Three Poems by Abby E. Murray

Political Love Poem

for my political love: I wanted to get you
       something apolitical, but all I could find
were roses and the socialist movement.
       All I could find was chocolate and colonialism.
I wanted to give you something untouched
       by human mistake and cruelty—no diamonds,
no flights to countries safer than this.
       A friend suggested I offer you mathematics,
the objective truth of numbers. Did you know
       Pythagoras was murdered? Did you know
Einstein discovered refuge in New Jersey?
       Is there even such thing as harmless small talk?
If there was, I’d buy a coat made of its fur for you,
       each hair some creamy comment about the weather:
here is a blue sky, warmed by manmade drought.
       Here is a mountain you can climb to see
just some of what’s been stolen. My love,
       I’d give you nothing if it wasn’t also ruined,
if it wasn’t its own long history of lack. I’d put my hand
       in yours, if only its bones and tendons
weren’t brought to you by so much more than devotion:
       theft and injury, centuries of trespass,
the wallop of our humanity on a breakable earth.

*

To the Man Who Could Shoot Me and Get Away With It

When I first realized I was a pacifist—I was a teenager—
a great mentor I didn’t have at the time told me,

you should learn how to be hated by the ones you love most.
It wasn’t terrible advice. I might’ve held it in my mind

awkwardly, the way I hold my husband’s Kevlar now
when he hands it to me between deployments,

sorting through our basement, saying, here, hold this,
and because my instinct is to reach for what needs holding,

I do. Maybe getting away with what we do in this life
is the worst that could happen. Maybe to be furious is to love.

A friend recently asked me why I thought men
had so much power. I offered the only truth I had:

because they’ll kill their children for it. I grew up to become a poet
with pronouns in my bio. Pacifism is more labor-intensive than war.

A mentor I really did have once told me, a poem isn’t a poem
unless it’s hurting someone. I thought about how the sun

can’t love anything constantly without killing it, unless
what it loves can figure out how to shield itself,

how to be loved from the safety of millions of miles away.
The sun is probably just as interested in survival as the earth.

A now-dead man-poet once told his now-dead woman-student
to make every poem her last poem, like she hadn’t already,

like we aren’t all being shot at by systems constructed
just for him. I would like every worm I’ve ever stepped over

to go back underground and tell that dead man-poet
I am no longer writing my last poems. I can only write

beginnings. See, I’m ending this one with a seed
no bigger than the sound of your name being called

from another room. You stop to listen. Who was it, calling?
Is there something you can do? If you hear it again, you’ll answer.

*

Hearing Test

I sit in a booth with the single-button clicker
in my hand and think about whether my husband
       would or would not get a kick out of this:
me, ears muffed, listening to an artificial man’s voice
tell me what to say, and I actually say it. Say cowboy.
       Cowboy. Say airplane. Airplane. At no point
does the man ask me to name what I hear
around his voice: the sound of birds flying far away
       from where I am, the sound of two eyes rolling,
the sound of the ocean if the ocean quit its storms
and married itself to carrying a man’s voice
       across it on a precious shell. Say shift. Shift. Say take.
Take. Here’s an example: the men behind AI
want to answer my emails using my voice.
       When I am asked to teach a workshop,
the men behind AI suggest I call myself definitely interested.
The only thing I am definitely interested in
       is the location of my voice: my throat, my skull,
my hands. It cannot survive elsewhere.
The audiologist discovers a small rock garden
       growing in each of my ear canals, which she describes
as petite, in a not-good way. My laugh is either
a gunshot or a car backfiring. Say hot dog. Hot dog.
       Say mousetrap. Mousetrap. The fluid that should be
where my rock gardens are can, in some people,
become so salty it crystalizes, which explains why
       solid ground feels like the surface of the ocean to me.
When I explain this to my mother, she brightens
and says, does this mean you are—what is it? a salty bitch?
       Everything my mother knows about profanity
she has heard from me. I gaze at her and shine,
a star and its moon, a river learning to swim in the sea.
       And even though I’m more of a dick
than a salty bitch, I hug her, tell her I’m proud of her,
and we listen to the sound of knowing
       the noises our voices make have been heard.

*

Abby E. Murray (they/them) is the editor of Collateral, a literary journal concerned with the impact of violent conflict and military service beyond the combat zone. Their first book, Hail and Farewell, won the Perugia Press Poetry Prize and was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award, while their second book, Recovery Commands, won the Richard-Gabriel Rummonds Poetry Prize and was released by Ex Ophidia Press in 2025. For now, they live in the Pacific Northwest and teach writing to military officers.

Net Worth by Hilary Sideris

Net Worth

I watch the news & file
my statement of net worth,
sign a retainer stating I won’t date
until divorced. Mom loves Sam,

a man my age who lives with her
(locked out of his wife’s house,
his name not on the deed).
No one has ever treated her so well.

Ecstatic to have someone to cook for,
she wonders what sex will be like.
My father wasn’t nice. I have his eyes,
& the bags under them. At church

folks talk. Sam promises he’ll build
a mansion soon, maybe they’ll move
to Spain. Incredulous, she tells me
He even finds my phone.

*

Hilary Sideris is the author of Un Amore Veloce (Kelsay Books 2019), The Silent B (Dos Madres Press 2019), Animals in English (Dos Madres Press 2020), and Liberty Laundry (Dos Madres Press 2022.) Her new collection, Calliope, is now available from Broadstone. Sideris works as a professional developer for CUNY Start, a program for underserved, limited-income students at The City University of New York. She can be found online at hilarysiderispoetry.com

Have You Ever Been in a Fight? by Sara Eddy

Have You Ever Been in a Fight?

When you date a man
one of the first things
is to find out how many fights
he’s been in, how many times
he’s put up his fists,
put his hard hands
on another man.

When they talk about this
they reveal themselves.
There are men who hate
themselves and the world.
Men who invite violence
to fall down on them.

Who take pride
in having broken
someone’s nose, who take
grim pride in having
broken someone’s nose.
There are men who see no difference
between world violence

and home violence, who know
the stages of bruise, broken
bone, concussion. They carry
weapons they’ve bought,
weapons they’ve made.
They look for weapons in the world.

What they’re telling you
is whether they can love you.

*

Sara Eddy’s full-length collection, Ordinary Fissures, was released by Kelsay Books in May 2024. She is also the author of two chapbooks (Tell the Bees, A3 Press, 2019, and Full Mouth, Finishing Line Press, 2020), and her poems have appeared in many online and print journals, including Threepenny Review, Raleigh Review, Sky Island, and Baltimore Review, among others. She lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, in a house built by Emily Dickinson’s cousin.