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I Drive You over the State Line by L.M. Cole

September 3, 2024
Reading Time: 1 Minutes

North to the Roanoke River.

Forty-eight miles, less distance

than I’ve driven you to the beach

or the seven-hour drive to camp

where you learned to build a fire.

The Roanoke has been called

The River of Death. For all I know

it’s taken lives, but it’s not my river

and it’s going to keep you alive.

 

Maybe I’ll park at the State Line

Church, hands clammy and wrung

together—not a prayer, not really,

but a hope and a tired determination.

 

There are reasons, of course,

those multitudes of soft-sung

whys when I explain your name,

your hair, your canon changes,

but the river doesn’t ask questions.

 

You can’t see the river from here,

we passed it before it could try                     

to live up to its appellation. We leave

your dead name there on the banks.

A placard below the state’s welcome sign

says, careful with fire. It’s meant as

a warning. I take it as a battle hymn

and vow to drive you these miles

as many times as it takes to make you

safe, despite the growing reach of hate

that would like to smother you like kudzu.

That’s what mothers are supposed to do.

Careful with fire.

It doesn’t care about borders.

 

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Cole, L.M.
L.M. Cole is a poet and artist residing in North Carolina. She is the co-editor of Bulb Culture Collective and a poetry reader for Moss Puppy Magazine. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming with The Pinch Journal, The McNeese Review, Stanchion and others. For more information visit https://linktr.ee/lmcole

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