Axe ®
You can’t tell me
more, but you want me to see
if I can build you a poem
on the scent
of a young man’s body-spray.
I won’t ask
for concrete.
We’ve worked
for this
intimacy—
me, letting go
of my need
to know,
you, trusting me
to let you
be.
What I’ve gleaned
is that you were in middle school.
That the boy was from our town.
That you had to sit near him
all through tenth grade.
And now,
from your college dorm,
you text me:
Of all the things in the world
for me to be afraid of,
this scent…
I imagine
your breath, catching and
catching.
A passing waft of a boy’s body-spray, cutting
through time, and you
caught off guard,
felled,
falling
into a well.
You, talking yourself back (get a grip, get a grip),
pulling yourself up,
hand
over hand.
JENNIFER L FREED’s poetry appears/is forthcoming in Atlanta Review, Bellevue Literary Review, Rust and Moth, West Trestle Review, and others. Her first full-length collection, When Light Shifts, was a 2022 finalist for the Sheila Margaret Motton Book Prize. Awards include the 2022 Frank O’Hara Prize and the 2020 Samuel Washington Allen Prize. She teaches writing programs from Massachusetts.
Read more by Jennifer L Freed
Jennifer L Freed’s author website
Poems in Atticus Review
Poems in Rust and Moth
Poems in One Art Poetry