--THINGS
CAN GET BETTER. WE CAN MAKE THEM BETTER
Rainbow Poems
Hope
In Rainbows
I
found him hanging onto to the end of a rainbow
outside
a bus terminal
where
trash and insect husks had gathered at his feet.
No
one else was watching,
not
the saints or hecklers,
not
even the sulking winter sun.
Gusting
winds kept threatening to break his hold but
this
one was a fighter,
cackling
as he battled back.
And
when I asked why he wouldn’t let go,
he
turned and gave me a toothless grin, saying,
“I
still believe.”
Anniversary
Rainbow
She
gives me her half of the rainbow.
“To
borrow,” she says.
She’s
loaned me other things—
false
promises,
barbwire
kisses,
a
life in purgatory—
and
I’ve been stung enough times to know
she
aims low and never misses.
It’ll
be three years tomorrow
but
I don’t want another day,
so
I tell her to keep her rainbow.
walking
out of the house,
leaving
without a plan,
happy
to finally be free.
The
Girl Who Once Loved Rainbows
My
daughter paints rainbows on her fingernails,
thinly
striped but bright as crayons.
While
she waits for them to dry I ask about her new boyfriend,
the
one named Axle with a silver hoop through his lip
and
two big fists.
She
says he’s fine, he’s good, he’s looking for work, why am I always asking about
Axle?
My
daughter doesn’t know I’ve seen her bruises,
that
wearing a turtleneck in summer calls attention.
I
look at her face, trying to find the little girl who once squealed over seeing
a double rainbow.
I
search and I search,
but
her sky is clear.
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