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poetry This Call Is From an Inmate at a Federal Prison

Minnesota poet Erik Tschekunow seeks to amplify the voices of the incarcerated and the previously incarcerated.

They say you eventually get desperate
enough to call a stranger, someone

who’s added her number to a database
for the incarcerated, someone who’s

even more alone than you. It’s amazing,
they say, once you’ve picked a name (other

stats sometimes provided), the numbers
you dial clink like bottles meeting

in a sea. Each distant ring is a pair of whirring
lips held millimeters from that ticklish

spot in the curve of your ear. Will she have the high,
lilting voice and self-possession of the weather

girl on the radio, or will her Hello
scrape and knock like a stone being winched

out of a well? And what do you say when she
actually accepts the call? Is it to her that you admit

you’re not even sure freedom is what
you want anymore? They say not to say

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anything, just listen to how sorry
she is about your situation. It’s important

to close your eyes. The breeze she says billows
her bedroom curtains won’t reach you, drunk

on the way by ghosts, but the shiver
you’ll get is, you know, more than you deserve.

Erik Tschekunow, released from prison and repentant, is still searching for the right way to say he’s sorry. His writing has appeared in Poetry, Rattle, and The Freshwater Review. He lives in Minnesota.