A mermaid is born when a heart is buried, deep in the trenches of the blue sea. A mermaid coveting motherhood need only snatch a sailor’s heart and offer it to the seabed, and within hours, her baby girl will rise from the sand and into her arms. What happens, though, when a mermaid steals the heart of another mermaid? How will the others forgive a murder, even if it is done out of love?
-Diary of a Siren
I need a new wardrobe—I’m running out of time to be young and beautiful. For people to see me and not just look at me out of some mundane politeness. I need to be everything I am right now in these fleeting moments, or it’s like they’ve already gone.
How on earth did you find me?
Oh sweet siren, every inch of water you touch tastes of sugar. I couldn’t lose you if I tried.
Well you ought to at least try.
Bite your tongue lass.
Or what?
Or I’ll do it for you.
Rotten sailor. I’ve no desire to play with you anymore. Leave me be.
How can you lure me off my ship and not even finish me? What am I to do now, drown?
You’d better not. I’d snap your neck myself and let the ocean have you but she retches at the taste of pork.
I’m no pig you finned whore!
Then why’s your nose look like that? Go to shore and dry off before your wife finds you wet, piglet.
—Diary of a Siren
Intelligence grand and ever expanding,
his head pounds with new ideas, while the heart in his chest beats slower,
his empathy is sluggish and cold.
The same old cruelty that ran in the veins of the cavemen is steady in him, his wisdom in vain. He has become acutely worse, torturing with metal tools instead of wooden ones, brainwashing with television instead of word of mouth, colonizing with guns instead of swords. What use is knowledge in the hands of a dominator? It becomes just another weapon, words to razors sentences to spears. Do not waste intellect on brutes, they will wound you deeper because they will know where it hurts.
Loving cruel people doesn’t change who they are. It’s like holding a morning star to your chest hoping it’ll become smooth. It just leaves you bleeding.
Fires burn in the shape of mountains, mere miles from my porch step.
The vegetation cries in red and grey.
My feet in my front yard grass ground themselves there, against the peeking patches of dirt hiding beneath the stiff yellowing blades, as if nature itself is afraid to look at its destruction. I cannot look away.
Our dry seasons get drier, rain will become myth, and water legend. I wonder when it will be my turn to record the destruction, to tell others of what happened to me, and not hear of what happened to others. I wonder if that day will be today.
There is an understanding in burning high rises that only it’s occupants can gather—that the rapid footsteps and baited breath do little for longevity if the staircase is ash and the elevator an oven.
No, the hurried panic is not for survival of the body, but a hunt for another. A body heat almost indiscernible undulating between the flap like flames—like pop ups out of a picture book. You may think it madness to seek heat in a fire, but this is a heat of the soul, a desire to die in embrace. To know a heart beat’s breath against your own.
An understanding that if life must be unkind, you must never let it be alone.
What use is death to a creature like me?
Well, I’ll tell you:
Death is an old bedfellow, a partner, a wife;
Is there anything so sweet as a union born in blood?
A promise to always be at each other’s finger tips?
Tool the marble into statue, we sculpt the world,
To improve it, cull those unfit for life by scythe point.
A silly question to ask me, what use is death to a
Creature? Without it, I would not have a life at all.
Like a mutant calf, my village shunned and cast
Me out to meet her, Lady Death.
When the vine burst through cooked earth, and curved to and fro toward the sun, I knew growth was not linear, nor was it impossible to come back from the dead.
We see each other’s Instagram posts.
But we don’t talk much.
I know what he thinks of the current administration. He likewise knows what I think of it. We play music on the car radio and sing along, not saying the words aloud.
I hear the posts on his phone undulating like neon gelatin, sugary nothings calling to him. A mixed bag of nuts that instagram feed, one post is an ai cat driving a semi and the next a cry against the white identity under attack in America. They’re both for my father. The algorithm knows him better than I do, he listens to it more than his own daughter. Our conversations are rarely in words.
He has women up in his garage, I covered them with grumpy cat pictures when I was only a girl. Make it lighthearted, make it fun, my objection to his sexualization of women. Why am I so eager to cater? I am a woman now. He has maga hats now, Trump ornaments up when it isn’t even Christmas. On the other side of the ornament is a mirror. It’s poetic. I keep turning it around, putting Trump’s face toward the wall and the mirror toward my father begging him to look. He turns it back around. How can I look at someone when they cannot look at themselves? How can I speak to him when we never have?
The touch of your coat as you trot on by.
The green of your eyes as you gaze at the sky.
The scratch of your claws as you knock on my door.
I miss that sound dearly
for I do not hear it anymore.