Bikes 1
Susan Brennan
We used to ride our bikes on the big road
past those two horses, golden and chestnut
always stopping, as cars did, to pet
their suede noses. One of the last farms
soon to be swallowed by suburban snaking roads
where you could still smell hay and manure
sweet and musky tales of earth and
dandelion anarchy. We could see ourselves
in their mirrored eyeballs with our hands flat
plates of sugar and apples as we leaned on the old grey fence
a sculpture saying forever will never count
built by hands now buried; and we would finally get to the store
buy candy necklaces and lip gloss and wait out back
for boys with beer cans and hope
a movie would happen to us
as if between our eyes a reel to reel was strung
I was looking for something that would burn my tongue
or make me change the way smoking and kissing
promised; the way secrets promise to make
a new planet of something simple –
but things stayed simple
my friend got pregnant at fifteen and moved away
I made new friends and kept trying
to find something that would lead to a different story
and I stopped stopping for the horses
although when I rode by on my bike
they recognized me, as a horse with wheels, would run alongside me –
and I was the free one, the one who would get out
Susan Brennan is a poet, screenwriter and activist. Her poems can be found in her chapbooks and book, Blue Sirens (Dancing Girl Press), numinous (Finishing Line Press), and Drunken Oasis (Rattapallax Press) and various publications. She curates poetry programming (WanderWord) at Wilco’s Solid Sound Music Festival, MASS MoCA. With a circus-arts company, she co-produced and staged her poem Chromoluminarism about Georges Seurat’s final painting (RGB NYC). She has written film scripts, a one million hit plus award winning web-series, pitched film stories, and co-produced a short film, of which have premiered at Austin, Venice and Tribeca Film Festivals, as well as a screening at MoMA. Being a part of Lotus's Spring Clover Edition has her feeling sassy through and through. See what she’s up to at www.tinycubesofice.com.