by Kurt Luchs

The giant spiders are migrating again. 

Their journey is long and perilous 

because they can only travel in nightmares. 

Last night as I dozed fitfully, two of them 

came down the hill, and when they turned off Red Wing Avenue 

I was able to blow out some of their dark, bulbous eyes 

before the shotgun became black smoke rising from my hands 

and a pterodactyl in a bus driver’s cap  

lifted me screaming into the sky. 

Today, as I go about my business— 

stamping ALREADY PAID on all my overdue bills— 

I can feel that it is they who sleep uneasily, 

relishing yet also fearing our next encounter, 

their jaws grinding, their unbearably hairy legs 

twitching in anticipation. 

This time there will be two shotguns 

and a phosphorous grenade, and if all else fails, 

a club wrapped in barbed wire at the big end. 

Let your remaining eyes look upon that 

and tremble, my dreamy darlings… 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kurt Luchs (kurtluchs.com) has poems published in Plume Poetry Journal, The Bitter Oleander, and London Grip. He won the 2022 Pushcart Prize, as well as the 2019 Atlanta Review International Poetry Contest. He has written humor for the New Yorker, the Onion and McSweeney’s Internet Tendency. His books include a humor collection, It’s Funny Until Someone Loses an Eye (Then It’s Really Funny), and a poetry chapbook, One of These Things Is Not Like the Other. His first full-length poetry collection, Falling in the Direction of Up, was issued in 2021 by Sagging Meniscus Press. He lives in Portage, Michigan. 

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