Tainan Nocturne
Already the river
elides its distance, bruised
as blackened sinews thinning
at the banks’ vanishing point,
where the horizon cuts
a white vertex.
Ye Ye might die tonight,
but I’m more troubled
by the mosquitoes leaving
flat red stones on the back
of my neck, by the family
whose bus blew up
in Xinhua street & killed
all four of them. Afterward
the vehicle’s metal skeleton
peeled apart
like the immolating black wings
of a moth: a gambit,
I assume, all travelers take.
What is the risk
of carrying something foreign
within you, the neon-
shot Hiragana & Roman characters,
proxy rivers where the living
contest the dead, contest dying
& the lighthouse eye slices
a white razor through the ocean
as if to contest its nativity—
I admit, I lack the courage
to resolve myself. Why else
let these helpless hands
pick at the wooden balustrade
while one dim street over
in the building behind me,
the night is falling
on my grandfather’s life.
All the mosquitoes I’ve killed
sink into clouds of algae
& beer glasses, they tug
against the river rock,
some difficult grammar. 菡馨,
the dead are more virtuous than us,
slackened jaws divulging
soil & tooth. Every soft nothingness.
Across blood and land:
a consciousness is not a place of stasis
but rather the travel
from being to non-being.
No different than the last foreign
light pinned to my face.
*
Emily Liu is a senior at Neuqua Valley High School. They have been recognized by the National Young Arts Foundation, Frontier Award for New Poets, International Hippocrates Young Poets Prize, Poetry Society UK, PICMA Competition for Emerging Writers, and Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, among others. Their work appears or is forthcoming in Tinderbox Poetry, DIALOGIST, The Phoenix, and more.