretending to sleep, I listen,
with hands curled under chin,
the sounds of your departure.
You have dug a trench inside me
from gut to gullet.
You fill me there.
“Hotel” is previously published in the collection, my verse…, published by Swimming with Elephants Publications, LLC in 2012.
Katrina Kaye
It is not
her fault.
Storms do
what storms do.
What they have
always done.
It was an
under estimation
of her power,
and a stubborn
belief man could
defy gods
that betrayed.
We know better now.
She reminded us
of our frailty,
our mortality,
as all gods must do
from time
to time.
Call it sacrifice,
call it necessary,
but don’t blame her.
Storms only do
what storms do.
“Storm” is previously published in Chasing Rabbits (2016).
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