TWO POEMS by MADELEINE TOMASOA

A CONVERSATION WITH A BUG RIGHT BEFORE I KILL IT

Please don’t, it says, as though it has

a wife and a family to feed.

I’m surprised by the fact that

it can even talk in the first place.

I blink my eyes and let

surprise bubble forth, unsure of

how to feel.

Can you hear me?

I can hear you, it says irritatedly,

I hear the creak of your knees

whenever you stand up from

your desk at midnight.

I don’t go to bed at midnight, I say

but it is already a lost cause

as the bug flaps its wings,

delightful and grotesque.


really ugly dog

When I was small my grandmother had this really

ugly dog who was so mangy and chewed up—

horrible little guy really—

that I was convinced he had rabies.

He bit me eventually and I was rushed

to the hospital with tears in my parents' eyes.

None in mine because I was a

Big Girl


Madeleine Tomasoa (they/them) is a Best Microfiction Nom. They are the EIC for Koening Zine and a CNF reader for Pidgeonholes. They are currently hurtling towards space. Twitter: @madeleinetms.

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A STORY by GABRIELA DENISE FRANK

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SIX POEMS by JOE MOLANDER