It’s Not My Fault that Your Wife Left
Your wife is leaving the party
with my hand on her waist
and I don’t know what to tell you
so that we can still be friends. You’re a poet
so your wife is too good for you. I wonder
what she sees in me that she can’t find
already mixed in with her things. The problems
with everyone are the same unless
you’re being beaten. Your wife told me that
and I didn’t believe her until she showed
the tattoo on her ankle with the bleeding
around it and called it as the ugly thing
it is. Your wife is not delusional
like so many other people’s wives
not gold-digging, not unable to darn,
not with the desire to be childless
but still pregnant one morning
touched in the biological way
and also as a wife. Your wife
is practical. She’s borne her own
share of guilt and you’d know
that too if you weren’t such a poet
which is really just a synonym for awful
husband. Your wife once tried
to kill a man with a rock but he didn’t
appear. She waited in the rain
with the stone in her shirtsleeve,
ten pounds and already blood
drawn from the inside
of her cheek. Your wife would have
swung that arm. She was ready to give up
her free life but she had the perfect
plan. To kill it and go. That man didn’t appear
and your wife was left wanting. A piece
of your wife is still in the woods.
A piece of your wife is spat out
in the grass, pre-chewed. A piece of your wife
will always be with you. But she’s ready
to use a mirror. She’s freshly minted
as childfree. She’s going to stay
skinny. She told me a secret thing
to repeat to you to save our friendship:
Hannah Schoettmer’s writing can be found in The Louisville Review, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, 24hr Neon Mag, SOFTBLOW Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. She lives in Los Angeles.
You can follow Hannah on Instagram here.