poems by rachel kellum
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Roommates
Hildegard is seventeen, or maybe six-.
She helped me raise three kids,
watched men come and go, hissed
either way: hello, good riddance.
Like true roommates, we don’t kiss
or cuddle. Sadly, I’m slightly allergic
so only scratch her ears and chin,
tolerate her needled love nips,
wash before I touch my eyes and itch,
periodically brush her coat, let her in
and out to prowl night’s holey pockets
and ward off that other cat who likes to piss
on our threshold. Little bitch. Hilde
knows I love her: I scoop her shit,
meow back when she wants to chit
chat, don’t scold when I step in her vomit.
Like me, she’s gotten fat, likes to sit
upright like old Hotei and slowly lick
her round belly. It swings when she skits
across the floor, and her eyes, sky slits,
are fading strangely: ghostly, distant.
Perhaps she’s going blind, but not decrepit,
not yet. Last week, before a 5 day trip,
she went missing getting her night fix.
I meowed from the porch, across the mint,
and she returned the call from her pit
beneath the porch, behind the lattice.
Her eyes burned yellow, that spectral glint
of flashlight. Here, kitty, kitty. She wouldn’t.
Under the steps, on sore knees, I flashlit
my waggling finger tips, luring her with
touch. That is all it took. She came, slid
against my sharp edges, her catnip.