Some Fishermen Make Bad Boyfriends
He showed up on my doorstep
with that smile, sunflowers,
a bag of Swedish Fish, like
it was just another night. That’s
no way to end a relationship. Earlier,
he stopped by with pockets filled
with river stones worn smooth—
I worried that the seams would tear,
feared he might go for a swim
(he adored Virginia Woolf). Once,
he turned up with another girl,
a co-worker who just needed a place
to crash. She looked frail, was fresh
out of The Joint, so he left me
with her—for two days! She wanted
to sweep the floor, got upset because
I didn’t swear. I told her to get out
of my fucking house. On one occasion,
he arrived with a knife, with condoms,
booze, a mermaid tattoo and a sob story
about a runaway train. I sent him
packing. He came back with a bouquet
of collapsed blossoms: wilted trumpets,
pink, deflated, tasting of the sea.

Elizabeth Iannaci is a partially sighted SoCal-based poet who earned her Poetry MFA from VCFA. Widely published, her latest chapbook is The Virgin Turtle Light Show (Latitude 34 Press). Recently, her work appeared in Gunpowder Press’s Anthology Women in a Golden State, Midwestern Miscellany, Interlitq, etc. She’s read at countless venues in the U.S. and Europe, has one son, three grandchildren, two grand pups, and prefers paisley to polka dots.