Jesus is His Son but We’re all God’s Children, or In Which an Exchange Student From Heaven Stays with You for A Weekend
Lilirose Luo
Sacramento, CA, USA
Mira Loma High School
Poetry
Jesus is His Son but We’re all God’s Children, or In Which an Exchange Student From Heaven Stays with You for a Weekend
On Saturday you watch a boy dull his mouth
into a fist. He gifts you the things he cannot keep: a
child-sized diabolo, locks of his hair, the love he has
for his mother. A jagged grasp of memory abandons you every time–
during that summer you started crying and never stopped, in the canyon
blessed by God’s fury, over a dull cellular connection,
on the precipice of saying goodbye. Not quite there but
almost. It is a two-way performance, and He is the only man
you will ever learn to love. Was it the blood on your hands,
or the blood on your underwear that made you my daughter?
your Father asks later, amused. What he doesn’t learn can’t
hurt him, and what he doesn’t know is that it was neither,
but the blood on your teeth & the way the girl
cried corroded red when you chose not to kiss her back.
That the blood wasn’t yours, but it could have been.
That you’re not what he thinks you are, but you
could have been. On Sunday He presses His palm into
your inner thigh bone, hot as a branding iron but only a
nickel as painful; you’d know. You’ve felt the claim of a man
before, and He’s not a man, He’s on his way to becoming
something else. And you let Him, because you know what
it’s like to stop being soft. How teeth can’t regrow more than
once. How a mouth can bleed open and open from unripened arils,
that oxygen-sucked July He stopped talking only to relearn speech
this time through fists instead of words. How a men’s shaver
isn’t that different from a razor’s bite when it’s held by someone
who loves you more than you will Ever Be Able To Comprehend,
or so He says. On Monday You are perched on the canyon,
taking turns throwing rocks into God’s mouth. Let’s play that
fucked-up game, He says. A version of the Trolley Dilemma
that neither of you is able to let go of. This is a story about Him,
not you, but you still peel pomegranates together– weblike rind muting
your incisors, crimson juice a sharp arc carving across flushed skin.
A whistle, trilling & endless. He smiles, touches your mouth
without any metallic aftertaste; this is how you know the grave
will be empty, only minuscule crooked seeds at the corners—
Okay, how about Our Lord Who Art in Heaven?
you half-joke. It depends, He replies, On whether he is on the
side of the tracks for which I have to flip a lever or not
EDITORIAL PRAISE
“Jesus is His Son but We’re all God’s Children, or In Which an Exchange Student From Heaven Stays with You for A Weekend” is a powerful commentary on innocence and identity. Luo presents a haunting portrait of a speaker navigating faith in a reality where the sacred is mundane, and the divine is mortal too. With musings on blood and the Trolley Problem, Luo presents a piece both philosophically and emotionally fresh.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Lilirose Luo (she/him) is a queer writer from California. When Lilirose isn't reading Coffee Shop AU fanfictions, she can be found cat-napping in sunlight, overusing ampersands, or doomscrolling on Twitter @moonp3arl.