Raking Light

by Hillary Moses Mohaupt

I. Prairie State
When the basement floods, I know exactly what to rescue first. The matching end tables are both too boxy for me to heave upstairs on my own, but I am on my own, so I take the first one in my arms and muscle it up one step at a time, because I remember these tables in my grandmother’s condo, remember the fragile glass lamps that sat atop each one. I don’t remember what my grandmother kept in the drawers of these tables when they were hers—perhaps her church directory, her TV remote controls, a phone book, miscellaneous plastic toys for her grandchildren to puzzle over. Now that they are mine, the table drawers are stuffed with throw pillows I’ve no other place for, and I don’t know where I’m going to put these tables now, except they must go somewhere for safekeeping. I tuck one into the corner of my son’s playroom, where it sticks out like an apartment building looming over a city block, and that’s exactly what it becomes, my son flying his Matchbox helicopters over it like any other landmark in his imaginary play. Continue reading

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A Virgin Daiquiri at the Hemingway Look-Alike Contest

by Gary Leising

The bartender snorted at the bearded man’s order,
then mixed a drink with sans rum, sans liqueur,
despite historical reservations. This evening,
his older colleague told him, stacking plates,
is about getting close, being near the real thing. Continue reading

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Payment Plan

by Claudia Smith

Blows to the face, jaw, or mouth can damage teeth, gums, jawbones, or nerve tissue in ways that are not always obvious at the time. Fractures or cracks might not show externally, but inside they can damage the pulp, leading later to tooth death or infection. Continue reading

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Cold Majuro Snow

by Darren Dillman

Enni Bilimon, the last Marshallese survivor of the Castle Bravo nuclear test, steps off the chipped concrete porch and maneuvers around the papaya and pandanus trees and sees the children dancing on the beach of the lagoon, swirling with their arms spread out, mouths open, faces tilted toward the clouds, catching with their tongues the first cold flakes of snow in Majuro’s history, spinning and hopping on little black and brown feet and yelping and hollering with the boys shirtless and the girls wearing floral-patterned homemade dresses called guams and dancing because, to them, the snow is something to celebrate. Continue reading

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The Singer

by Sean Eaton

—after Barbara’s “La Solitude”

You think your new hat’ll hide your blowsy attitude,
the dusk that haunts your eyes at noon, at parties.
It’s true that I’m tired, yet you follow like a faithful hound,
my solitude, my soiled clothes, my odd stench, my bare soul. Continue reading

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