In remembrance of victims of hate crimes
Some say I speak a nightingale
the red of the fleeting sun
Deep seeded in my song
cause nightingales
sing the best songs
at dark and so do I—
beating this heart.
Cause mama put my
guns in the ground.
In the ground like the forty-nine
shot In Orlando that night. Forty-nine
Knock knock knocking
on Heaven’s door. Sore
from the fall; they’d rather lose
a child plummeting off the
Madison Street Bridge
than burn the Stonewall
of gender norms down.
Some say lipstick is gasoline,
that certain flames are deserved.
I speak a nightingale
cause I look a flightless bird
or stars burnt into ash
so wish
we can get through
this.
The TV says
“Marriage is between a man and a woman.”
But gender
isn’t the claw machine rigged
to grab only
what’s in your pants.
We The People are
created black or white
But can’t choose Created Equal
when “boy” a leash
cinching my neck
into silence, what was once
a Pulse is
just white noise
blocking out the voices
of thirty-four thousand queer teens
who end their lives each year,
sending grief spilling
through fractured family photos.
So tell me again
why the Stars and Stripes are
forever but
fifty stars minus forty-nine victims
is just one nightingale singing.
People are crazy and times are strange
to the Pulse of
red sun just
as it shatters behind the
mission mountains.
Hey “boy”
it’s dark where I live but
I’m still singing.