Featured Writer: Jessica Austin

 

Sediment

 

What silence is this

That stretches and drifts

Into the corners of the house

In eddies, swirling and burrowing

Into the filaments of life,

Gritty between toes and

Etching skin like jagged bone.

 

Should they let silence

Layer grain upon grain—

Hide behind dune swells,

Lit by a milky moon-wash?

They would be netted

By their own reticence.

 

Their house is silent,

Wrapped in the stillness

Of untouched clutter.

They have grown old.

What water once rushed the halls,

Filtered by its own frenzy,

Purified in a kind of frantic dance,

Now cools in patient stagnation.

 

The house is not scrubbed anymore,

Rubbed pink and giddy

By running feet.

They dab at it

When ketchup spills,

Or glass shatters.

 

The walls are growing moldy,

The sand climbing ever-higher.

Can they breathe?

 

A creeping mildew is softening the

Structure, secreting its issue

Through these deepening days.

 

 

 

Jessica Austin has a B.A. in English from the University of Virginia. She has work scheduled for publication in the online magazine 491 Neo-Naïve Imagination. She lives in Poquoson, Virginia (a modern-day fishing town sandwiched between water and marsh), with her husband, two young daughters, and one mischievous dachsund. She teaches English to secondary school students and hopes to obtain a master's degree in literature or writing.
Email: Jessica Austin

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