Gabriel Oladipo
Summer 2024 | Poetry
Three Poems
There’s a Hole That Pierces Right Through Me
HEALING and a phone number
Sharpied on a train wall. That was the source
of Esther’s grand solution. 11 pm, April turns
this fact over at her front desk job, North Central Hospital.
Even in winter the building is cold. She has her black coat on
and Peanut M&M’s from the vending machine.
In her own defense Esther only said the handwriting
was too pure to be a murderer’s.
It was admittedly gentle work. April isn’t calling
that number again. It’s stuck in her head,
that night but also the voice, its words
about dreams that give a person strength,
about strength that leads to future dreams.
There’d been a dog barking.
Sounding small. April’s dreams have
so far involved drowning,
a jagged coast, an ocean
at times like a mirror,
a total heat, a choked
forest, wind.
(7)
The first thing April feels when she steps
into the room is the heat,
as if three space heaters run at the same time.
They might be. The room is packed with garbage
and five fat identical cats laying all around,
all near the old woman sunk into a large
reclining chair set directly across
from the door. April can hear the TV clearer
now that she’s in the same room as it. What April can’t see
is a chair for her to sit in so she stands.
She is very conscious of her black coat
and the room’s heat, her hand in her pocket.
You’ve brought something. the woman says,
in the same voice. From her backpack April pulls
a small black pouch given to her by Esther.
She turns it over above the table and rubies rain down.
The woman picks one up slowly like her arm
might shatter and rubs her thumb all along its edges.
In her lap is a small rectangle wrapped in brown paper.
She unfolds it, revealing, the size of a playing card, an image
of a figure with long hair carved into something that looks cold
like metal and fragile like glass. At the bottom
an inscription, also carved, in small letters, TRANCE.
This is what Esther has sent her to get.
Gripping the knife in her pocket, April steps closer
to look closer. The woman makes a sharp gasp
that then slides into a low, deep moan, and freezes
April in her tracks. April sees the woman
as if for the first time, her hole eyes.
Whatever you plan to do, do it quickly.
After all, it will only hurt you in the end.
April points the knife at the woman without conviction.
She slowly gathers up the rubies, then the card,
and walks out of the room.
The cats watch.
(9)
Three days left until their flight. Esther told April
not to let the being out of her sight,
so she’s sat in the living room with it for hours,
though its aura has grown no less awful,
summoning a strength of will she didn’t know she had.
She tries to pass the time like she usually did,
watching YouTube clips, watching movies,
but she can’t ignore how the witch has grown fuller,
not quite so thin, and each time she catches
a glimpse of its eyes, she sees a few points of white,
small as snowflakes
but there nonetheless. She’s watching a mukbang,
a video of a man eating KFC fried chicken
and chicken sandwiches and popcorn chicken
and mac & cheese. Esther is away
and she wants to feel less alone.
I’ll kill you. The voice appears
in April’s head more clearly than her own.
I’ll devour you, I’ll leave nothing.
The being hasn’t moved at all,
its darkest eyes still stare
without a fixed point, but April knows
where this voice is coming from.
Gabriel Oladipo is a writer living in Chicago. He received his MFA in poetry from Brown University and is the author of the chapbook Emma (Ghost City Press 2018). You can find him at gabrieloladipo.com