Two poems by Chloe Ackerman

Healing Waters
by Amanda McLeod

The Riverbank

            after Arthur Sze

—the president suggests we consider injecting ourselves with cleaning supplies or sunlight—


I walk along the river, 
            —the part that floods 
                        when the dam opens— 

and the rocks 
            shift like grinding 
                        teeth under my feet. 

Hanging across tree limbs 
            and tangled in the bushes 
                        are lost, faded clothes 

and a water-logged sleeping 
            bag. Skeletons of old signs 
                        are imbedded in the earth. 

Soon, it will be overgrown 
            and green and thick, but now 
                        it’s a beach of barren trees. 

I press my shoe near a footprint 
            in the sand to see if it’s mine 
                        or from someone before me. 

I’ve imagined how I could die 
            here, every way involving water 
                        or a man or a bad choice. 

In my family, we say 
            the dead visit as cardinals, 
                        and now these trees vein 

the earth and claw  
            up from the sand, sticking 
                        out like exposed nerves. 

The way the red birds 
            swoop, circle, and land, 
                        you’d think it was still autumn.


Orpheus Leads the Grief Support Group

We lie on the ground & look to the sky in our cubicles 
of pink picnic blankets hung from a labyrinth of clotheslines. 

The man to my right says it’s been raining oceans for years. I watch 
the blue sky & hear him quake; a rabbit shaped cloud blocks the sun. 

I’m afraid of everything someone says or maybe it was me.
A gust of wind lifts our walls—if I turn my head, I’d see the others, 

but that’s against the rules. I close my eyes & hum but make no noise. 
Someone says I don’t know why I’m here—no one asks what they mean. 

Another says but you are & you’re welcome to stay
I reach my hand under the picnic blanket to the man weeping next to me. 

Frayed edges tickle my wrist. His hand is cold & solid like stone. 
It’s hard to remember, he says. I squeeze his fingers gently; I think he’s marble 

or maybe we both are. It’s hard to feel anything someone says. I let my hand relax 
but leave it under the divide. Minutes pass & everyone is silent. 

I keep my eyes shut: all I want is to see pink. His hand becomes warm, 
soft or maybe mine does. He squeezes my fingers back. 


Chloe Ackerman is from Eau Claire, Wisconsin where she recently graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire with a bachelor’s degree in creative writing and psychology. Her work can be found in Barstow & Grand and UWEC’s NOTA Magazine.


Amanda McLeod is an Australian author and artist, with a penchant for wild places and quiet. Her work has appeared in many places both in print and online, and her flash fiction collection Animal Behaviour was released by Chaffinch Press in 2020. Her work has been shortlisted in several writing prizes, and won the 2018 Marjorie Graber-McInnis Short Story Award. She is Managing Editor of Animal Heart Press. Find her at amandamcleodwrites.com.