Destiny O. Birdsong
Destiny O. Birdsong is the author of the poetry collection, Negotiations (Tin House Books, 2020), and the triptych novel Nobody’s Magic (Grand Central, 2022).
Everything That’s Happening Has Already Happened
You have already been in the fourth grade
and had your first perm. You already believe
glass jars on shelves can make you beautiful,
so you grease your hair with so much Blue Magic
its blond has a green tint in sunlight.
Your sister has already called you a genetic freak
because she is in the sixth grade, and her friends
ask too many questions, so she spits at you
the words that will one day eat holes in your intestines.
You have eyes that cross—sometimes out,
sometimes in—so tetherball is hard to play.
You’ve spent recess after recess squatting along the edge
of the playground, dreaming of what you cannot see,
eating the honeysuckle growing through the chain-link fence.
Your teacher has already threatened you with what she knows:
stray dogs go there at night, but you
have spent most of your life chasing sweet,
like the time your friends told you the new kid—
the green-eyed one, whose buttery skin and California swag
made him immediately popular in that small town—
has a crush on you, but is too shy to tell you himself,
so he wants you to meet him near the edge
of the playground. Near your fence.
Near your honeysuckle.
So you run to him, but he keeps moving farther away,
and you think maybe it’s just your eyes.
Even now, they’re always slightly out of focus—
you never see things for what they really are.
Though you saw his Cross Colors jersey, a jumping, bright blip
kiting across the lime-colored grass
of a town you already dream of leaving.
You’ve already decided it’s best not to ask
if he was in on it.
Your friends have already made fun of you.
You’ve already forgiven them because
you’re already afraid of losing people
the way your mother is losing her teeth, which she brings home
in tiny envelopes still warm to the touch.
You’ve already become accustomed
to handling other people’s dead things.
Two days later, while your friends were still
giggling behind their hands, you mixed together
raw egg and paprika and poured them on the kitchen floor.
No one would come close enough to tell
it wasn’t vomit, so you stayed home from school, watching Garfield
on a pallet you made in the living room.
You love Garfield, perhaps because, somehow, you know
most of your sorrows will demand his kind of sleep.
Your mother, with her new job and her new
insurance card, has taken you to the new
hospital, where a nurse prescribed bananas,
rice, applesauce, toast, told you to come back
in two weeks if symptoms persist. Your mother
has already laid hands on you in the car.
They smelled like bleach, and that made you want to cry.
There are real diseases stirring in you
that she cannot rebuke because they don’t yet have names.
But there are already rooms you can’t re-enter.
There are already people you can’t look in the eye.
The Candy Lady, or (Post)Reaganomics: 1991
Ms. Jerleen: Sugar Mama before Beyoncé,
with black pantyhose and terry-cloth slippers,
a dark green floral muumuu, and a son
back from the Persian Gulf with shaky hands
making change. Our mothers whispered shellshock,
and I imagined his veins shuddering with shards of pearl.
A husband with emphysema, and, still
the house reeked of cigars. Mouths to feed.
Her Kool-Aid freeze cups hooked you with the first sting
of tongue to gluey ice, the first whiff
of syrupy vapor rising from the Styrofoam cup.
Usually I wanted Stage Planks, but they were fifty cents
and Mama only gave us quarters at a time. That is,
until another family started selling
too: vanilla moon pies, which Mama loved,
and sometimes she’d send us out at ten at night,
peeking through the blinds as we crossed Roitan Drive
away from the gray and orange sidings of Section 8
to the last few private houses on our street.
The family: a stepdad, two tween girls, and the woman
who gave my mama her first job. The daddy and girls
would be awake, watching movies under a blanket.
Later, he’d go to jail for what he was doing
when he heard my sister’s small-handed knock.
Ms. Jerleen couldn’t stand them: I got a permit
to do what I do. Every time we came back,
her husband’s breathing grew louder. The son
started wandering the streets, rapping lyrics to himself.
As she dropped each coin into a coffee can,
she talked about papers. We nodded our heads, agreeing.
Then the other family lowered their prices, started pushing
Air Heads, Gushers—snacks you could share
with the suburban kids without shame: a new
kind of high. We saw Ms. Jerleen less and less.
Then one day, a strange woman answered her door.
Previously published in Words Beats & Life.