Rachel Mallalieu
Before Everything
Half my face hangs
from rearview mirrors and
litters the ground like torn
butterfly wings
Without it, I turn away from the
girl in the mirror –
her face a dim moon
Everyday it gets worse, my patient gasps –
his voice a mist that drifts through
the wound in his neck
His arms and legs are too feeble
to escape the body’s prison
I whisper encouragement but think
I’d rather die
Last year, before everything,
flies crawled out of the wall and
died in lazy heaps
Everyday more appeared
I’ve never been one to read the signs
but these days, handfuls
of my hair carpet
the bathroom floor
To think –
I used to carry a notebook and scribble
fanciful phrases I overheard
on the radio or in line at
the grocery store and
weave those words into poems
Now, I’m stranded on
the other side of nowhere,
finding a new way
to grieve
The way my body
attacked my liver
and left me round
faced and bereft
of empathy
The way I can’t change things
When a young man’s
heart convulses and quivers
and he begs Don’t let me die
I pat his hand
but promise nothing
The way it’s taken me this long to realize
I don’t write the endings
The young mother slips easily
into death, like going
for a swim,
but the drunk
burns the house down
and walks away
The way my life contracts
to the tip of the needle
that pricks my forearm each week
while inked butterflies shiver
on the back of the phlebotomist’s hands
Stories I No Longer Tell
I know which stories will impress
friends over dinner.
I might tell you about the pregnant girl
who was shot in the head
all those years ago in a Walmart parking lot,
and the way her husband wailed when I
tracked him down in
Fallujah and told him the news
on a crackling line.
Don’t worry, it ended happily enough.
She learned to walk again and the baby
survived.
She only occasionally uses a word like milk
when she means to say bird.
People always demand
tell me the worst thing you’ve ever seen,
so sometimes I tell them about the car
filled with teens who thought they could fly
and left pieces of their bodies
in the trees instead.
Or of the woman who delivered her
intestines like a baby
and the way her husband
gazed at her with both love
and disgust.
Occasionally, I’ll mention the mother
who shot herself in the mouth and arrived
in my trauma room with her eye
dangling against her cheek.
Her young son found her but
she couldn’t be saved.
I’m too tired for stories now.
Each day spins tales of pregnant women
who drown in clotted lungs and leave
their babies behind.
It’s almost boring when patients gasp
Is it too late to get the shot?
Then I see their smiles on
Facebook and the kids
in their profile pictures,
and I must not
be numb enough yet,
because it all still
makes me feel sick.
My children ask me to
stop talking about work.
No one cares about Covid anymore Mom
my oldest mumbles.
And it’s true.
So today, I’ll tell them a story about
our dog who slipped his lead and galloped
through the stream behind our house.
Mud clung to his white fur and he rolled
in the grass when I tried to wash his paws.
But I couldn’t stay angry
when cedar scented the air
and the trees wore crowns of fire.
Rachel Mallalieu is an emergency physician and mother of five. She writes poetry in her spare time. Her recent work is featured in Blood and Thunder, Haunted Waters Press, Pulse, Nelle, Entropy, Anti-Heroin Chic and Rattle.