Elizabeth Theriot




Hallelujah By and By

I’d follow Maw-Maw’s metronomic snores across the hallway, creaking forest papered with mystery-novel dust jackets, into her sheets blanketed with detergent and Dove soap, jagged moonlight on her feet, warm skin, a second skin cocooning me. 

The biggest drinks are frozen with extra shots that go bang and leave holes, sweet with the spittle of Bacchus, like how I was delivered by a flash of lightning—

Shutters begged to get brought in out August rain crying like blue eyes while the kettle gloated and Mama, all legs in cut-off shorts, carried mugs of honey-sweet tea to her mother, reading by the window, listening to Willie Nelson. We thudded over broken branches hunting for ice down River Road to escape the heat, magazines on my lap sleek with androgynous boys, bodies scratching at the radio.

Someone will braid my hair with poppies and silly string but first, before Christmas, her eulogy clung all coffee-grind to my tongue, the sky’s jaundiced Cyclops eye unblinking while I waited for rain that wasn’t even a suggestion and you were always on my mind.

Que sera sera she might have said but her silence made the ground silence and my speakers would not silence for months, my thumb broken, threaded fingers bleeding beneath the nails. Back home the roof leaked all through summer, petty drops that helped Mama’s hair change color.

My sweat hung back in puddles on the ground, red skin peeled like sheets left out in a storm, years run off into some dense and lurid swamp.





Same Roads, Different Houses

I thumb through decades of flowers—How your mother knew the difference between a fold and a cuff, how her boyfriends stare from the red leather album and I worry about these pictures. He crouches beside you long and narrow, eyes empty, arm circling your ruffled dress. Begin with families, return with things only wished for, like married first at sixteen, neither name pronounced right, like you and George in sepia, windswept on a boat, like Jesus with the credit for your sobriety, like Paw-Paw on a motorcycle, driving trucks after the Korean War, after his tattoos loosened, like books that taught jewelry, laying brick, painting, Hershey desserts, like ten pregnancies and half as many children, and when Go home, Danielle were the last words, and your daughter with her daughter in your house, and your son who came back from Vietnam, and how the others made a little show of history. I heard them argue over furniture while you were dying down the hall. 




Remainders

Four hours and nearly a dozen eggs later and I have a chocolate birthday cake. I don’t even really like chocolate cake. She would’ve eaten a slice and drank from the tin mug kept in her freezer just for chilly milk. It’s still there. Hers was its last human mouth but I remember cold metallic on my lips and then the cream. 

One of the last things Maw-Maw insisted (and she was one to insist) was that Momma buy me a small netbook for college. It wouldn’t connect to Wifi, had no USB port; anything I wrote was typed into a tomb. It sits in my old bedroom beneath a carefully wrapped charger. I don’t know if I remember the password, if I could get back in even if I tried.

Momma grabs the glasses for me from a plastic tub in the closet. They aren’t the ones I remember. Anti-climactic, the thin wire sits lightly on my face. Maybe she bought a new pair right before the aneurism. Mom says these were the ones next to her chair, next to her book, next to her water.

Whenever Momma tells a story it’s bound to be in her own voice regardless of who’s talking. Creation, intimacy, I get it. But the vines that crawl around my brainfolds are industrial, thick. I hear the A/C sputter.

Daughter, if someday you exist, I hope you carry resurrection in your throat. 





Total Variable Cost


In precalc Mom texted me to hurry if I could it was time for the surgery 
I’m almost certain it was sunny bright the gravel crunching 
Airline highway framed like a school project you know 
the paneled cardboard but bordered with car dealership Shell station graveyard 
and at the empty house I showered maybe had a snack but I remember the shower 
and an emptiness across the 1-10 bridge though there must have been other cars 
maybe even traffic and cars clogging the Ochsner parking garage like arteries 
around the hospital with platelets and cells shining too brightly in the sun 
my chipped nails pushing against the hospital smell hanging in curtains 
that failed to conceal the final act the glass-walled waiting rooms failing 
to conceal all the screens playing daytime TV soaps the aunts and cousins 
assembled like loose bandages and my mom didn’t say Well you missed your chance
she was sorry but the doctors had waited as long as they could 
so I followed her past nurses and doctors whose faces were the same 
plastic black signs and white letters the same intensive care 
unit/ICU/Maybe if she hears our voices empty stomach tugging me 
frantic the small room dissolving around her the tubes and wires 
a future like colorless metal Mama we’re here, I brought Elizabeth and maybe I did 
try to speak before I left them down another hall sunlight drowning the glass windows 
the reception desk again cars again fountains flanking obsidian statues
arthritic finger twisting toward the sky refusing to explain 
if I had been selfish or afraid or how to quantify the difference





Sestina for Greeting My Body

I unfold           my snap-lock altar        saying this is my body
this my body & I          will drink this time
these                the consequences of the spell I cast
in jars of apple             butter crashed, pull up the root
of the problem                         the branches    lengthened inside my jar
& every extra sock,      hello. Hello socks        & yes, the burn

yes, hello! Peeping from inside                         stocking-holes, I burn 
I really do. Really         pulled over, this the ticket        my body
gives me           with a low head-                      shake, this jar
ringing ‘round my rosy             digestive track.                         Hurry it’s time
to text back your mother,        hello. Time      to get to the root
of your problems, the nugget of gold   you can’t swallow. Lots cast:

40 pieces of silver,       what a deal! Steal         me piles of cast-
off candy, gum printed                        with your molars. Money to burn,
cash                 to change. Hello, I wasn’t        sure which route to root
to remember    where parents live. I do                        dig how your body
ferments so      well. You don’t believe                        you’ll last a long time
but there it is, your usual plaid             & there my honey in its jar

I pour out, ooh                        sticky all over the stove, broken jar-
ring to low-medium,                propose an afternoon to cast
in bronze & burgundy broke leg & sweeten my tea     high time
to climb inside your mouth,     lite a cigarette & burn
dark on the porch,       almost ready    climb inside my body
under eyes all               palimpsest hello           did you root

for me? Or…?   Hello at 9:00, Lincoln logs & Jenga, salty root
haunted knocks                       like knees & door not door when it’s a jar,
door     a gift    delicious nightmare,     a door-able this body
taking the window,      my window open         & shadows cast
out with the lint & bacteria. Wax         is poetic, you burn
pine-scented candles    & never rhyme                         & next time



you will say     
look these were in my pocket the entire time,
these pieces of your fingers, here, take them before they take root
and grow a phalange-tree in my living room, so maybe burn
them in the bathroom sink with sage, empty out a jar
of frog appendages & eye-of-newt into your seasoned cast-
iron, you know what to do




& I will serve up my body


this time towards         the cauldron, drip drip into the jar 
all greasy greasy           fat catch a line              on the cypress root
hello hello cypress,       burn my bark & I’ll learn         to be a body.









Elizabeth Theriot
grew up in Louisiana and earned her undergraduate degree from University of New Orleans. She currently lives in Tuscaloosa, where she is an MFA candidate at the University of Alabama. Elizabeth works with Black Warrior Review as Nonfiction Editor and with the program as Assistant to the Director. She has poems forthcoming in Jet Fuel and The Bangalore Review, and her work can be found in Rogue Agent, Barrelhouse online, Crab Fat Magazine, OCCULUM, Tinderbox, The Mississippi Review, and others.