Turnstile Jumping
By Janelle Tan
the card machine is broken again.
on the platform, a boy
jumps the turnstile behind me.
i notice him, walking toward the tracks
with no look back.
some days the turnstiles swing forward,
and i don’t look back.
some days by the emergency exit a hand on a holster.
those days i say a little prayer.
last winter i couldn’t afford the subway,
vaulted over the turning metal bars—another hurdle, to live
meaning being fed meaning no metaphysical questions
just getting somewhere.
last winter they could have made a detailed case
for my deportation.
let me be honest:
my vision has gone blurry from drinking, watching cars
cutting overhead and starting my own subaru
trying to find my way home.
for years, i closed my palms
over rings in shops. store lights searching,
my hands grasping empty,
my closed pockets.
a small step over the sensor.
every day, another jump over.
they hang men for marijuana back home.
for years, i ended my day
blowing smoke out the window.
the case against me so loud it straightens
into a hum. for this, for this.
always another hoop to jump through.
last night, the woman i love cried in the shower—
they could drive you out too.
i can’t lose you.
the hot water slipping
down her neck.
can i name my danger?
the top of her head
the buried smell of her sweat,
the corner of her jawline
the hanger of her voice
the water wrapping around our bodies.
i want to tell the lawyers,
i’ve jumped through every hoop.
i’ve made my longing a hoop.
don’t you see—i would jump through my own arms
if it meant i could stay?
can i let myself want?
more than tomorrow, more than someone
to push open the emergency exit—
don’t leave me, she cries.
i mean to say, i stopped jumping. i promise.
from the far end of the shower, i say,
can i stay here?
stay, she says as i pull the plastic curtain back—
her stomach warm against my back,
the water now cold around us.
stay a little longer.
Source: Poetry (September 2021)