Christmas Log

Fabrice Poussin

Dreams are strange for the young boy
when time seems to move at leisure
upon another Christmas in the land.

It will be warm in the stranger’s house
so tall with the wisdom of ages
at the end of a day almost too cruel.

But he awaits with open arms
with the kin he gently nurtures
for it is the grandest day yet.

There will be a meal of hours
laughter, smiles, endless embraces
a game of cards open to all.

Decades have melted into the ground
souls gone and new ones come
leaving just a taste of time behind.

The girl has labored with child’s care
to mix the saintly nectars of this precious hour
made magic for all eyes to feast.

Wooden log for the hearth
now a grandiose desert for the wealthy
an eternal world in chocolate grooves

Light Switch

Madeleine Park Hager

I remember you
in contradictions that
part my chest

Ribs turn in to
knives and I
am bleeding memories of you

The tattoos left behind by your lips
form an inky shadow that follows me
under the weak light of dusk

I lift up a trembling hand to
turn off the light, then remember that
I’m afraid of the dark, without you.

The Law of Gravity

Madeleine Park Hager

A heart
that falls in love
must also
fall out.
this

is the law of the heart;
unbreakable
yet we create our own prison
trapped by walls
made of memories

a purgatory
where time moves backwards
and all we can see
is the precious time we had,
dying.

Feeding the Sea

Madeline Park Hager

Your tears feed
the ocean and
sculpt its waves.
Cry, let the sea
hear the droplets fall
from your eyes
as they become part
of something bigger
than they ever imagined

Pursuit

Lorraine O’Byrne 

1954
Louisa
Sisters of Mercy, Galway

I tiptoe past the beds, groping my way through the dormitory. The gloom my shield. Latest victim, Pauline, lies curled up in a foetal position on a mere sheet, sniffling in her sleep. Something rankles. Poor sod must have wet the bed again. I throw the blanket over her then melt into the corridor. Silent as a wraith.  

The Virgin Mary leaps out at me from her sanctimonious perch on the window sill, amid intangible threats that lurk elsewhere in the shadows. Shoes squeak from a room to the left. A pungent odour of antiseptic wafts through the air. Someone flicks on a light from behind. Sister Joseph pushing a trolley heaped with towels and sheets. She’ll recognise me. Gotta get out of the open.  

Finding a door at my shoulder, I shove it aside. Stumble into a closet and wait for her to pass. Sister Joseph has the hearing of a flea, but she can smell fear a mile away. Sweat pools behind my neck and slithers down inside my clothes. I twist my hands, powerless to block the overwhelming panic about to drown me. The light goes out and murk descends in the hallway once again.  

I’m so cold, goosebumps prickle my legs and arms, and I can see the vapours from my breath billow into the frigid air. I rub saliva from my mouth, straighten, and will myself to think through the fog that fugs my mind.   

It will be morning soon and they will be searching for me. Hugging myself to keep warm, I glance down at my stained brown smock that is almost threadbare from constant use. At my knuckles, skinned from scrubbing concrete floors. Flinching at every rattle and floorboard creak, I squeeze the Claddagh ring suspended from a chain around my neck, close my eyes and recite a prayer in my mind my grandmother taught me when I was little, to give me courage.  

Angel of God
My Guardian dear
To whom God’s love
Commits me here
Ever this day
Be at my side
To light and guard
To rule and guide
Amen       

My breathing slows, and I scrutinise the little room with new eyes. A black habit dangles from a hook to the right and below that a tunic, wimple and gleaming black shoes. My hands are shaking so much, I struggle with the baggy habit and stuff my hair into the wimple. It’s just the right fit, tight against my skull.  

In my haste to escape, I knock a small bag of linen to the ground. I pick it up to cover me in case anyone questions what I’m doing. Heart pounding, shoulders back and striding with a confidence I don’t feel, I emerge from my place of hiding, praying that no one will see me.  

A weak shaft of light filters through the grimy windows overhead, revealing a grey dismal sky beyond, a promise of the day to come.  

The habit is so long I step on the hem, stumble and drop the bag. A voice stops me cold.  

‘Sister, goodness, where are you going at this hour?’ 

My gut clenches, screaming to flee and it takes every last ounce of willpower not to lunge for the stairs just four feet away. Rigid with fear I turn. Hands twisted in a ball at my side. 

Sister Concepta’s glasses rest askew halfway down her bulbous nose. Chocolate coats her face and biscuit crumbs muddy her tunic. She glances up as I turn around and squints. My mouth goes dry. 

‘Bit early for deliveries, isn’t it, Sister Margaret?’ she clucks. ‘What’s the world coming to – delivery vans at half seven in the morning. Lord save us and guard us.’ 

I’m so relieved that she doesn’t recognize me, air whooshes out of my body with enough force to cause a tornado. I shrug in reply, hoping to God she’ll leave it at that, but needn’t have worried as she’s off grumbling to herself down the corridor. Rosary beads swinging. Still shaking her head in bafflement. 

Clutching the bag full of washing, I rush downstairs to the basement. One ear cocked for activity upstairs. Out of breath, I toss the bag on the ground, and spring to the door. Cobwebs cling for dear life to crevices overhead. A pump hums in the corner. Empty boxes tossed upended in a pile. Clanking pipes. 

The bolt jams at first, I yank it back, my hands slippery with sweat and it opens. Cold air hits my face like a bucket of iced water. Nothing ever felt so good. As soon as I am free of the confines of the institute, I bolt up the street and lose myself in the maze of the town. 

A Volkswagen Beetle ploughs through a puddle drenching me. I gasp and jump back on to the pavement for safety, just as a green bus advertising Kellogg’s Cornflakes on the side, and belching smoke out its rear end, trundles to a stop not far from where I wait. The bus is my knight in shining armour. Arriving to my rescue on the nick of time. I scan the destination overhead. Salthill. 

The driver, round and bearded with black hair, steps out for a smoke. I hop on when he’s not looking, huddle at the back, and pray that my good fortune will hold out until I get to my destination. Babbling girls in school uniform get on the bus. Forming a wall in front of me. Concealing my presence. 

A weary sun dapples anaemic hedges scattered throughout the estates as the bus meanders along cobbled streets and squares, stopping now and then to let more passengers on. Heat sears my face; finding it hard to breathe I tug at the wimple. 

At the next stop, the girls disembark and a small slight middle-aged woman carrying a loud orange handbag, and a folded newspaper tucked under her left arm, boards the bus. She sits down opposite me, scans the headlines, then puts the paper down, and stares out the window. At the third stop, she gets out. The newspaper still on the seat. 

I pick up the Sun Herald and skim the first page. My eyes are drawn to a paragraph on the left column. Report exposes overcrowding and neglect at The Sisters of Mercy care home.  

I chuck the newspaper aside. The town slowly chugs to life. Up ahead the steeple from St. Mary’s Church pokes into the sky, like a beacon towering above the houses directing me where to go.  

I don’t have the luxury of resting. My heart is racing. At the last stop, I jump out. Pull down the wimple, and gasp at my reflection in the glass as the bus sputters away; my colourless cheeks and matted brown hair shorn to almost within an inch of my skull.   

I blink in disorientation at the buildings, the warren of streets around me. Everything looks so different. Nothing is where it’s supposed to be. My mind is smudged by hazy memories. I don’t know whether to go right or left. But I have to keep moving. So, I head west towards Salthill. Head bent against the biting wind.  

It doesn’t take long before I discover that I’m lost. My feet ache from walking, the shoes are pinching my toes. People are glancing curiously at me as I pass. Pointing and whispering. My head can’t take it anymore. I have to find Gran soon. If only I could remember. I press my knuckles to my head as if that will somehow release the memories trapped inside.  

The sun disappears behind a cloud. A gull swoops to the ground. Church bells chime out the midday hour. It’s been almost twelve months since I’ve seen or heard from my grandmother. What if she has died? Gripped with sudden panic, I stop and clutch a railing for support. I find it hard to breathe. A cyclist goes by in slow motion. I can’t hear the chuckles from the young couple pushing twins. Banging, clattering and hammering from a nearby building site has stunted my hearing. Weak from hunger and lack of sleep, I try to focus as everything whirls around me.  

A garda car pulls to the curb. I register the arrival too late; a guard jumps out; bull- necked, and cross-eyed. Marches towards me.  

‘Louisa Sheridan, stay right where you are.’ 

I spin on my heel, but the long habit hampers my escape, and I collide against two elderly ladies in headscarves carrying shopping. 

The Move

Olivia Mueller

I like to make lists. I like writing in rainbow pens, very neatly so the ink doesn’t smudge. I like checkboxes marching down the page in a neat, straight line, clean and uniform, and I like it even better to check them off. I like to see even rows of tasks, all completed, and I like to plan. I freak out less if I have a list. Things don’t seem as big when they’re all next to the same tiny little checkboxes. 

But sometimes making a list doesn’t make me feel better. Pack clothes, I write to myself, glancing up at the mountain I have on my bed. I’ve been putting this off for a while, having to take everything out of the drawers, off the immaculate hangers in my closet, only to fold it all over again and put it in brown cardboard boxes, boxes I have to tape shut with packing tape that makes a loud squeaking noise when I pull it off the roll. I fold and stack without really realizing what I’m doing. Jeans and sweatshirts and sandals all somehow find their way into appropriately labelled boxes, taped shut neatly along the seams. The mountain of clothes on my bed flattens into a sloping hill, then disappears entirely. Another task I can check off the list.  

My room already looked bare, but it looks even more spartan with an empty closet. All the posters I had up on my walls are gone. I cleared out my desk drawers. All my stationary and pens and binders are packed away. There is a growing stack of brown boxes in the corner near my window, and I can see out into the backyard because my curtains are gone, too. I consult my checklist again. I still have my shelves to clear off.  

As I pack away my books and school awards and stacks of Polaroids of me with my friends, I feel something heavy and angry pressing down in my chest. My eyes are a little wet, actually, but I blink it away. It’s just my shelves, and it’s not like I’m losing this stuff forever. In fact, it’s all going into another brown box. But with every box I fill, my room looks less and less like it’s mine, and it hits me that soon it won’t be.  

It should just be some checkboxes on a checklist, the kind I normally love. Pack shelves, move boxes, move out. But checking them off feels hollow. Instead of satisfaction, I feel dread.  

I fold up a pennant, probably from some spirit rally at school. “Go Cobbers!” it proclaims cheerfully in blocky letters over the fuzzy green felt. I hate my school’s mascot with a burning passion, and I often marvel at the fact that someone actually came up with it– and worse, the school approved it. It is literally an ear of corn. Or I guess I should say was, since I won’t exactly be attending anymore.  

“I can’t believe I’m going to miss a stupid ear of corn,” I mutter to myself, almost in disbelief. But the more I think about it, I really am. I was going to miss seeing Eric wear the mascot suit, eating popcorn at sports games and making, dare I say it, corny jokes with my friends when we hung out. I was going to miss Fletcher High and Minnesota.  

As I pack away a field day participation ribbon, I knock a photo onto the floor. A younger me beams back, hugging and Sadie and Tess, my two best friends. Only a year ago,we were wearing our matching Fletcher High sweatshirts, laughing and sitting on Sadie’s bed. We’ve already promised we will text each other every day and FaceTime a lot, but California isn’t exactly close by. I don’t know how I’m going to go from seeing them every single day to maybe never again. Mom and Dad weren’t exactly forthcoming about when we would be coming back to visit. 

I wish I could just add Be happy about moving to my list, check it off and move on. But unfortunately, it isn’t that easy. Yes, I’ll still have all my memories, but I want to be able to make more. What if I forget? Or worse, what if I get forgotten? 

Hallelujah

Emily Moore

Oh Lord, dear Lord, 
Blessed Creator of all 
Compared to Your might, 
All quandaries seem small. 

The billowing waves, 
Though they toss me about 
Are to you one raindrop 
In the midst of a drought. 

In the height of shadow, 
In lowliness of heart, 
You bring hope, joy, and strength  
Before the trials depart. 

You are there before, 
During, and after the pain. 
In the highest and lowest times, 
I never cease to praise your name. 

Overcome with power,  
love, and grace You bestow. 
Hallelujah! Hallelujah! 
The only words my tongue now knows. 

Oh Lord, dear Lord, 
Now I see you face to face. 
I bow down and thank you 
For your mercy and your grace. 

The sanctification process  
Has led me to Your throne.  
I am with You forever. 
I am finally home. 

For this, You and I labored 
together many many years. 
Now, here we are in eternity. 
It was worth every tear. 

Oh Lord, dear Lord 
No number of praises  
would ever be enough.  
But eternity is long, and 
I will spend it singing Hallelujah. 

unstoppable force, meet immovable object

(a sonnet of Deborah) 

Emma McCoy 

I’m a God-given mouthpiece: a prophet. 
They call me a judge, I can do that too, 
watch the war-hungry men who would profit 
from God’s wisdom, falter, in my news-room. 
I was shocked, call me a maybe-quitter 
when he came in, brawn-bared, and asked for me 
I thought, what, you need a babysitter? 
God has not hidden me, my mysteries. 
He lays them all in lines like graveyard rows 
and so I see from the hills, in visions, 
a woman with a bloody stake who knows 
a ground-teeth promise and God’s precision. 
Human pride and fear tend to intermix, 
I don’t care for your death-bound politics. 

Drawn Into Water

(Miriam’s victory song)

Emma McCoy

I remember the sand under my feet 
when I watched my brother on the river- 
caught in the reeds, a prophecy in a wicker basket. 
There came Pharaoh’s daughter, I was afraid 

but watched my brother on the river, 
God whispering mystery in my ear. 
I, so afraid, saw Pharaoh’s daughter coming. 
She sent me back to Mother. 

God whispered mystery in my ear, 
always overflowing into song and tragedy 
and sending me back to Mother. 
My brother grew old in exile, 

he will overflow into song and tragedy 
like the guttural sound of freedom. 
My brother grew old in exile 
and we led an exodus across the sea 

to the guttural sound of freedom. 
God is in the air we breathe, He told me. 
We led an exodus across the sea 
and felt the heat of the desert. 

God is in the air we breathe, He told me 
to keep His commandments and love without restraint. 
I feel the heat of the desert, 
the cool uncertainty of an ocean split apart. 

Keep His commandments. Love without restraint. 
I sing the victory song as a vision for the future amid 
the cool uncertainty of an ocean split apart. 
The salt tangles my hair and closes my eyes. 

The victory song is a vision for the future and  
I remember the sand under my feet. 
The salt tangles my hair and closes my eyes. I am  
caught in the reeds- a prophecy in a wicker basket. 

The Long Plight

Jeffrey McClure

Use knowledge to see a much greater light, 
To see the world a new in one’s brief stay. 
Wisdom is a tool that aids the long plight.  

Learning helps those who yearn for deeper sight 
To open one’s mind and to see all they, 
Use knowledge to see a much greater light. 

Those in deep struggle often quit their fight, 
To sink in defeat and confess dismay, 
Wisdom is a tool that aids the long plight. 

The wisest scholar will teach in delight,  
And like a student, their mind goes astray.  
Use knowledge to see a much greater light.  

The learner attempts to reach greater heights, 
Like a bird soars against the wind away 
Wisdom is a tool that aids the long plight.  

To you, dear reader, pick your pen and write. 

Do dare to recall this message, purvey, 
Use knowledge to see a much greater light, 
Wisdom is a tool that aids the long plight.