family plot
my father says he’s sorry
carries a shovel
for a grave
he can’t help dig
we bury only women here
he points
counts bodies piling up
my father leaves me
leaves me
only hands—
gravel dry
callused heirlooms
two bruises that have begun
to take my mother up
She had no corners though the world was flat—
You don’t know what a suitcase is
until you understand your mother
115 pounds
hollowed out—so much room
to fold
your clothes
inside her
Who could survive
the tenderness
of a kitchen,
my sister
angry once
again
I’m still young enough to destroy
a marigold and be
forgiven, my father wakes
to take care
of me again
What would I do
to you
if my sister left,
took her son
and painted red
all over the garden
biography
HAFIZAH GETER is a South Carolina native currently living in Brooklyn, New York. She is a Cave Canem Fellow and a recipient of a 2012 Amy Award from Poets & Writers. Her poems have appeared in BOXCAR Poetry Review, RHINO, Drunken Boat, Columbia Poetry Review, New Delta Review, Memorious, Linebreak, and Columbia: A Journal of Literature and Art.