Poetry: Jack & Jill by Kyle Hemmings
Jack & Jill
two club kids
jack & jill
their dreams have bar codes
& quick hands
they vodka tongue-twist
until dance of dawn
who’s counting? she thinks,
twelve bourbons fourteen bronsons & three left feet
between them
outside, under late-night neon
he almost rapes her reflection
she scars his shadow
they walk home
pigeon-toed & forgetful
& leaking darkness
in a pre-war tenement, they're squatters,
a woolen blanket he shoplifted from Dollar & Dimes
withholds their heat until the winter can kill them both.
in the morning, he wakes up to her skin secreting the scents
of sleep & vomit
he gets a job as a temp
she freelances for an artist turned pimp
jack proposes to her by email
jill sends him a virus
later, they have mad make-up sex
after he loses her childhood chia-pet
the honeymoon at the edge of town:
they're savants of selfies & i-phone apps
they watch late-night movies
until they can no longer
belch or laugh
the next morning
he watches the sunrise glow in her hair
it sets his clocks back to when he could love
w/out stipulations or rehearsals
to when names didn't matter
they grow toward middle-class comfort
she's his best video game princess
she weeps at his Ponzi schemes
his unworkable e-cars
in the mirror
she tells her image she's pregnant
"Jill," she says, "you're full of life."
they smile
they beam
they blush
she loses the baby
to a technical glitch
after her overdose
he sleeps on hard foam memory
on an empty beach, he wonders
is she the ghost of all drowning men?
on his computer screen
her little girl avatar singing
“you are my sunshine”
Kyle Hemmings has been published in Kyso Flash, Right Hand Pointing, Dark Entries, and elsewhere. He loves 60s garage bands, 50s sci-fi flicks, and street photography.
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