Dear Zion,
sadie burch
Anytime you say be
benevolent the custard drools from my lips,
cascading like a broken
dam held back by one man. They say
Eve hid in the garden behind
flowers and bushes, hiding from
God. So, let me do demolition on your lungs.
Hack open your ribs, crawl
inside, and slowly nail them shut again. Don’t bring
Judas to justice, just let me light a cigarette. I’m
keen on baked goods, making homemade
lemon tarts in my home. I’m a
memorial of a chef, and your heart is my oven, so let me
nest in your cavities, I’m an auspicious
opportunity. I’ll hang coloring sheets, they’re
pretty things, and when the priests show up for
questioning, maybe make my confessions for me.
Repentance and fasting will be easy. Or be
silent. Be still. You’ve always been the stoic
type and therefore true, so let’s make our
union. I’ll pull out my umbrella on stormy days,
velvet violence will only be surface deep. Don’t be a
wishing well that runs out of wishes.
Exonerate me, let’s have a glass of
Your Train Has Been Canceled.
Zion, darling, we can light candles and eat
Asparagus for dinner.
Sadie Burch is a senior at Interlochen Arts Academy from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. She started at the academy her junior year as an Interdisciplinary Arts student and later changed her major to Creative Writing. Sadie is the 2023 winner of the Charles Crupi Memorial prize, and will be published in The Albion Review. Sadie is taking a gap year before starting her studies at Bennington College VT.