It Only Made Sense
After my mother died,
my sister found a bundle
of yellowed letters:
how my dad had planned
to skip out, to leave the States
with someone he’d met, a Brit.
Beautiful, no doubt.
But he didn’t leave. Not then,
anyway. Someone talked him
out of it: my German grandfather,
the dour Ernest, who never said
a word to us.
A blonde. I remember her
that way. I was seven, maybe.
A blonde who followed us.
Was it a chrome-bright Pontiac
convertible (or only a Chevy)
that sent us flying from our seats?
She was screaming something.
What I remember: the crush
of metal, as she hit us again,
again, until my dad accelerated
& escaped, with a few quick turns
to somewhere safe.
Pittsburgh Quarterly is now accepting submissions for its weekly online poetry feature. PQ Poem is seeking poetry from local, national and international poets that highlight a strong voice and good use of imagery, among other criteria. To have your work featured, send up to three previously unpublished poems in Word or PDF format as well as a brief bio to pittsburghquarterlymag@gmail.com
Simultaneous submissions are accepted, but if work is accepted elsewhere, please alert us.