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Zone 3 Literary Journal Spring 2023, Volume 38, Issue 1
Volume 38, Issue 1
Spring 2023

The Trees

Sometimes they cry, he says, staring
out the bay window. At first I think
he means my brother and me, that
he’s talking to our dead mother,
gone for seven months. Of course
we never cry, not in front of him
or really anyone. Then I recall he
only speaks to her in low mutterings,
the volume of intimacy and habit.
He’s talking to me about the trees,
the river birch he planted right before
she got sick again—trees he hated,
at first, their peeling skins a nuisance
when he mowed. I asked Tyler, he says,
naming a man I’ve never met, the
lawn guy who knows my father
better these days than I do. I picture
the two of them nodding at mulch,
shaking their heads at grubs. When
it gets hot, they take up water they
don’t need, cry it out. I let this sink in,
eye the stiff, cracking birch bark my
mother loved, their darkened trunks
a reminder that life is slow dying.
I lift my glass to the trees, nod in their
direction. I say good for them.

About Leona Sevick

Leona Sevick is the Press 53 Poetry Award Winner for her first full-length book of poems, Lion Brothers. Her work appears in Orion, Birmingham Poetry Review, Blackbird, and The Southern Review. She was a 2019 Walter E. Dakin Fellow for the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. She serves as advisory board member of the Furious Flower Black Poetry Center and is provost and professor of English at Bridgewater College in Virginia, where she teaches Asian American literature.

Zone 3 Literary Journal Spring 2023, Volume 38, Issue 1
Zone 3 Press, the literary magazine of Austin Peay State University
Volume 38, Issue 1
Spring 2023

The Trees

Sometimes they cry, he says, staring
out the bay window. At first I think
he means my brother and me, that
he’s talking to our dead mother,
gone for seven months. Of course
we never cry, not in front of him
or really anyone. Then I recall he
only speaks to her in low mutterings,
the volume of intimacy and habit.
He’s talking to me about the trees,
the river birch he planted right before
she got sick again—trees he hated,
at first, their peeling skins a nuisance
when he mowed. I asked Tyler, he says,
naming a man I’ve never met, the
lawn guy who knows my father
better these days than I do. I picture
the two of them nodding at mulch,
shaking their heads at grubs. When
it gets hot, they take up water they
don’t need, cry it out. I let this sink in,
eye the stiff, cracking birch bark my
mother loved, their darkened trunks
a reminder that life is slow dying.
I lift my glass to the trees, nod in their
direction. I say good for them.

Volume 38, Issue 1
Spring 2023

The Trees

Sometimes they cry, he says, staring
out the bay window. At first I think
he means my brother and me, that
he’s talking to our dead mother,
gone for seven months. Of course
we never cry, not in front of him
or really anyone. Then I recall he
only speaks to her in low mutterings,
the volume of intimacy and habit.
He’s talking to me about the trees,
the river birch he planted right before
she got sick again—trees he hated,
at first, their peeling skins a nuisance
when he mowed. I asked Tyler, he says,
naming a man I’ve never met, the
lawn guy who knows my father
better these days than I do. I picture
the two of them nodding at mulch,
shaking their heads at grubs. When
it gets hot, they take up water they
don’t need, cry it out. I let this sink in,
eye the stiff, cracking birch bark my
mother loved, their darkened trunks
a reminder that life is slow dying.
I lift my glass to the trees, nod in their
direction. I say good for them.

About Leona Sevick

Leona Sevick is the Press 53 Poetry Award Winner for her first full-length book of poems, Lion Brothers. Her work appears in Orion, Birmingham Poetry Review, Blackbird, and The Southern Review. She was a 2019 Walter E. Dakin Fellow for the Sewanee Writers’ Conference. She serves as advisory board member of the Furious Flower Black Poetry Center and is provost and professor of English at Bridgewater College in Virginia, where she teaches Asian American literature.