Without Hearing Gunfire

Without Hearing Gunfire

POETRY

By Andrew Payton

If I spent every day­break on this balcony,
the man walking three pugs would become ritual

in the way I once knew the sched­ule of a fox
who crossed the bay window on morn­ings snow

covered tracks in the moun­tains. My wife and I
have two lan­guages but still lack words to touch

what we hold. On the morning of the balacera,
I take a walk but avoid streets where bodies were made.

Once the sun makes the balcony unbearable,
I go hunting for a snack and place a slice of mango

on my wife’s tongue while she changes our son’s diaper.
This is the closest we have ever felt to being one.

Photo by Jakub Kriz

This story orig­i­nal­ly appeared in Stonecoast Review Issue 19. Support local book­sellers and inde­pen­dent pub­lish­ers by order­ing a print copy of the mag­a­zine.



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