Poetry — February 20, 2014 10:22 — 0 Comments

I Heard a Baby Crying – Paul Luikart

I woke in the middle of the night to the sound of a baby crying. I’d thrown on my robe and jumped into my slippers—wrong-footed—and had already begun to heat water on the stove for her bottle when I rubbed my eyes and remembered I lived alone. I walked through my apartment touching things, touching everything I own—laptop, backpack, laundry baskets—and then, for a long time, watched the snow fall on the street. When I slid back into my sheets, I listened to the radiator purr and the old building pop as it settled on its haunches, thick concrete walls sunk in the dirt a century ago. 

Bio:

Paul Luikart’s work has appeared in Barrelhouse, Chicago Quarterly Review, Curbside Splendor, Pacifica Literary Review, Santa Fe Writers Project, Vector Press, Whiskey Paper, and Yalobusha Review. His work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and Sundress Publications’ Best of the Net anthology. He lives in Chicago with his wife and two daughters.

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What am I?

Bioluminescent eye
That sees by the shine
Of its own light. Lies

Blind me. I am the seventh human sense
And my stepchild,
Consequence;

Scientists can't find me.

Januswise I make us men;
Glamour
Was my image then—

Remind me:

The awful fall up off all fours
From the forest
To the hours…

Tick, Tock: Divine me.

-- Richard Kenney