Contemporary Literary Review India | Print ISSN 2250-3366 | Online ISSN 2394-6075 | Impact Factor 8.1458 | Vol. 11, No. 2: CLRI May 2024

Fabrice B Poussin

Acid Campfire

It might be Tuesday in the midst of June

a calendar droops from a rusty tack

confused in its crumbling sepia tones

they can’t quite recall wo placed it there

or when, yet they have a vague impression

of a silhouette similar to theirs, decades before.

Someone set fire to a desk in the living room

to make a feast reminiscent of their teens

when they escaped to the dark forest

and sat around the makeshift hearth as magicians

when their dreams were still puerile

they could laugh without retribution.

It may have been twenty years ago or perhaps one

they have not ventured to the streets in ages

subdued by an existence without imagination

they slouch in boneless bodies

glassy eyes into landscapes no one else can perceive

they might well become part of the wooden floor.

They are five, perhaps twenty without a will

to stand or change the channels on the antique screen

they did laundry once and left it to rot

it was weeks ago, should they ask the neighbors?

but swimming through inches of dirt

wallowing in remnants of forgotten orgies they lay.

Someday their abode will implode

for a mistake under the expected influence

all who have survived will finally find a brutal end

in the flames of oddly concocted hallucinations

for a life without debt in a pricey world

too weak to face the humility of decent days.

Beauty Masks

Beloved child she stumbled on a limelight stage

wearing heels made for a mother

cheered on by strange adults with fancy cameras

she pursed lips in what she thought a smile.

Frail legs swayed with newly found pain

hoses, mascara, and other devices

prescribed by an ambitious manager

she is six, might as well be twenty.

She traveled many ages and numerous cities

on luxury transport and first line air

sniffing caviar, Havanas, and cocaine

forms preserved by chemicals and a little touch up.

She recalls those days when it felt so good

to show angular curves bathed in two pieces

of thousand-dollar fabrics per inch

before the party to celebrate her twenties.

A monument now she feels nothing

under the artificial layers tailored for a future

walking to cheer on her replacements

so artificial the mirror reflects a stranger.

It has been many visits to the sterile rooms

under bright lights again and silent walls

as she tried to recover a youth not her own

and succeeded so in looking like another’s ghost.

Little Thing

She looked at the giant a million miles above

attempting to escape on all six in the dirt

it had not been a moment as she thought

since she had devoured a particle of dust.

The monstrosity continued on its merry way

moving mountains at the bottom of a sole

infinite in its blind power to achieve oblivion

upon a world suspect only to its gentle kin.

A tremor soon shakes their home like a quake

so strong to swallow all things, redemption

the killer has collapsed under an unseen thumb

pressing on a life so feeble in its illusion of invincibility.

Within the carcass a little thing crawls

warm in the home of these shrinking entrails

it seeks a place to raise its immense family

food aplenty in the bounty of this fleshy planet.

Tomorrow will see another light

a dimming sun will become supernova

victim to its own appetite for eternal strength

it may even beg for a respite.

Sitting atop the cozy enclave of a palace

he contemplates the cadaver of a brother

stabbed in the heart by such a little thing

another sun’s life shuddered by a tiny moon.

About the author: Fabrice Poussin teaches French and English at Shorter University. Author of novels and poetry, his work has appeared in Kestrel, Symposium, The Chimes, and many other magazines. His photography has been published in The Front Porch Review, the San Pedro River Review as well as other publications.
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