“Alley Behind the Bar” and Other Poems
By Ally Chua
Cathedral
My baby drove a nail into my hand the last time
I gave him the board.
It was not his fault. The sun was setting
and we aren’t woodsmiths by trade.
I can tell you what held our attention.
The sky on fire
like the day the cathedral burnt down.
Ashes to ashes.
Wait, not quite.
That’s why I am here.
The remnants, someone’s got to rebuild it.
You go on even if you are tired.
Who else was going to get to it?
The phoenix’s already reborn,
and gone.
And the raccoon that stayed behind
and bit me
It was not his fault.
He acted out, he was scared.
Still hurts like a bitch.
Me, I’m a dead stray out of town.
Go to that town, say my name, and they’ll say:
Yes, what a tragic tale. I wonder what happened to her.
I think they want me to be the warning sign.
Welcome to Bedrock
This is what happens when you do this,
Or don’t do this–
(I don’t know how they spin the story anymore.)
Ask me why I hide my wounds
and I will tell you
it's not because I am ashamed.
But someone’s going to look and me
and go
She has failed her entire life.
I just want a clean slate.
Doesn’t everybody?
If you’ve seen me there, by the autumn road,
I would have said
I want a new leaf.
I want to rebuild this cathedral
with fireproof walls and a
sprinkler system. Safety coded,
the full works.
Maybe a yard too, with a pond. Imagine
ducks, during autumn. A garden
filled with magnolias, or some beautiful
blue flowers that will still
thrive if I mess up
once in a while.
And my baby will come back.
Say he’s sorry for the nail in my hand.
He’s a better carpenter now.
Unarmed.
The day I found out, I threw up my dinner.
Noodles, still undigested. To this day I can't stand pesto,
all of it downed with one pack of cigarettes. Ashes in my mouth
and my eyes. Looking at your message. Wondering why
you didn't seem sorry, at all. They told me I dodged a bullet.
But that is not the point.
I never wanted a person who would shoot me. Who could
look down the barrel and think, this is how I would hurt her.
Alley Behind the Bar
Sometimes in the stillness I wait, quiet
wondering when the ground would
shift beneath my feet. Imagine I am
at a last dance, last call,
and the announcer's going, the
circus is closing in fifteen minutes
so pack your bags and get moving
and the cold air another reality.
By the gate, the old man, the trapeze
artist. He used to be the star of the act.
He failed once, lost his wife. Now he's
the bar's resident drunk, and
the reason why trapezes have nets.
I suppose everyone has a trapeze
story. One moment where you
ruined everything. Me, I told a child
I wasn’t coming back. Even if it
wasn't by choice, all he knows is
I left him there. So suppose I
ruined everything. Kicked a puppy
so it would stop following me. Made
a child stop believing in Santa.
Isn’t the circus better, anyway?
The lions, the mirror maze,
the acrobats. Everything an
illusion, except when it isn’t.
That’s real magic,
slinging lives for fun. Backstage,
a full corridor of ghosts and the audience
none the wiser. Let me tell you
a secret. We’ve all wished for a way
out of here. Used to wonder what if
my life scraped the bottom
of a barrel. Now I know it’s living
with every ghost I created. They’ve
run me out of every home and
house. I’ve lingered in dark
corners and empty spaces. In the
end, we all find ourselves here:
Stuck in the bar, quiet in the stillness.
Wondering when the ground would
shift beneath our feet. Last dance,
last call. Waiting for the night.
Ally Chua is a Singaporean writer now based in Boston. She was the 2019 Singapore Unbound Fellow for New York City and has been published in Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, Cordite Poetry Review, and Salamander Magazine. She is the author of poetry collection Acts of Self Consumption (2023) by Australian press Recent Work Press, and novel The Disappearance of Patrick Zhou (2023) by Singapore press Epigram Books.
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