You asked me to come and see you before you left. I told you I had plans. The truth was I didn't trust myself not to fall back. Three days later I bought a train ticket to your city. I watched fields turn into buildings outside the train window. Walked the white cobbles of your street. Sat beneath a tree in the park across from your house and looked at the front door. Nothing happened. No curtains moved. No footsteps crossed the hall. No shadow passed the window. You were already gone. Still, I sat there for an hour, as if regret could arrive late and find me waiting.
Jonna Kihlman is a Swedish poet writing about memory, inheritance and language. Her work has appeared in journals including The Ticket, Litmora Literary Magazine and Jacaranda Journal. She works in communications and publishes poetry and reflections on her Substack, Poems by Jonna. She can often be found chasing story ideas and drinking coffee while everyone else in the house is still asleep.
Recent Posts
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the time i was abducted
Elie Lichtschein - MY PSYCHIC GAYLE CHARGES $40 FOR A 15-MINUTE SESSION WHICH USED TO BE A REALLY GOOD DEAL BECAUSE SHE WOULD LOSE TRACK OF TIME BUT NOW SHE DOESN’T SO IT’S KIND OF EXPENSIVE
Olivia Sawatzki - Eutrapelia
Billy Sheehan - horse/mother
Lili Lin - Warning Label for Prednisone
Robin Neidhard - A Winning Garden
Juliet Waller
