Weeping Cherries

by Nicole Markert 

I mutter bitch
I spew
spit 
through my dentures. 
It splatters 

onto my finished word searches 
as my granddaughter 
places four aces as a set. 
We never have enough space for cards, 
my        medication      scattered.  
We play on my wooden dining room table. 
She wins the game. 
I don’t mind. My mind is going. 

The school bus drops her off every day 
near the weeping cherries. 
I watch her wave, 
as she passes my window 
to climb up the front 
porch stairs. 


She is a weeping cherry 
but I don’t tell her that— 
She’ll act like an 
airhead. 

I tell her the little girl 
down the street is better & 
she snorts. I tell her she’ll       spew    snot. 

As she grows into her wide boned body, 
she will wear those words like 
thick bark. When called ugly bitch, 
she will throw her head back, 
laugh, gasp & say Thank you, I know

 

About the Author:

Nicole Markert is a senior English Writing and Literature major with a minor in Gender Studies at Eastern University. Her work has appeared in Glass: A Journal of Poetry and SWWIM Everyday. She is the Editor-in-Chief of Inklings Literary Magazine, a poetry reader for Split Lip Magazine, and an intern for Saturnalia Books. 

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