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Sonya Schneider

A Wound Is An Opening

 

A baby, my brother, his head heavy

with no-speech, propped up against plush

pillows, his heart recently opened like a bifold:

the dime-sized hole sewn up hastily

before anything else vital

slipped out. There I was a girl

practicing cartwheels

on the pintucked pink couch

whose back rested against a window

I threw myself into – a foot breaking glass,

bright blood at the heel and later black

as it dried onto the stiff stitches,

stitching the tiny wound.

A wound is an opening.

His chest a riverbed of scar tissue.

On my foot, all that remains:

a tiny white mark in the shape

of a wishbone.



The Pool

 

Pa built one, dug the hole

with a few of his friends

till the earth piled up and I’d scale

the excess mound in search

 

of treasure. To save money,

he stretched the sides of Mystic Blue,

a liner he’d found on clearance,

laid the tile himself.

 

From the back patio we watched

the lines of his face darken

with dusk, the gaps slowly filling

with grout. After the cool groundwater

 

was called from deep soils

through a bright hose, chemicals

added, temperature brought to a balmy

eighty-six degrees, he stepped in,

 

my wordless brother stiff in his arms.

I’d heard of baptizing,

and even though we had no god

in our house, this is what I remember.

 

My father moved through that chlorinated lake

holding his first-born – small arms akimbo,

hair loose snakes – sashaying

him across the calm surface,

 

while my brother, very slowly,

relaxed his tense muscles, gazed

skyward. Then, finally, my father

threw back his head and laughed.

 

Sonya Schneider's poetry can be found or is forthcoming in Catamaran, Naugatuck River Review, Potomac Review, Raleigh Review, Rust & Moth, Whale Road Review and elsewhere. She lives and writes in WA.




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