Ask Me About Hell

There is something standing in the street.

With sharp teeth and hands made of metal,

                                                it paces the edges of the neighborhood.

Sometimes it wears the face of my mother,

other times my uncle long dead and buried

turned to marsh and twigs in the dirt. Still

                                           other times it wears the face of our governor

with his face pockmarked with grease from

fingers dipped in tar, clutching a shined and

toothy Bible to his always damp chest. Mostly

                                     it wears the face of anyone – the man on the corner

of some street with his sign ASK ME ABOUT

HELL leering at the way my hands flutter

against my thighs, my knobbed knees – the woman

                                         at the coffee shop who asks me if I know Jesus

and if I know him well, who hovers at the counter

watching me pull the shots, steam the milk,

who takes the cup with clawed hands and furred

                                         fingers – the child who asks their mother is that

a boy or a girl and the mother that says its ugly

pointing a long sleeve of fog at the way my hair

curls against my ears – the friend who stares

                                          as the woman I love puts her hip against mine,

who pulls his lips back at the way she goes

to touch the back of my neck, who grabs me on

the way out says keep that to a minimum next time

                                           and next time I do, next time I shed my skin

and pack it into a box near my front door, put

on a pretty pink face with pretty pink eyelashes

with my hands in my pockets, pull out my teeth

                                            and replace them with shiny beads, pull my

reflection from the mirror and bury it as deep

in the yard as I can dig, next time I walk

right by the thing in the street and it doesn’t even

                                                look my way. It can’t even see me.

 

 

 

 

Maddie C. is a poet from South Carolina. Their poems have been published in The Madison Review and Miracle Monocle. They have a cat called Goose.