A. J. Huffman’s poetry, fiction, haiku, and photography have appeared in hundreds of national and international journals, including Labletter, The James Dickey Review, and Offerta Speciale, in which her work appeared in both English and Italian translation.

 

Counting Nothings 

 

One drink would help me sleep.

Two would give me the courage to think

about the three words we both speak as lies

before lying next to each other.  Five nights ago,

I counted six black feathers outside my window—

there should have been seven—

one for every deadly sin we had committed

against each other’s body.  I closed my eyes

and waited for the eight angelic chimes

that would herald dawn, but I forgot

myself in the middle of a dream

about a cat that did not want

his nine lives.  I swallowed them greedily,

waited for lightning to strike me for the tenth time,

but when I finally opened

my eyes, you and I were still alive

and bleeding tomorrow.

I prayed to the absence

of stars that morning would never come.

 

~

 

Ballerina Believing She is the Ghost of Music’s Past 

 

Every footfall echoes like an anvil

of silence.  A body—

too light—

forgets the idea of dizzy,

looks to a haloed moon for guidance,

hears nothing but her own

regret.  A wind

whimpers in the distance,

divides

itself, gains cadence

and acceptance.  Tireless

legs leap toward the dying

light,

fall short of total encapsulation.

A drop of sweat glitters like the North

Star.  Her blood is reborn

as a momentary exhale,

hovering just before tomorrow’s dawn.