Sexting
You say words work when hands can’t
reach. So I try, send you messages
that set a scene: the tool shed out back,
windows steamed, wood grain
from the work table pressing patterns
into my bare thighs. You write back:
We’d knock over the bag of seed for songbirds,
use the foot stool to get a better angle, grab
the twine to bind us. I tell you
the next door neighbor, pruning her shrubs,
might hear us faintly, might think us
an exotic bird decrying its cage, or perhaps
just a bitch in heat moaning down the street.
No matter, it would remind her, little Miss Mary,
of her dead husband, those nights they’d escape
from their newborn and hide behind
the grape arbor. I watch her on the weekends,
riding the lawn mower he left for her,
how she smiles, dentures wiggling, as it buckles
and bumps beneath her. And I know
you’re looking for a different image
as you sneak a glance at your phone
beneath the conference table. I know
I’ve veered from the storyline you want,
but it’s still a fantasy all the same,
to feel someone when they’re gone.
Isabelle Shepherd is a poet from West Virginia. She now lives in Wilmington, NC, where she received her MFA from UNCW. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in DIAGRAM, The Journal, Ninth Letter, Redivider, Sixth Finch, and elsewhere. More of her work and upcoming reading dates can be found on www.isabelleshepherd.com.