DOUGLAS MANUEL
DOUGLAS MANUEL
Feels Like Rain
Dead black cat on the porch,
tongue out.
I touched it!
No regrets. I’ve told myself
for as long as I can forget.
I rode a Big Wheel
through snow, couldn’t go back
as far as planned. Manx cat, do you want a tail?
Left too many blades under pillows. Band-Aids
never big enough. My father aches
in legs he doesn’t have. That cat
was more his than mine.
He’s like both of ours
only let’s keep him at my house.
With a lit cigarette, I plugged an anthill.
The First Time I See My Father’s Blood Cleaned
Fried chicken and cigarettes
in my backpack,
I stand at the door
unable to cross
the threshold. As if
that hospital floor
is ice too thin to bear
any weight. I hear
your younger self caught beneath,
knocking your fists
against the brittle cold,
not strong enough to break
through, your gray-black skin
a city at night. Still,
I’m at the door
with the greasy chicken
and smokes you asked for,
watching you bleed.
Blood rushing
through tubes so fast
it seems not to move. Artificial
kidney does work
yours won’t. You don’t see
me. You shiver between death
and sleep. I place my bag down,
try to give you my time,
the thing you wouldn’t ask for,
and didn’t need, what
I’d been longing to give.
Douglas Manuel was born in Anderson, Indiana. He received a BA in Creative Writing from Arizona State University and an MFA from Butler University where he was the Managing Editor of Booth a Journal. He is currently a Middleton and Dornsife Fellow at the University of Southern California where he is pursuing a PhD in Literature and Creative Writing. He was a recipient of the Chris McCarthy Scholarship for the Napa Valley Writers’ Conference and has been the Poetry Editor for Gold Line Press as well as was one of the Managing Editors of Ricochet Editions. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Poetry Northwest, Superstition Review, Rhino, North American Review, The Chattahoochee Review, New Orleans Review, Crab Creek Review, Many Mountains Moving and elsewhere. His first full-length collection of poems, Testify, was released by Red Hen Press in the spring of 2017.