‘The Pallbearer’s Daughter’ by Adam Galanski-De León

After the Rain
by Brandy Wilcoxen

The Pallbearer’s Daughter

He is talking to people who are not there.

My mother-in-law tells me my baby knows 
secrets of the world that we do not. Babies 
exist on the threshold of life and death.

My grandfather worked 
in a chemical factory. It was his life 
and death. He couldn’t eat sugar 
for the last decades of his life. 

A cancer ate him alive.

I watched my grandfather on the threshold of life and death.
He rose out of his hallucinations like a drowning face resurfacing for air.

“I love you” he gasped 
as he grasped my collar. Babies are 
on the threshold of life and death

I am nowhere.
A middle ground where
birth is forgotten and 
death is a painting.

Life is the desert in between.

Churches are birth
And life and death.
I was the pallbearer.
I grasped the coffin in my palms.

Hospitals are for death
and life, and birth.
I held her mother’s leg.
I was the first to see her enter this world.

She wailed, covered in blood,
head full of hallucinations,
on the threshold of two worlds,

crying to people who were not there.

I cut the cord with scissors and 
she stared at me like she just
woke up from a feverish dream.


Adam Galanski-De León is the author of The Laughter of Hyenas at Bay (Raging Opossum Press). He lives in Chicago, IL with his wife, daughter, and four cats. Adam maintains a website at http://www.adamjgalanskideleon.com. Instagram @adam_j_galanski_de_leon.


Brandy Wilcoxen is a writer, artist, and photographer based in Missouri, focused on finding exceptional moments in everyday life.