Janet Bernichon
Life Support


The shift half over
and I shelter my self
in the hospital hallway
from rooms where beds
are perpetual oblivions.
I know by touch
the feeling in the air,
fury and rage.
Fear, cold and death lingering 
unfinished, spin and scream
my name.

    " I need you, nurse,"
the call bells bleed.
Skin and bone insomniacs
stiffly stretch tendons,
beckoning me to their death beds,
    "don't let me die alone."
They rout the night
with cries, a mass
of too many miracles
in a downward spiral to dust.
Agony pulls me along
by a ring through
my sanity.

In the hallway, on my knees,
fingers fanned, sweeping
up in the tangles of my hair,
I am the guardian
tumbling down eternity's open grave.
I hear my screams.

Fading Away Shrunken within a salmon colored sweater, 57 pounds with shoes on, the nurse saying, you look unwell, Mae's arms choreaform gesture as she explains she just doesn't feel like eating anymore, maybe she has pnuemonia from smoking too much but her heart is good, the hospital told her so two years ago, they did tests. Perched on the edge of a stretcher, legs crossed, feet swinging like doors with busted hinges, busy doors at that, Mae tells her sob story, the details beaten dumb by apathy and you know there's just not much left of her to live anymore.

love at first sight you know the story boy meets girl they put their secrets in deep pockets he never sees her without her makeup she never smells his boutonniere he has lipstick on his ear lobe she has lipstick on her teeth they both have hidden videos he offers her his avaricious agenda in ritual acceptance she parts her waters

Sonnet for a Hustler The silhouette of Michaelangelo's David shades across the chenille bedspread, this pose, his pose so familiar to me. Jeans and shirt on the floor, he's marble cold, and at my service for his going rate. Who is he? What am I? Does it matter who's tossed aside like handfuls of loose change when it's over and I watch his price tag swirl down the shower drain? He always wipes clean with the spread, before the lights are on. The young man of the C-note rendezvous slides the chain off the motel door for me, a woman in basic black and pearls. I exit. No good-byes. Age before beauty.

Quid Pro Quo Daylight is slipping into a magenta pool. You linger in the doorway on the fringe of evening aubergine hair reflecting the dusking light, a halo you deserve to wear, face flushed the color of July- my quid pro quo for a taken for granted life. I can feel, oh yes, the sweet pressure of your hands rubbing my weathered shoulders. Weightless acts of kindness in a transient motel room where mouths are candied and you, closer than the edge of a bed. The tender imbrication of words dangling from your lips are a constant I can't depend on, you being my secret. And me? I'm a relic, a curiosity in your clenched fist writing memories that will loiter on pages tissued and brittle. But for now you lend your luster to my tarnish, blow kisses into the air I breathe. Where I am now, where you cannot stay, I want to swim my tongue down the slope of your waist, rest my mouth upon your concupiscent mirage, clasp your absence like I grip this mattress. And when our needs have been quenched and we touch ourselves with sated indifference, we will resume the lives we own, paths slightly askew.


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