Literary Orphans

Three Poems
by Molly McCormack

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FIVE-YEAR DIARY

Found my diary yesterday

wrinkled in a damp basement,

a gift from who knows at nine.

I dreamed of being Millie Perkins

playing Anne, hiding from the Nazis

in the attic with Peter, Margot and Shelly Winters.

Broken lock and lost key —

brother Joe threatened to invade

and share during a sleep-over.

 

Today I will wear my velvet pants and fake ponytail.

Today I washed Freckles paws because they were dirty.

Today I went to school, then I played Barbies.

Joe broke a vase. Last night I stayed at Grandma’s.

Gary S. gave me candy for my birthday.

We went to the library. I got Bernadette and the Lady.

Broke up with Gary now I like Sean.

Went to Pattie’s party and Sean wasn’t there.

Went to Alateen and I was chairman. Vicky spoke for me.

Mom said I showed off.

 

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LOOKING FOR ANNA

It was coming down hard

that March afternoon when I stopped

by Mom’s mother’s house on my way

home from class. I knocked on the locked

storm door– only my anxiety answered.

 

I shifted my’72 Gremlin

into first and searched

sidewalk cracks and sewer grates.

 

I found her three blocks away

parked on a stool looking out the plate

glass in White Castle. I lectured

You shouldn’t be walking alone

in this neighborhood.

 

She shrugged I walk fast so they won’t

know I’m old.

 

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DECISION

I called him

My Million Dollar

Baby for all

the trips

to emergency,

daily shots,

special diet.

Friends agreed–

what a charmer.

He saw goodness

in everyone,

and no lap

was a bad lap.

Dr. Myers

vowed to write

about how

he beat the odds.

 

After dinner

at Vinny’s,

you found him

barely breathing,

twitching on

the basement

floor. I checked

for puke and piss

on the new

throw-rug

from Target.

You ran for

my phone.

What’s the number?

My chianti buzz

kicked in.

It’s on the fridge.

Bloody drool

dripped from

his hanging tongue.

 

Are you sure

he’s still breathing?

I took my time,

hoping he’d just

stop– the cheapest

way to go.

You leaned down,

Let’s just get in

the car and go.

When you left

the room for

a towel and his soft

bed, I searched

for a heavy thing

to smash his skull.

I imagined the sound

it would make.

 

You drove. I held

the bed in my lap

and stroked.

We sobbed.

I asked at the desk

about cremation

costs. Three hundred

and forty-five dollars

includes a special

memorial kit. His sugar

level and vitals

were nil. I said

do nothing.

I drove home,

snot dripping.

You carried his

empty hair-stuck

bed to the trash,

said nothing.

I decided to keep you.

 

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Molly McCormack is a teacher, poet and folk musician from Louisville, Kentucky. She enjoys exploring her creative side- painting, writing and playing music with friends. She is the managing editor for A Narrow Fellow Journal of Poetry.

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–Art by Diana Cretu

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