Derek Graf
Summer 2024 | Poetry
Two Poems
Newlyweds
We have our best sex in the bathroom
of a Taco Bell. In the parking lot
we’re met with raucous applause:
our mothers gripping tissues, our fathers
lighting illegal fireworks from their car hoods.
When I ask you to marry me, you disappear
into the cackling woods. I spend the night
sniffling in my Honda. After the wedding
we have our worst sex at the Airbnb in Tulsa.
Later we find ourselves at a repertory theater
where nothing plays, a slew of unborn children
jeering at us from the balcony. We both tried
to flirt with the usher so I guess this is what
they mean by karma. The moon seeps
into the field like morphine. Dearly beloved,
I ordered you a burrito. It tastes abysmal.
First Date
Her parents upstairs huffing through sex. Over dinner
I quote scripture out of context. Children scream summer
in the park. The parched trees rehearse their death throes.
We’re caught fucking in the alley behind the daycare.
Some kid takes a mason jar and fills it with aphids.
I break it. At night I eavesdrop on her reading.
She lets her dog lunge at infants once it’s dark.
At night we listen to Christian rock while we roleplay
as starving colonists. Years later we break up at an airport.
Her parents finally dead. If only I could remember their names.
Derek Graf's first poetry collection, Green Burial, won the 2021 Elixir Press Antivenom Poetry Prize for a First or Second Book of Poems and was published in 2023. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Meridian, The Journal, and Sugar House Review. He lives in New York City.