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Saturday Poem: Target Practice
Saturday, June 28, 2008
The evening of my best day was the color
of early October. Dead
leaves. Broken telephone wire.
The smoke of a neighbor's burn pile sliding
down my throat like fake cherry cough syrup,
chipped teeth. Cheap alcohol, straight up.

It is the color of a darkened room, where
the TV screen light streams over your face. I catch
you, in the corner of my eye, as you mouth the lines
to "Dawn of the Dead." You know all
of Romero's movies by heart, have a plan
for what to do in case zombies ever really attack Pittsburgh.
You've written it down on graph paper,
in red pen. It's in your briefcase, the one with a broken
lock that you have to break into with a butter knife.

I imagine watching from our second story, cut off
from the world. Below us, the mass
of dead bodies, slow like cold
maple syrup. Sticky with the gore of intestines,
brains. I like the idea of only us
surviving. Never having to leave
the house. When it all begins,
I will remember what you've told me
four thousand times:
destroy the staircase first,
block the door.
Always aim for the head.

-- Christina Murdock

Christina Murdock lives in Bellevue. She received the Sara Henderson Hay Prize for poetry in 2006 from The Pittsburgh Quarterly Online. Her work has appeared in Voices from the Attic, Vol. XIII., and on the radio show "Prosody" on WYEP-FM.
First published on June 28, 2008 at 12:00 am
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