Benjamin Sutton

Stylistic Signatures for a 2×2 Card

Blue short-sleeve strutting

A blue leash for a dog on steroids-

Borrowed blue work gloves for polished

Grass push-ups, a barrier between the

Grass that scratches raw.

Burnt skin sizzling, count the blades

By the green patches, green then brown

Green then brown, green then—

Heel bone splinting concrete paths leading

To another wadding through a diagetic world.

And once again, it is eight am.

The bed door is open. The front door is open.

The gate is open. The leash and the dog

Are missing—

Sitting in an Indian styled pretzel formation,

She accidentally writes.

And once again, the dog leapt stair, by stair,

By stair, followed by a sharp corner to a

Closed door, Pavlovian spit dripping down

The wood paneling on the entrance into

A family home.

And for once, the windows were open.

The white morning sun on the white walls.

The white carpet, a white note, an apology—

I love you, a signature,

All followed promptly by a date

And a time, reeves of bright spring flowers

And two-by-two white cards—

Piously forgiving the typicality of being typical,

Harsh C-notes, the bountiful D-notes

Of sympathy gone wrong.

And once again, an apology, and an apology,

And an apology.

Saturday Evening

Half worn dress puckered

At the shoulders—her family

Glaring at the television,

Tipping heads to detergent jingles—

An open, flat hand through the

Hair—strike of a dry blade—

Her youngest brother is waiting

In the hallway, donning a superman

Sweat suit and sixty pounds of

Excess weight, he says that

If I could be anything, I would be

Strong, a hero.

He slides a comic book from under

A worn rug, splitting seams from

Foot pressure—he tears the coupons

And delicately covers holes in the

Floor to stop the roaches from eating

The remaining pages, he says that

I wouldn’t worry about death

Dying is just a quality of the air.

The dress nipping at a hidden tattoo,

A tribal something—she revealed true

Rebellion and stayed the night in a

Different bed—her brother, sitting in

The hallway, hugged paper—kissed the future.

Benjamin Sutton is currently living in Denver, trying to comprehend the constant changes in temperature. His poetry has been published in Writer’s Bloc, Calliope Nerve, and Word Catalyst, among others. More work is forthcoming in Breadcrumb Scabs, The Stray Branch, and Ken Again. His first chapbook of poetry, Atom-Bomb Sunrise, was published last Fall by JK Publishing. He is currently working towards his MFA.

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