Bionic

My brother’s twenty-two and therefore believes he’s bionic.
He’s home from school,
he’s supposed to look after our mother for the week.
She’s senile and probably dying.
He’s cruel but his cruelty’s probably temporary.

He’s dressed her in a T-shirt that says
I kill everything I fuck // I fuck everything I kill.
She stares into a bowl of cornflake milk;
I carefully cover my breakfast in ketchup.

My brother is funny and blunt.
Whenever I say something sentimental,
or talk—for example—about the ocean,
he says, You know what?
You should write a poem about that.

(Right now I imagine we’re all feeling
like it’s winter and we’re alone
in a splintering cabin on a crumbling cliff
with the ocean below hurling itself at the rocks
like a child against a locked bedroom door,
but of course I don’t say this out loud.)

It’s early spring; too cold to open windows.
We do it anyway. The air is ice and mud.
When we shiver our mother
lifts her head and says, I’ll warm you up.
It’s the first time she’s talked in three days.
She says that as a child
she walked through a meadow for hours, following the smell of smoke—
parting tall grass as someone
might part a beaded curtain—until she found
an empty house
burning unattended in the dark.


Sara Peters hopes that they never try to undo marriage equality.


Published On: July 1, 2013
Permanent Location: http://www.forgetmagazine.com/130601f.htm


From 1996, House of Anansi, 2013



Volume 7, Issue 3
Canada Day, 2013



Praise



Introduction
Forget Magazine

The Falling Man
John Wall Barger

Dear Liza
Raoul Fernandes

After the Porcupine
Aisha Sasha John

Instructions For Dancing
Elena E. Johnson

Bionic
Sara Peters

Rapture Begets Sweater Begets Rapture
Suzannah Showler



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