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Jenny Perowski Is Ahead of Me in the Grocery Store Line

Julie Danho shoots a flaming arrow into your thatched roof

Occasionally I stumble across a poem that shaves my eyebrows off while I’m asleep, or makes me feel like I’m the grape and not the feet in an old-country wine press. I’m still not confident I know what forgiveness is, but I will keep trying the same way families farm the same piece of land for generations and when I find it I have a feeling it will weigh the same in my hands as this poem from Julie Danho does.

Jenny Perowski Is Ahead of Me in the Grocery Store Line

If an Amish family can forgive the man who burned
their land, surely I can say hello to Jenny Perowski,
who used to call me “fattie fat” in seventh grade math
and had boys call my house, pretending to ask me out.
That was twenty years ago. Now Jenny, if not fat exactly,
is puffy as a slightly overstuffed chair. I’m thinner than her,
and my pleasure feels more whiskey than cream, makes me
want to pour out her Kors bag to rifle for candy, then slowly
eat it in front of her like she once did to me. I know
her cruelty was, at best, a misdemeanor. But anger
is like a peppermint in a pocketbook—everything inside
takes on its smell and taste. I could break it in my teeth,
make it disappear. Instead, I savor the mint, let the sugar
line my mouth like fur, linger far past what can be called
pleasure. How good it would be to be better than this.

Julie Danho