Moonomania

By F.J. Bergmann

If we had more moons,

months would fracture into innumerable shards

and broken Junes would rhyme with multiplication;

December's segments would twitch and sparkle

along the arched spine of winter.

Tides would become tentative

and wait for more gregarious skies

to swell like the noise of a crowded party

after the rumor spreads.

Anyone can fill a myriad of jiggers with mercury,

center another moon in each mirrored meniscus,

swirl or jiggle the silvery apparitions,

and watch them ripple and divide.

The largest planet, with a red heart that bleeds,

has a month of moons orbiting like butterflies

whose bright wings slowly open or close

and good-natured women who never know

when their next period is due, its time and tide

unpredictable as the next flickering moonrise.


F.J. Bergmann lives in Wisconsin. Her anachronistic occupations include riding horses and selling used books. She has no academic literary qualifications, but hangs out a lot with folks who do. Her hairstyle is deceptive. One of her pseudopodia can reach all the way from the bed to the refrigerator. Other works by Bergmann include Aqua Regia, Sauce Robert, and the story The Dream Tinker in the anthology Touched by Wonder: A Symphony of Fantastic Tales. More of her works may be found on her website, and she can be contacted by e-mail at demiurge@fibitz.com.