Hillel Steinberg photo
By
Sarah Cheshire
Doors
Tell us what you don’t remember, they said.
There are many doors, but which door
Did you walk through that night,
Be specific. Can you identify it on a map,
Can you find it in relation
To all the other doors:
The sliding grocery store doors
Where your mother left you to face
The man who closed the door behind you
That night. The door of the house
You silently returned to. The second door
You attached to the entrance of your home
Years later, so you could continue to escape—
*
Tell us about how doors
Open to more doors;
Take us back through the houses, door
After door after door after door, back
To the original door; the door you tried
To keep shut— Remember
Search your body for the key
Turn the knob come on yank harder
Can you feel it twist in your gut,
Can you smell rust soften
To rot in the dusty upstairs room
Where bedsheets still writhe
And flesh holds no words.
Peek inside:
Can you spot your past
Self, shrunken beneath
Laughter’s
Indelible hands—
They said,
Tell us what you don’t forget.
Sarah Cheshire
I am currently pursuing and MFA at the University of Alabama, where I also serve as an assistant editor for the Black Warrior Review. I am the author of the chapbook ‘Unravelings‘, and my essays and reviews have appeared in Creative Nonfiction, Scalawag Magazine, River Teeth and Brevity. Additionally, I was awarded the Kurt Brown Prize for Creative Nonfiction (2018), the Etching Press Prose Chapbook Prize (2017), and was a finalist for the 2018 Disquiet Literary Prize.
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