Unexpectedly,
	pelicans.
	They arrive in untamed formations, celestial
	accordions, from the green refuges of the deep west.
	They rise and fall on
	air drafts, like the unseen levers of the past
	that move our conversations.
	We both wonder how it might have been different had
	you stayed.
	Maybe, in all the after-years, all we needed
	was to share this little canoe, to glide through the soft weeping marshes,
	listening to the pelicans winging.
	Their white feathers, tips
	dipped in black like our consciences,
	play the music
	of our gaping wonder.
	We half-expect the birds to turn into
	silken handkerchiefs, or red plastic roses, or warm white rabbits
	pulled from the blue sleeve of sky.
	But instead they drift up the valley
	to the north,
	like forgiveness,
	right before our very eyes.
- 
		
Issue 81
 - 
		
Editor's Note
 - 
	
POETRY
- Michael Bazzett
 - Lana Bella
 - Nancy Bryan
 - Lauren Camp
 - Cyrus Cassells
 - Lucia Cherciu
 - Richie Hofmann
 - Juleen Eun Sun Johnson
 - Rebecca Lehmann
 - Greg Maddigan
 - Marilyn McCabe
 - Dunya Mikhail
 - Alex Miller
 - Julia Anna Morrison
 - Jeremy Radin
 - Supritha Rajan
 - Nicholas Reading
 - Brad Trumpfheller
 - Kara Van De Graaf
 - J. S. Westbrook
 
 - 
	
FICTION
 
		

