“Nightwalkers” by Ciku Gitonga

Poetry Pause is the League of Canadian Poets’ daily poetry dispatch. Read “Nightwalkers” by Ciku Gitonga.


Nightwalkers

By Ciku Gitonga

I wake up with my mouth bitter.

Drunk last night

I dropped my bike on the staircase

coming up.

Mom is sitting in the living room

in silent rage,

and I croak, โ€œHeyโ€”

Did I bring the bike in?โ€

She watches me crawl

to the toilet bowl.

My skirt from last night goneโ€”

โ€œYou were exposed,โ€

she says, โ€œI had to cover you.โ€

She wants me to know that she saw.

Through my bedroom wall

I hear her pacingโ€”

I know her hands shake.

Her mouth hisses little prayers.

She stays awake when Iโ€™m away

She sees my legs splayed

on the butcherโ€™s plate.

She hates women like meโ€”

nightwalkers.


Copyright ยฉ Ciku Gitonga

Previously published in flo., 2022.

Ailsa Gitonga is a writer and columnist whose work has been published in literary magazines such as Ellipsis Zine, flo. and Cypress Press. She lives in Montreal and works for a queer nonprofit.


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