Toadstools My soft, black cat licks me awake. I eat my breakfast of cold, raw steak. I go out into the dark woods and hunt For ingredients for a potion to make my teeth blunt. And when it grows dark, I look for mushrooms, Soaring up high on my flying broom. These mushrooms will help me with many things— Growing long nails and leathery wings. To tell my future, I see the local seer Then I go back home to break a mirror. They say this brings you good luck, you see, Or perhaps that belief is unique to me. At last I curl up in my spiderweb cot And go on to sleep without a thought.
October 2022
Pumpkin Girl
Plagued by constant teasing, Mari makes a plan Mari was sitting in her room when a brilliant idea hit her. She’d sell more pies, and with the money she’d buy a silk dress and then she could go to Lucy’s quinceañera. But, all the girls of Tulip Avenue laughed at her. And only because she lived in a pumpkin house! “Then I’ll make a plan,” she said to herself. The next day, she bought a wig and got her sunglasses. She sold all of her pies and bought a dress made out of silk. She went to the quinceañera, wig, sunglasses, and all. She came in and ate some cake. It was delicious! But when she was eating, her wig fell off, revealing her face. Everybody started to laugh. “Pumpkin girl! Pumpkin girl!” But then Lucy demanded, “Who is ‘pumpkin girl?’” Everybody pointed at Mari. “She’s my friend, not ‘pumpkin girl,’” Lucy declared. “Uhmmm. Hehe,” they said nervously. Now everything was fixed.
Sisters
One freezing winter day, Marie finds a sickly kitten on the street The wind stung Marie’s cheek. She shivered, despite her warm jacket and hat. “I knew I should have brought a scarf,” she said out loud, but there was no one but the wind and her dog, Kora, to answer. It was the time of winter where people stopped being happy at the cold and the snow and instead stayed inside. All except the people who had dogs. Marie—though she loved Kora—did not necessarily want to be outside. But Kora needed to be walked, and so here Marie was, outside in the freezing temperature. The relentless winter. Regina never walks Kora, Marie thought grumpily. It’s always me. Not that Marie minded when it was still warm out, but now it was all cold and unforgiving and Marie had no desire to be outside. I’m making Regina do it tomorrow, Marie thought with resoluteness. The weather reminded her of a poem she had read in English class just the day before, just before winter break started. The whipping wind, Red cheeks, Cracked lip— A winter cold and unforgiving Yep, Marie thought bitterly, that describes the weather right now. That was the only stanza Marie remembered. There were probably more, but Marie was not known for her memory. It also probably didn’t help that Marie spent much of her day daydreaming. She only remembered that stanza because she had liked the play on “cold” in the last line. The winter was literally cold, and it was also cold as if distant. Marie dug her face into her coat and kept walking at a brisk pace, dragging Kora behind a little. “Come on, Kora!” Marie said, exasperated. “Don’t you want to get out of the cold?” Kora, in response, sat down. Oh, the advantages of having a fur coat, Marie thought wistfully. Not that Marie would ever buy an actual fur coat. She was an animal lover and could never stand even the thought of that. Marie bent down to scoop Kora up, meaning to carry her the last block to her house, when she saw something: a shivering kitten hidden in a bush. Its fur was covered in dirt in some areas but so shiny in others that, for a second, Marie thought she was hallucinating. Can frostbite do that to a person? she wondered. Can hypothermia? Did I slip on the ice and hit my head? Marie closed her eyes, but when she opened them the kitten was still very much real, and very much in need of help. Marie dropped to the ground and then sucked in a breath as the cold snow reached an unbearable temperature. But Marie kept crawling toward the kitty, who was shivering under the bush. Marie gently pulled the kitten out of the bush and ran the rest of the way home. Kora, remarkably, didn’t put up much of a fight. Maybe she sensed that something was urgent, or maybe she just knew that Marie wouldn’t stop for her. “Regina!” Marie called, bursting through the door. “Look what I found.” “What?” Regina asked, gliding into the room and bending down to unbuckle Kora’s leash. “A kitten!” Marie explained, holding her out to Regina. Regina sucked in a breath. “Yikes.” Regina was a veterinarian major in college, home on winter break. “That cat’s on death’s door.” “Can you help it?” Marie asked, eagerly. “I don’t know,” Regina said doubtfully. “Oh, please, Regina. Please, please, please!” Marie begged. “Alright! Fine . . . Go give the kitten a bath while I go get my kit.” “Oh, thank you! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!” Marie exclaimed. She would have probably jumped up and down as well, if not for the frail kitten in her arms. “Bath,” Regina said sternly, but Marie could see that she was smiling. “Oh, right. I’ll do that right now!” Marie said, hurrying up the stairs. I have a pretty cool sister, Marie thought. Marie cradled the kitten and sang it a soft lullaby; it stirred a little but didn’t wake. In fact, it wasn’t until Marie started washing it that it fully opened its eyes. It took a while for Marie to clean the kitten, due to the fact that she was doing so slowly and carefully. She wasn’t sure if the kitten had any open injuries, and she wanted to make sure to be extremely careful and thorough. When she was finally done, you could see the kitten’s fur: it was beautiful, the color of an ocean pearl, with an adorable little black splotch on his left ear. Marie thought that he, for Regina had told her the gender, was the most beautiful kitten she had ever seen—not that she had seen many kittens—and nothing could sway her mind. Marie cradled the kitten and sang it a soft lullaby; it stirred a little but didn’t wake. Marie had never really considered herself a cat person. Her family had had three dogs during the span of her lifetime alone, and up until now, she had never even held a cat. Maybe I’m not a dog or a cat person. Maybe I’m both, Marie thought while gently drying him with a towel. She carried the kitten downstairs to Regina, who had set up a makeshift veterinarian’s office. Marie had wanted to stay while Regina did a checkup and diagnosis, but Regina insisted that she leave. “That’s not fair!” Marie protested. “I found him!” “And I’m fixing him,” Regina said calmly. “He doesn’t need fixing!” Mare shot back. “He does if he’s sick. Marie, I’m not a professional—not yet anyway. I know enough, but if I have to operate I can’t have you in the room. You’ll just make me more stressed out,” Regina said, in the same tone Marie found irritatingly calm. “But it’s just a simple diagnostic!” “Maybe yes and maybe no. But if it is more, and I’m not saying that it will be, then I can’t have you