On Your Dead Brother’s Birthday
You will not go home. You will walk
your adult self through your adult neighborhood
and you will try not to notice the virginia creeper
has turned the same blood red as your childhood home.
You will have to think of it then, its red stained
shingles, a matching fence more pike
than picket. Remember how it tore
at clothes and tender flesh—the cost
of your freedom so often stitches.
How prettily your mid-century ranch sat, so
smug in its suburb with its crisp white trim,
a blue Galaxie 500 in the drive, your proud mother
tending the flower box, so slim and pretty, so
well-meaning—the perfect heroine for
your horror story. How disappointing
you were, you and your brother, screaming
down her hallway past the Sacred Heart of Jesus,
sliding messily into your own thorny lives. Even now,
with shingles painted the softest cream and fence
pickets blunted, something inside stirs.
That house will always haunt you.
- © Celeste Oster 2023
Celeste Oster’s poems have appeared in various publications including Thorny Locust, The Kansas City Star, Tiny Frights, and Potpourri. She lives in the Midwestern United States.
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