‘Second Contact and Fadeout’ by Nate Maxson

 Visitor
by Elise Rothenhoefer

Second Contact and Fadeout

  1. Contact

When the astronauts landed they found the city they’d seen from orbit

To be just like where they’d come from

And when they walked masked and oxygenated out from the borderlands and through the alleyways and boulevards, thumbing rides with awkward, fat, gloved hands on the highway’s edge

Nobody paid them any attention, just bumped into them on the sidewalks and told them to stop loitering

They took off their helmets and found the same smoggy air they’d flown so far away from

Most of them eventually found wives, husbands, jobs, houses, and just nearly forgot the spaceship they’d parked far off in the forest, mouldering and grown over with trees and moss

They felt the shape and curve of their contact like licking a battery and accepted it like gravity having pushed them out and pulled them towards

Only one astronaut couldn’t forget,

Couldn’t accept going from heavy to weightlessness to heavy again

He stands on the corner of 14th and Central, holding out his helmet like a pail and asking for spare change, still dressed in the staining white, diaperlike fabric that makes him sweat so much in the summer

There are things you forgot and there are things you can’t forget

And there are things you almost remember

Any astronaut,

Any traveler

Will tell you

It’s like a magic trick, 

Like a coin that reappears behind the ear of a child

Who, after they realize how it’s done

Will spend years trying to get back

To the moment between

When the silver dollar vanished

When they didn’t know, and when they did


2. Fade

If you asked him, he’d tell you that he came from another world just like this one

He’d tell you that if you wanted proof

To go eastwards into the wilderness

And that the ship

Was a haunted house

And so was the city 

And so was the new planet

And the old planet too

I however,

Will tell you

To think of it in terms of architecture

To think of architecture as making a space for the ghosts

You fly towards the dark aperture, a moth in reverse

It’s a new moon

You might make a wish?

In some cultures they do that

They wish

For the artificial, 

Pitch black clarity

Of the planetarium

The lightshow’s about to start

Sit right back

We’ll tell you 

The names of the constellations

Each hero’s shape

Their tombs and their deeds

Spears and swords pointing like compass needles,

Like exhaust trails

Who would follow?

These unidentified flying animals

Someone already has

How did you think?

The house you lived in was built?

It was built from their bones

Someone chased and hunted

Footprints, spoor, stag and forest

Blood from a wound that didn’t heal

Points of fire spread out, across the sky


Nate Maxson is a writer and performance artist. The author of several collections of poetry, he lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.


Elise Rothenhoefer is a visual artist, animal lover, and justice advocate.  She manages a graphic design business, Magic Bean Designs. Elise lives in the wilds of Southern Florida with her husband, 3 children, 4 cats, 2 dogs, 3 hermit crabs, 1 pig and 1 tortoise.