24
the mirror is oblong & at
an odd height. perfect
for our many crotches
to be framed by. men
would decorate this way,
i knew, let it go, smiled
for a different photo.
nobody plays pong
with actual beer anymore.
everyone has electronic
cigarettes in their hands.
i stare, sit back, ease
into the incense of their
exhales, get struck through
my middle by music
so unhealthy & saturated
with fat, busy booming
from all four corners.
i’m possessed by cinnamon
spiced spirit & infected
with whiskey, celebrating
Dia De Los Muertos by
downing canned margaritas,
pointing fingers at “Who
owns this house?” wondering
what happened to celebrating
birthdays with cakes & shots
of root beer– those burps
tasted better, you know.
PEARSALL
You eat peanuts shell and all. You like that
about yourself. I know because you tell me
a lot, as though I’ve forgotten and could forget
a detail about you. Mr. born in Texas,
descendant of peanut farming men.
You haunt my bags of trail mix with each
of your forefathers.
You look like Mr. Peanut of Planter’s Peanuts,
the way you grin.
The world’s largest peanut is in your hometown
for Christ’s sake.
I can’t bite into a PB&J and feel pleasure
without guilt.
Your girl’s got hair the color of honey-wheat bread.
You said you’ll marry her and she’ll have your
pretty babies who’ll have your nutty eyes and suck nuts
instead of her nipples cause she’s too damn precious
for that, and you know, anything that comes from you
devours.
THE SKY IS A GUN THAT SHOOTS OUT STARS
I saw the meteors! Cruising back
from bumfuck Iowa, I’m deprived
of my senses in the inner and outer world
going 100mph down the interstate
at midnight without a seatbelt on.
My car hiccups.
It’s 23 years old and the gas cap door
won’t open no matter how many pens
I break trying to pry it.
If I crashed, I’d die for sure
and the road doesn’t need another white cross beside it.
I think of not wanting to add to the tragedy
Shakespeare never got to write about reckless driving.
The stars and clouds and sky
agree because he wrote plenty about them.
My body flies out of the windshield
in my mind. Shatters the glass,
a carcass in the soybeans.
I tilt my head back. Close my eyes
for only a moment. I never swerve as my foot eases
up off of the pedal, my speed dropping slowly.
I made wishes tonight. They won’t come true but wits
have nothing to do with numbness, so I did it anyhow, for you—
for what small, foolish pleasure I find in all of this pain.
ABOUT RAYNI
Rayni Wekluk is a writer currently studying at The University of Nebraska-Omaha. She is in her third year as both an English and Creative Writing Major and will graduate in 2025. Wekluk utilizes observable reality and humor to portray aspects of the human condition within her poetry. Her work has previously appeared in 13th Floor and in two anthologies by The Moonstone Arts Center. You will see her writings in upcoming issues of The Linden Review, Collision Literary Magazine, Rubbertop Review, and The Oakland Arts Review.