ELLEN BRAY KOSS
Commended 2023 - Tower Poetry Competition, 'The Planets'
falling in love with pluto again in the alleyway behind my house
I called by your house on Tuesday, but no one was home. It made me think
of when we were children, and I would sing you Billie Holiday songs
over a tin can telephone, to help you get to sleep.
Are you forgetting the rust and the debris and the way silence thrums in your
eardrums? I don’t believe in second chances, and you didn’t believe in me.
I’m sorry, but I looked outwards and everything seemed so much
more complicated. I was blinded by that smouldering in the distance, the one
we always used to talk about. Do you remember?
Maybe. But nostalgia is a liar, who distracts us
while it erases our regrets.
I don’t regret anything.
Not even the leaving?
I regret that you saw me turn others over in my palms, after I pledged
these hands to you, and I regret not telling the heart on your sleeve
that I was coming back for it.
If I told you that the heart on my sleeve is actually a poisonous
ocean no one has explored yet, what would you say? If I told you that the
heart on my sleeve is actually a poisonous ocean I haven’t explored yet,
what would you say?
I would remind you that what once filled my brain is now only a hangnail
at the edge of my consciousness. I am ready to become a scuba diver.
All those years, I sat alone with the emptiness, so viscid it slid between
my fingers. My voice has become splintered after screaming into the
darkness, hoping it would do something other than stare back and laugh.
I will fix it for you. I will stitch back every one of your vocal chords
with my tongue as the needle and I will swatch each star to find
the perfect match for that flush in your cheeks, just so I can paint you
into history and prove that you were never insignificant.