Last modified: January 21, 2024
Phoebe Literature| January 26, 2024| Features
after Mary Ruefle
Let’s go to church, I said.
My lover didn’t want to go
to church. It smells like
a hospice in there, he said.
So we walked together in
the direction of the train
tracks, where the old
graveyard sat. The snow
was leaking into my boots,
making my socks wet.
My lover was wearing
a turtleneck made from
real wool, and I was
wearing a huge, heavy
locket. I want to have
sex, I said, and I laid
down in the snow,
like a pin-up girl with
my head propped up.
In the snow? he asked.
I was taking off my gloves,
pulling them with my teeth.
In the snow, I said.
I saw a single bird flying
above me, high up,
watching for something
to die, and I felt my locket
with my bare fingers,
the little bit of ash
that was inside.
Jen Frantz is a college dropout from Ohio. Her poems have been published in Fence, Denver Quarterly, and Washington Square Review, among others. She attended the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she was poetry editor of the Iowa Review.
Artwork: “Sometime Soon” by Rachel Wold
Acrylic and ink on wood panel
Last modified: January 21, 2024