2023 Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize Second Runner-Up

borderless
there was much then July came and slept that night
steepling of hands taking a hot shower without dreams
as if the surgeons in our bathroom and slept that morning
were trying to build without a vent without dreams
a church to house our lawn steamed and slept that afternoon
their inoperable religion with hospice and morphine without dreams
and it was June and the nurses came i made baingan bharta
and there were with kind words for dinner and as
too many corridors the nurses left the eggplant charred
the sun hadn’t begun with kind words under the broiler and
pushing its gurney of heat the nurses came i tempered
through the double doors the nurses left chili powder in oil
of summer and it was time
and all the nurses then it wasn’t time i felt you
in their cartoon tops and then it was time
asked for SSNs and then you asked like a sputter of oil
addresses for saffron kulfi
insurance cards and kitchari burns skin
but you were for daal makhani
borderless malai kofta i felt you sharp
the tumor we fed you
cresting through and you took a bite and brief
your skull from each
and we kept trying and gone
to push it back in

Brittany Mishra helps make medical devices for a living and writes poetry as her passion. Her poetry can be found in Poet Lore, Spoon River Poetry Review, Painted Bride Quarterly, Sky Island, Chestnut Review, and MoonPark Review. Brittany lives in southwest Washington with her husband and daughter.