Planets
by Hazelyn Aroian
and so you float through the twilit cemetery. pink ribbons threaded along the horizon, pink ribbons tasseled through your hair. the sound of September wind through dry grass is not unlike the sound of graphite, frazzled chicken scratch on a baby blue exam booklet. if death is a prickly essay question, a headstone’s more footnote than thesis. and if death is a physics lab report, at the moment you’re workbenched, stuck fiddling with your pendulum, your balance scale. but enough of that. look to the cemetery oaks, orange leaves shattering around you like dozens of satellites. in the heat of a brief supernovan bloom is it better to study the wrong thing? to study nothing at all? look to the graves, knit in such tidy rows. the symmetry makes you want to pull your own chair back, sit down for class. as the neighbor boy pedals past the wrought iron cemetery gate, as his wheels spin, whir, flicker in mechanical tandem like the phases of miniature moons: recite your times tables, aloof as a runaway helium balloon. keep rising all light and airy up into that most intimate infinite. keep racing towards that starless blank slate, black granite.
Hazelyn Aroian lives and writes in Massachusetts. She recently graduated from Northeastern University, where she studied computer science, English, and philosophy. She has worked as a software engineer, grocery store clerk, and movie theatre attendant. Her writing has been nominated for Best Spiritual Literature and can be found in The Shore and Strange Hymnal.
