The FedEx Man Always Knocks Twice

How many times have we been here, closing the door

against the outside as if we are prey, as if we are worthy

of hunting, a prized head to hang on a wall, glass eyes

reflecting the face of the hunter. It’s not your fault.

Just last week a woman was murdered in a park nearby.

She was going for a run. She was running before running

meant not dying. It’s not your fault. Once, you were crouched

behind a bush til dark, shook from the guts out, while a man

slapped a pipe in his open palm, softly singing Here, kitty kitty

over the crunch of his boots. When you were 13,

the man working on your house was caught peering into

the window of your second floor bedroom as you towelled

yourself dry and looked for all of your vanishing underwear.

Your brother sat on the roof with a shotgun waiting

for that same man to come back around because brothers know

what men can be capable of. Once, you accepted a gift in exchange

for rape. Once, a man who offered you a ride home drove you

to his house instead. Once, you left your drink unattended, woke up

in the backseat of a car full of sleeping girls and you could only save

yourself. You have seen your own funeral so many times. Your throat

has been clutched over and over by your own hands just to protect it

from the real thing. Sweetheart, the man at the front door

is just delivering a package, he is just conducting a survey.

You know so many good men.


Also by Sheleen McElhinney

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