Juvenile Dependencies
By Nina G
I’m afraid I’ll wake up one day and I’ll realize we are not
functioning, that in the sweating, my eyes will not
open and that you will appear to me veiled and
screaming as our children drown in the river. I’m concerned
that we won’t try to help them, that 10-milliliter glass
vial hearts will bob up and down and we’ll release all
the syringes to float on the riverbed, tell them stories about
when we nearly met Death, or when his counterparts
sat at our table, drinking coffee and playing with their
hair. They leave lancets as tokens under our pillows. Awful
grimy patches on the chair from little death baby
kin who I tuck into bed. I sing them lullabies,
get cozy in my sheets until I feel the 3.4, 2.2, 1.8 on my
skin. Maybe this is our end. Maybe
we’ll see our red-hole-and-bump heaven, speak
to Señora Cetonas, ask her if stillborn acetone, acetoacetate,
and beta-hydroxybutyrate made it. I can see the
river floor from here. But then there’s the liminal
cord that pulls, makes me think in another life we could
have been friends, but in this one, I detest you
because I cannot love you, and despise even
more, that I need to.