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Tonight's Poet Corner: Will I

Will I by Belinda Roddie Will I kiss you, hold you, keep you, in the constructs of my psyche, behind the velvet curtains where I keep my heart locked up in a chest with no key to open it?

Today's OneWord: Wealth

I was still deciding whom to allocate my wealth to once I died when the butler, Timothy, staggered in. It was clear from the smell that he was rather drunk; he had probably dipped one or two many times into the leftover punch from the party the previous night. As he swayed, I could see his eyes practically sliding around in their sockets, like crystal balls rolling out a foreboding future. "Ma'am," he slurred, before nearly pitching forward, but then righting himself, "your rel...your rela...your uncle and aunt is here."

Tonight's Poet Corner: Escape From The Inevitable

Escape From The Inevitable by Belinda Roddie Now hot, now cold, I see the sun's fluctuations, its stumbles and bows, its somber smile dripping like waxen gold from its burning lips. This is not the end, but the beginning; in due time, the oceans will be slurped up like scalding soup, salt lingering on our tongues as our skin chars against our mortal grills. We'll flee in ships round as baseballs, and stitched like such, but made with steel instead of leather, and run with circuits instead of cork. We'll make new homes among other dying stars and eat from square tins, all while we still sing, still write, still speak with one another on our enclosed balconies, watching a shooting star dissolve again and again and again, disappearing into the darkness that will push our galaxy farther and further away from us, swirling like milk into the black coffee of the cosmos.

Today's OneWord: Triplets

The Jones triplets all liked to do different things: Martin was a jazz trumpeter, Jasmine was an accountant, and Kaitlyn was a brazen activist fighting for both the trans community and the Black Lives Matter movement. All of them sported similar physical features, however, with wild thatches of curly black hair and rich chocolate skin. Martin was married to a woman who was whiter than milk, while Jasmine and Kaitlyn preferred to be single.

Today's OneWord: Channel

"I know you're angry, Chris," my mother said, watching my fingers turn white as I gripped the bedpost. "I know how much you want to hurt him. How much you want to kill him. But you can't. You know that." I didn't respond to her - not verbally, anyway. I could hear my breaths assaulting my ribcage, bursts of guttural notes playing xylophone on my bones. "What I need you to do," my mother continued, unperturbed by my hyperventilation, "is channel that anger into something else, okay?"

Saturday's Storyteller: "Okay, so I know what eggs are, but what the heck is nog?"

by Belinda Roddie "Okay, so I know what eggs are, but what the heck is nog?" "I certainly hope you know what eggs are!" "No, but seriously, what is nog? Why 'nog?' It doesn't make sense." "You're really obsessing over this, aren't you?" "It's racking my brain, man! I don't get it!" "..." "..." "...Did you try Wikipedia?" "...Dude." "Yeah." "Dude. " "Yeah?" " Dude." " Yeah?" "...You're a genius." "I know." "...Hmmm. Okay." "What?" "Weird." "What's weird?" "I mean, the page says the word may have come from the word noggin..." "Noggin? Like your head?" "Nah, man, it's Middle English. Noggins were these little carved mugs that they served alcohol in." ...

Today's OneWord: Normal

Can't we just go back to the way things were, and everything returns to normal? No. We can't. Because we weren't normal in the first place. We had dreams that didn't fit right in boxes, hopes that had to be tied down by strings and ropes or else they would drift away. We sang songs where the words trailed off into non-sequiturs, and the prayers we made weren't to any gods, but to ourselves. We can't go back to the way things were because if we tried, it'd be forced and hackneyed. This is who we are now. We are normal.