if you had a girl like we
Elisa Luna Ady | Poetry
you would have nothing at all our fine porcelain & high foreheads misbehaving laughter that gives away the outlines of our mothers we, unable to iron them out our first & forever instrument the albums that had in childhood incited us to habitual greed when Ashanti runs back to him we are propelled further from our fates gluttony grown like no-good men & we are the worst of them all guest vocalists endowed godhood & thank God our husband is the waiter we will never see again Ivan making us play rock-paper-scissors for the last slices of bread left in the Puerto Rican restaurant as if jibaritos are hardship games we share & so we wife one another’s syntax til it sits between us like a shared idol stalk of incense speaking into the ceiling til we both inshallah over iced coffee two-toned jackets ringing thru the graceless dark we who crush on the nightsky as a matter of cliché analyzing her slant in low voices Shalamar we set beside Manu Chao inert cars we mock w/ our ankles skipping past scarred pavement overturned tarot cards questions of who we will wed if we will wed them well at all we w/out each other still a we & heat like the hinge of a door opening us into another dialect of light a different song about looking back so very long ago canned cocktails in our mouths when Meelah sings See, he’s my property no man will ever love us like the music the music loves us so & so we marry it once more sublime runs we take turns tossing up to the heavens.
Elisa Luna Ady is a writer from Southern California and a 2025 Anthony Veasna So Scholar in Fiction. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Adroit Journal, Passages North, trampset, Witness, and elsewhere. She lives in Chicago, where she recently completed her MFA+MA through Northwestern University’s Litowitz Program and where she was awarded the 2025 English Department Prize for best MFA thesis.