on the subway lose control of the rain in her hair
by untying the tight pact of her bun
Help is the new Amen Amen, I’m drowning
in women who know what they want
you bread the tilapia hands gloved in powder
while I tell you about the trip home
a woman spilled her groceries
on the platform eight oranges rolled across the dirty floor
I watched her recollect the planets
and knew something
small and bright as a lime I bent down
Can I amen you? and after being born
and born again I was born
again—
do you know what I mean, tilapia hands, let me
turn on the faucet I know the joy
of Marie Curie sleeping with radium
women aren’t lovely they’re love
we live in the bitchery of honesty
you, you most especially
murdering lemon
over fish and singing
a dum-dum song about my ass
you, you magentamouth transfixtress my magnet
those oranges constellated from yellow line to trash can
her fingernails
lurched fuchsia and turquoise
a cigarette parked behind her ear
cigarettes and fruit, what she put in her mouth
we gathered the flock of
at the top of those subway stairs
hugged in white light
a silver-haired woman
dressed to the nines and tens
pulled the leashes
of two saint bernards
mannish with drool
manifested their attention
and mine a red kerchief’s splash and woo
at her throat
while down below
the stranger awarded me
an orange which I later peeled in one go while the snow ate my clothes like a man
the air smelled floral
like the earth
was ours and bragging
Copyright © 2026 by Shira Erlichman. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on June 18, 2026, by the Academy of American Poets.