In a Town of 13,000

by Emily Younkin

in a town where the children

peel laminate from the windows of school buses

and ask god for the same forgiveness

because no one believes here

but in pretense…

in a town where the birds

gather in a singular yard

with four fat squirrels

because the seed collects itself

under one golden tree and no others…

in a town where the mothers

shackle their fates to reputation

and leak repulsive tears at night

because the cars passing by

shine headlights into empty rooms…

in a town where the fathers

are ocean tides and overworn ties

who forgot how to dream when they were 16

because someone asked them to jump

and they couldn’t move their feet…

in a town where the cars

gnarl themselves into knots

around trees they wish to be

because the radio station still plays

even after destruction…

in the town where I sit

on a wide flat rock illuminated bright

sheltering in an enclosed circle of woods

because roads bellow in every direction

and nothing speaks here but the crows…

in that town I learned how to listen.