Walk-In Emergencies Welcome

I live in minefields, study dioramas

of disaster, pose in crime scenes. I pay

attention. Last night, I overheard a woman

in a restaurant complain that her friend always

confuses Nothing is better with Better than

nothing. I once rented an apartment near

a clinic with a sign that declared Walk-in

Emergencies Welcome, a consolation

of which I never availed myself. Nothing

can be better, the numbness a relief even

if the lack of feeling indicates danger

in a triage situation. What can I say? I’ve

always ignored Do Not Enter Signs. Brave, stupid,

willful? It all depends on the ending. Let’s face it,

this game should have been mercied a long time ago.

Michelle Brooks has published a collection of poetry, Make Yourself Small, (Backwaters Press), and a novella, Dead Girl, Live Boy, (Storylandia Press). A native Texan, she has spent much of her adult life in Detroit, her favorite city.