
Andrea’s book The Other Life can be ordered online at a 25% discount from storylinepress An interview with Andrea will be broadcast on NEW LETTERS ON THE AIR and a casette can be purchaseed for $10 from [email protected] _______ Andrea’s work online: Cortland Review
Poetry Daily
Georgia Review
River City
Blue Ink Press
Norwich
_______ A webpage at Previewport.com, the International Authors Index
Email [email protected] _______ For more Poetry |  Andrea Hollander Budy
Delta Flight 1152
After the first drink, you can be what you’re not. It’s so easy, all you must do
is answer this man’s questions with truths you’ve just invented— on my way to the annual meeting
of master magicians, or to a conference of physicists or international bankers— and your life is enviable,
new. Tell him you’re sad because you’re on your way to your sister’s wedding and you’re in love
with her fiancé. Wipe your eyes, sigh, mention almost under your breath the baby
you had to give up, the job. You’re the one who introduced them, you couldn’t stop yourself, he would come
to your desk at the office. How lonely he was, how young. But if you reveal the afternoon
of lunch on the rooftop, how for you it wasn’t enough, there’s certain danger
this man, his drink finished, ice diluted in the bottom of his plastic cup, will lean too far
into your invented life. He’ll offer his handkerchief. You’ll finger his embroidered initials. He’ll touch your arm,
hand you his card. His voice unsteady, he’ll tell you to call him at home— you,
an only child on her way to see the ocean for the first time. You, who have managed
to live a moral life, whose troubled heart has never surrendered, now with your wild and dangerous
lies, you could turn toward this stranger and open.
Wound
When you asked if I wanted to see and I said yes, you opened your robe, lifted off the gauze, and exposed a barbed wire fence cut through a field of snow. The snow wasn’t white exactly but used or forgotten, the air hardened by winter so that to breathe was to choke. And along its black length that separated into two your past and your future, that fence was streaked with indecipherable detritus as though some small animal had been dragged from its life into it and died there, its clots of fur still frozen in the barb. This is your chest, I told myself, not some deserted pasture flattened by winter over what is lost or missing. I should have closed my eyes or pictured the ocean instead. Twenty-seven years after your death I still can’t turn away. I shut my eyes and see your chest stitched closed. If only poems were the only places to know such cold.
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