Monoculture

By David C. Kopaska-Merkel

Germination

Grey

hands

growing

from parched soil

fingertips near the

porch grasping hands and wrists around

the mailbox post where cacti withered and blew away

they bend in wind I cannot feel

large small every shape

why human

hands why

here

now

Dissolution

So

these

mono

chrome mani

dissolve in the first

gully-washer leaving oil slicks

swirling with faces I don't know they mouth words contort

as puddles dry but I don't read

lips or play charades

or look down

until

it's

dry

Transplantation

I

dig

up the

hands but they

don't have roots bases

are frilly fractal mats I could

root one in a pot not water it three times a week

transplant the arm and then if I

put it in the bath-

tub what would

rise up

from

it?

Cultivation

My

home

thirty

years the last

four of them alone

I think I saw my father's face

after the last rain I staked the puddle where it dried

five hands grew they're in the window

when I know which is

his it goes

in a

big

pot


David Kopaska-Merkel lives in Tuscaloosa, Alabama with his wife and youngest child, both of whom are more talented than he. Persistence has resulted in an impressive number of publications, some of which are listed on the website of his science fiction and fantasy poetry magazine, Dreams & Nightmares. He is the author of The Egg Show, underfoot, and Separate Destinations. Find flash fiction at The Daily Cabal, and more fiction at anthologybuilder.com. He can be reached by e-mail at jopnquog@gmail.com.