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      February 26, 2011Peculiar CrimesLaurie Blauner

      In some countries the bodies vanish.
      Not here, little girls are unearthed
      from their pink, overstuffed bedrooms
      to kiss their plastic dolls, practicing for you.

       

       

      Each family is marvelous with its mistakes,
      an aunt kidnapped by an old lover who
      dropped her decorously off at her parents’ house
      screaming an hour later. How did she know

       

       

      blindfolded? Here even snow is strange,
      unconscious, filling the emptiness with
      its tarnished whiteness, hiding the largest
      objects. Covering up and then confessing.

       

       

      I trust the destitute, after all, they have
      nothing to lose. But then there was you
      behind a fistful of chocolates and red flowers
      who closed their faces to me every night.

       

       

      How could I have believed in your soiled,
      sweaty hands leaving prints on my mirror
      and hairbrush, my skin and hers? They resembled
      sticky blossoms unable to part from what remained.

       

       

      I should have known what being late
      meant, the shirt with its torn buttons
      like missing body parts, the stain
      of your hair used by someone else’s hands

       

       

      as a weapon. Not my doing. I wore
      rubber gloves to make you disappear, burned
      my favorite rose splattered dress. I watched
      while snow heaved itself into your packed

       

       

      boxes, uncertainly, like someone wandering away
      from a firing squad only to end up in front of
      a teenager with a shaky gun who is crying
      and babbling about crimes of the heart.

      from #27 - Summer 2007