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Valley of Sweet by Travis Tate

ONE ARM by Christine Kwon

One Arm

hush · issue 4

When I come home from shopping, I find him cutting up his beloved books. Because I love you, he says. The next time I leave the house, I leave my arms with him. One hand, mottled blue, writes on the wall, the other disobeys. Back from the store I find one arm has grown a body, all torso no legs no head. My beloved is already attached and cries as I shovel a hole in the backyard. It’s been a long time since I could sleep, even with my one good arm cleaning the house, I cannot be at ease. He can’t sleep either, he’s distraught, pasting his precious pages to a box—it’s my birthday. I’ve peeked—beneath the lid is a new tongue. It is not the one I lost. This one is more like a snake. At night I must keep it in a cage to stop it from wriggling into my mouth. Beloved passes me in bed with a bowl of food. In the other room I hear a sharp hiss, a clattering of bars. Then I love you, I love you, I love you, his soft, furred voice curling around it.  

Christine Kwon

Christine Kwon lives in New Orleans, where she teaches second grade in the French Quarter. She has poems forthcoming in the following magazines: The Recluse, Recliner Mag, blush lit, and Bodega.