Things Go South

Always trust a red door
On a black Camaro, thighs 

Sticking to the vinyl in the June
Sun, pinking up the place.

Here, the apple don’t fall
From the tree. Here, whatever you

Find lying on the ground is yours.
A scratch-off waiting to strike. The shade

From a sidelong glance. You’re looking at
What happens when a body fights back

Three years after the fact. Three years
After the fact: the sweet morning

Stench of you sweating out last night’s liquor
Just from pushing my tongue against the porcelain

Crown glued in my mouth, like hitting a switch.
Every town I leave, I leave on scholarship.

Nothing looks better to me than seeing
Nothing for miles. I can fit everything

I love into this trunk, into my own two arms,
Into my backhanded smile. And this gas station

Bathroom is more than just an American
Notion of the dirtiest place on Earth. It’s where

I’ll put on my face. I know how to wipe
A scene clean. And then I’m gone, love, like

I was never there. And even if it could hear
You at these speeds, the backseat don’t

Care a lick what you have to say. Sweetheart,
I sympathize with the assassin in every story.

 
Amy Woolard

Amy Woolard is a public policy attorney and lobbyist working on child welfare, child poverty and juvenile justice issues in Virginia. She is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and the University of Virginia School of Law. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in publications such as Best New Poets 2013, the Virginia Quarterly Review, The Massachusetts Review, Fence, and The Journal among others. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.

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While Away

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Don't Start Me Talkin' (novel excerpt)