Chrysalis: Spring 2022

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Spring2022 Ferrum College C H R Y S A L I S

Chrysalis Literary and Arts Magazine Abigail McGovern, Editor-in-Chief Kristina Cossa C.J. KatherineJasmineMarinaWillShelaJacquesCarolineShayliseHughesJonesKingMoore-RobertsMurielPochPowellWhiteGrimes,Advisor Tom Nix, Art Mike Dunavant, Photography Cara Modisett, Poetry Joshua Bernard, Prose FerrumSpringCollege2022 Cover Image: Thrice Welcome by Marina Powell

Without You by Caroline King

Life’s Blessing by C.J Hughes

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Gordonia Iasianthus by Anna Tomlin by Marina Powell

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Sitting in the Sun by MacKenzie Ensley

Dear Mother, Dear Father by Abigail McGovern

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The Old Tractor by Marina Powell

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Cover

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Forever Ferrum by Nancy Brubaker

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D.C Days by Emma Brubaker 27

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Great Ball of Fire by Lana Whited

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Needle in the Way by Scout Lynch

Wondering by Chelsea Zizzi

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Ancestral by Jacques Moore-Roberts

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More Cheese, Please by Shela Muriel

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Palomino Sunset by Nancy Brubaker

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Define Love by Kristina Cossa

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84 Table of Contents Thrice Welcome

Pondering by Nancy Brubaker

Tree of Illumination by Anna Tomlin

He Will Know No Shame by Casey Craddock

Home by Laura Dymond

I Am by Jasmine White

Full Figure by Laura Dymond

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Love Yourself by Jacques Moore-Roberts

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Karma by Jacques Moore-Roberts Natural Gold by Anna Tomlin

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Evening Haze by Laura Dymond

We Just Dance Along by D. Bruckshaw Campbell Snow Camp by Lana Whited Ice Storm by John Kitterman

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Darling, If I could... by Abigail McGovern

It’s Captain (Lessons from Jack) by Marina Powell

Ellis Island by Madison Cline

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You Used to Be Seventeen by Casey Craddock Window Panes by Abigail McGovern

Inlet Sunset by Caroline King

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The Last Rose by Marina Powell Peace by Riley Church Tiger Lily by Alyssa Hogan

Brave New World by Ashley Minnick

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The Wasp by Madison Cline

New Life by Madison Cline

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Good Intentions by Jacques Moore-Roberts

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Blinded by the Light by MacKenzie Ensley

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Reaching for the Stars by Lana Whited

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When I’m Breathing Fire by Abigail McGovern

A Little Kiss by Caroline King

Turtle Tire by MacKenzie Ensley

Crane by Caroline King

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It Will Be Wonderful by Jasmine White

If You Have Not Loved by Casey Craddock

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Reincarnated by Jacques Moore-Roberts

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The Rookie Detective by Shela Muriel

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Soar by Caroline King

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Don’t Look Down by MacKenzie Ensley

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Movie Critic by Shaylise Jones

Urban Sunset by Madison Cline

The Sun Sign by Luis Felipe Marques

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Ole Ferrum Skies by William Poch

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Where I’m From by Caroline King Answer My Call by Kristina Cossa Mushie by Emma Brubaker

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A Big Slice of Heaven by Alyssa Hogan

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Koi Pond Garden by Anna Tomlin

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Sherbet Skies by Ebony Reeves Stars for You 1 by Makenna Lemon Stars for You 2 by Makenna Lemon Starbound by Madison Cline Life Cut Short by Shela Muriel

Feeling Nutty by Laura Dymond

Ice Drops by MacKenzie Ensley

Mr. Krabs by Caroline King

Alone by Jacques Moore-Roberts

View of the Olde Farm by Shawn Haven

We’re Not Bad, Just a Little Mad by Kiersten Jones Smile by William Poch United as One by MacKenzie Ensley

Gender Envy Casey Craddock by Alyssa Hogan

Choked by Caroline King

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Untitled by Alyssa Hogan

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A Lasting Nothingness by Braden Homsey

Blue 180 Degree by Shaylise Jones

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Time Travelling by Emma Brubaker

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Moonlight Meadows by Kristina Cossa

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Samantha, My Little Sister by Shela Muriel

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What is a novel anyway, if not a place to run?

First Place Prose

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by Abigail McGovern

I would bleed for you, darling, if I could. When we’re together, I hear the sadness whispered in your words, feel the weight of it when you touch me. I am no stranger to pain. To carrying lives, love, loss on my shoulders. For you, for sharing your secrets with me in the deepest shadows of night, naught but a flashlight beam between us….for you I would do the thing properly.Skin under my nails, blood on my face, bruises on my knuckles. I would ride in on the white horse, sword swinging. Stand between you and any enemy.

First place photography

Darling, I would swallow your sorrows, or take the fatal blow. But without hands, without a louder voice, all I can do is offer you another world to step into. A journey, an adventure. Or a moment of pause. My words are often written with woe, but just as often, they are filled with love and laughter too. Still, I have neither fists nor sword nor blood. Really, I am nothing but pages and ink and binding.

Reincarnated by Jacques Moore-Roberts

Sometimes, darling, the world is dark and frightening. Often, the world is dark and frightening. And if I cannot be your soldier, then at least I can be your light. Your outlet. Your doorway to something new. I cannot offer you force, so I will offer you hope.

Darling, if I could….

Movie Critic by Shaylise Jones First Place Art6 7

The Old Tractor by Marina Powell Second place photography Ellis Island by Madison Cline First Place Poetry The ceiling arched above their heads Echoing their grandest dreams. Urban Sunset by Madison Cline8 9

I have heard that people are window panes because they’re sometimes reflecting you right on back So if I am a mirror too, am I really me or am I just reflecting you?

by Abigail McGovern Second Place Poetry

I am sorry for these poor metaphors but I am trying to find a word for these shaking hands and this anxious heart

So if I am a mirror too, am I really me or am I just reflecting you?

I am sorry for these poor metaphors but I am trying to find a word for these shaking hands and this anxious heart

And if people are window panes then we are at least something that can be explained, and we can be at once holding back the wind and letting the light come streaming in

by Casey Craddock Second Place Prose

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I am sorry that I am sometimes angry and often splintering and don’t always know what to do with my hands

I am sorry that I like to keep my secrets close and my curtains closed and that sometimes I have sharp shards for a tongue

And if people are window panes then we are at least something that can be explained, and we can be at once holding back the wind and letting the light come streaming in I have heard that people are window panes because they’re sometimes reflecting you right on back

You Used to Be Seventeen

One day you’re 17, then you turn around and you’re 23 and your grandma is dead. You only talk to your brother every couple of months when you used to play games together every day. You haven’t talked to any of your high school friends since the day you graduated. You had big plans for when you finally got out of your hometown, but now that you’re out you see that nothing is different, yet everything has changed. The house your grandma grew up and lived in is for sale. The height markers you and your brother made are still carved in the door frame. Your beloved dog is old and grey now. No longer the pup she used to be. You look at a picture of yourself from when you were fifteen and wonder what did she have to be so sad about? You look in the mirror and see the grey hairs that she didn’t have, and you feel so much older, but still so inexperienced at the age of 23. You listen to the songs you used to love and find that you don’t remember the lyrics anymore. You only make two or three art pieces a year when you used to be so passionate about art. Your cousin that you ate lunch with everyday tried to end her life and you didn’t even know until your other cousin mentioned it in passing. You no longer look at your elderly family members in wonder. You look at them and wonder how long you have left with them. You used to laugh when they didn’t remember things. Now it sends ice through your veins. You used to be a hopeful little 17-year-old kid. You thought things would get better, because that’s what they told you, but they lied. You just get older, and everything changes.

I have heard that people are window panes, that there’s more to see inside than from standing on the street But maybe that’s more of a metaphor about glass?

“Are you okay? I’m so sorry. I saw the EMTs wheeling your husband out of your building this morning. Jesus, there was so much blood. Is he going to press charges against you?” I turned around and leaned back, reflecting on the day I had. I don’t think I’ve had such a terrifying experience ever since. That morning, I was awoken at 5 AM to my cell phone ringing, only to pick it up and see my soon-to-be-ex-husband Martin’s name illuminated on the screen. I hit the “reject call” button and went back to sleep. I was staying at a friend’s house, since Martin and I were going through a separation. When I woke up 3 hours later, I checked my phone and knew something was wrong: 18 unopened text messages, 11 missed phone calls, and one unheard voicemail. All from Martin. I rolled off of my friend’s bed and threw all my clothes on as quickly as I could.

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“Hey,“Scout?”I’m so sorry. I really have to go. Martin blew my phone up, and I think something’s wrong.” “Do you need a ride or anything? I can get dressed and drive you home.”“It’s ok, it’s only a few blocks away. I really appreciate it though. I’ll text you.”

I didn’t mean to be curt, but I had to run. I had a feeling that something bad was waiting for me at home. I ran out the front door of my friend’s building. I was trying to look at my phone while I speedwalked down the street. The texts Martin had sent me were all misspelled

and confusing.“Wereare yuo?” “i gues you rlly don’t love me.” “please” “see what happens” “my sister hats you.” “i love you” “bitchh” “i;ll take you”.

I was a block away and decided to listen to the voicemail he left me at 5:40 in the morning. My stomach dropped when I heard it. “Scout… I love you. It’s your fault. Goodbye.” I don’t even remember running at that point; I could have sworn I was flying. I flung the building’s front door open and bolted down the hallway to the door leading into our apartment. The door wasn’t even locked. Our one-bedroom apartment, rented to us by a man who everyone in town knew to be a slumlord. Upon walking in through the front door of it, one could immediately feel the draft coming in through the cheap, thin windows. There were cracks in the ceiling and roach traps everywhere. The walls had been painted with multiple coats of cheap white paint, in an attempt to cover the yellow walls, stained by years of smoking.indoorThe first room was the living room. Empty. I held my breath as I walked towards our bedroom. I peeked my head into the door to see my dog on the floor, anxiously chewing on the case of a CD that a friend had lent me. My dog was still wearing her leash, and my Alone by Jacques Moore-Roberts

Needle In The Way by Scout Lynch I was sitting in my local dive bar. It was later on in the evening, in the middle of December. I was on a barstool with my back to the door, and each time it opened, it let in a gust of frigid winter air. If I wanted to be exposed to the cold, I would be sitting outside. The front door swung open for what felt like the hundredth time, and I turned around to glare down whoever walked in, as if they had purposefully opened it just to annoy me. I looked over my shoulder to see my friend Micah, who beelined for me as soon as he saw me.

“How about I call 911? Do you really want the cops in here? I’ll call 911! I mean it.”

My body temperature went up. I had a hot flash. My sense of balance disappeared and I fell forward, catching myself on Martin’s chest. Tears were welling up in my eyes, uncontrollable tears over this person I hated so much. I felt so weak. I pulled my phone out of my back pocket to call 911. My vision was blurred trying to see through my tears, as I frantically explained to the operator that I needed an ambulance. Her words seemed so drowned out in my ears, her voice competing to be heard against the pounding of my heart. It was beating so loudly I could have sworn it was in my head. The lights in my bedroom were so bright, and my head hurt from trying to comprehend what was happening. The room was spinning and getting smaller, and I thought my chest was going to explode–and then everything stopped.

across the face, hard. He still wasn’t getting up.

“This isn’t funny. Come on. Stop messing with me. You need to get up and leave.” I grabbed Martin by the collar to shake him awake, and that’s when I noticed the needle sitting on the nightstand. His head rolled back and stayed there when I lifted him up by his shirt. In a panic, I slapped him Home by Laura Dymond

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I couldn’t hear anything any more; it was like someone pressed mute on a remote. I looked down at Martin. Why did I care what happened to him? I stared at him, this man who had tormented me for the past 8 months. This man who isolated me from my friends, gaslit me, convinced me nobody else would ever love me, told me I was nothing without him. What if I did just that? Nothing? What if I was all he ever believed me to be: nothing. For once, he would be nothing without me. The calm I had from my sudden numbness was quickly interrupted, as a geyser of blood-red vomit started spewing from Martin’s mouth. I screamed, and my soul connected back to my body. The first thought that hit me was, “Oh god, the smell.” The first thought that hit my dog was apparently, “SNACK TIME” because she ran up and started trying to eat it. With my right hand, I grabbed a handful of Martin’s hair to pull him upright so I could keep him from choking. With my left foot, I tried blocking my little 20-pound Boston Terrier from diving straight into it. My left hand was still holding onto the phone, and I finally registered that the operator was telling me to crate my dog. I stuck Flapjack into her crate as cops burst through my front door.She was barking, but the cop nearest to me was barking questions at me even louder. He was screaming at me for crying, telling me I needed to calm down, that I wasn’t helping. The EMTs rushed into the bedroom. eyes followed from where it was attached onto her harness. The leash led up to the bed, into Martin’s hand. He was lying on his back, with his mouth wide open. He looked like he passed out drunk.

“Flapjack still has her leash on. Were you so drunk that you couldn’t even stay awake long enough to take her on the walk she was expecting?”AsIwalked closer, I got more aggravated. I stood over Martin. I looked at his face, hating every inch of it. He had curly brown hair and a scraggly beard. He was 26 but looked like he was in his mid-30s. His skin was weathered from years of alcoholism and heroin use. I stared at wonderinghim,how I could ever have loved him enough to marry“Gethim.up. I want you out of here. Now.”

“You asshole!” I yelled, “I thought you hurt yourself or something!” He didn’t respond.

I was met with silence, no movement.

“It’s fine,” the loud cop said, almost laughing. “Junkies always wake up mad if you take their high away.” I despised Martin more than anyone, but had to resist the urge to slap the officer for referring to him as a junkie. Martin was moving, though. He wasn’t dead. Was I relieved, or just a bit disappointed? I sat in the living room, trying to stay out of the way. I watched the EMTs emerge from my bedroom, wheeling out a sit-up stretcher. Martin was strapped into it, with blood red vomit splattered all over his chin and neck, as well as the front of his shirt. The EMTs told me which hospital they were taking him to, but I didn’t care. I had been through enough. I spent the rest of the day cleaning, stripping the sheets off of my bed, and tossing them into the garbage. I took Flapjack on a long walk. She really deserved it. I ended my day going to Brendees, the dive bar where I knew I would always see at least one familiar face. This is what made Brendees such a safe haven for me: I could never truly be alone there. I sat and drank my rum and coke, which was way too generously poured by the bartender, who knew I had had a rough day. That’s when I saw my friend Micah walk through the front door. He told me he saw Martin, covered in what appeared to be blood, getting wheeled out of my apartment, which was surrounded by cop cars. When he asked me if Martin was going to press charges against me, I realized he thought I had hit my breaking point and beat the living snot out of him. I smiled at Micah.

“I sure hope not! Do you know how expensive lawyers are?” Micah laughed. I’m not sure if he realized what had really happened, but he didn’t say anything else about it, and I didn’t dispute the idea of it either. He and I both knew I was tired of being terrified. Maybe I was more terrified of what I could have become.

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The Sun Sign by Luis Felipe Marques

“SIR, SIR, PLEASE STAY SEATED!” one of the EMTs yelled. Martin had immediately started swinging on them when they hit him with a shot of narcan.

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16 View of the Olde

Wondering by Chelsea Zizzi I walk around not knowing where to go; asking constantly for guidance and receiving none. My only friend is the darkness at home where the abyss swallows me whole. Mindless platitudes of those reaching out: “I am here, You are never alone.” Yet haunting thoughts still consume— until there is nothing but a being unable to hold on. Gasping for air although there is no water around. We learn to sink, and sit at the sandy bottom where we were made to decay. Farm by Shawn Havens Ole Ferrum Skies by William Poch

“Selene!” her half-brother Alex called out. “Mom and Dad said that they want to see you,” he continued and she gulped in fear. What did they want “Okay,now?I’m coming,” she responded, getting off her bed and walking out the door. As she headed down the stairs she could smell whatever her stepmother had brought home. It smelled awful, but that outweighed her fear of going to face her guardians.

Crane by Caroline King Frantically snapping, Creek banks and murky waters, Cranes snatch their next meal. Caroline King

by Kristina Cossa

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“Oh, hello, darling,” her stepmother said once she took notice of Selene.“Hello, Stepmother,” Selene responded, a bit afraid to say anything else. Her stepmother told her to come over, and the girl obeyed without question. Kara was her name, and in Selene’s mind, she looked like a witch. Her long curly hair was like waves of auburn; her make-up looked like blood on her almost pale skin, and her eyes were like burning embers. Even the way she dressed made Selene think of the evil queen

Moonlight Meadows

Most kids who were Selene’s age took their home and possessions for granted. They complained about what their parents had them eat, where they lived, or what their parents didn’t let them do. Selene wished she could at least experience just a taste of that normality because she was never allowed to complain about anything. Not the state of her house, the food placed on the table, and especially not how her family treated her. She let out a heavy sigh and blew her dark hair out of her face. The poor girl had run up to her room for an escape. School was once again a nightmare like always. But she never brought it up at home, because her life here was no better.

“I really hope that Dad does not make me cut my hair again,” she said to herself, not wanting to think about that. Her father had wanted a boy and was disappointed when she turned out to be a girl, so her father tried to always make Selene look like a boy. Someone knocked on her door, and the eleven-year-old jumped.

Inlet Sunset by

“Your hair is too long. After dinner, I am going to cut it,” he said without a second thought.

Selene remained silent after that, and about an hour later dinner was finally done. Alex came running down immediately when his mother called for him, and Selene scoffed when the woman happily picked him up.

“Mommy, I love you,” he said with a smile, and Kara kissed him on the head.“Aww, baby, I love you as well,” she responded, and Selene hid her face. If that vile woman is capable of loving her son, why doesn’t she love me? the girl thought to herself. “Jack, is it okay if he sits with you?” Kara asked.“Of course,” her husband responded, and Alex ran to his father. “Hey, buddy, how are you?” Selene tuned everyone out as her halfbrother talked about his day. She was only interested in eating and getting back upstairs, not the words of a six-year-old. The milk was sour, and the meat wasn’t perfect, but at least it wasn’t undercooked. Selene remained mostly silent while everyone else spoke, that is until her father spoke directly to her. “So how are your grades, Selene?” he asked, and she paled a bit. If her grades were not good, then her father would lock her inside her room.

“Now get started on dinner and try not to burn anything,” Kara ordered. Selene only nodded when her stepmother handed her a grocery bag. Inside there were some potatoes, along with meat and sour milk. No doubt it was what Selene had smelled earlier, but she said nothing as she got to work. As she was peeling the potatoes so she could mash them up, her father commented about her appearance.

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“I only go there to reflect on my day, ma’am,” Selene answered. The pre-teen didn’t feel like mentioning that’s where she cursed both of her guardians and thought about running away.

“Selene, we have talked about this a hundred times. I can’t let anyone know you’re a girl,” he told her. “As the oldest, it is your responsibility to continue the family business,” he continued. Selene sighed as she knew what was coming. Her father was referring to the from Snow “Selene,White.youknow the rules; you will address her as ma’am,” her father scolded from his spot at the kitchen table.

“Why not just tell us?” Jake asked, but Selene didn’t answer him. She pushed her empty plate away and lied about being tired. “Fine; do the dishes and wait for me in your room; then you go to bed,” her father responded. Selene did what she was told, and before she knew it, her father was standing in her bedroom with a pair of scissors.

“Why can’t you just let me grow it out a bit?” Selene asked, despite knowing that her father would berate her for questioning him.

“Impressive,” Kara commented, “considering you hide in your room all the time.”

“Don’t talk back to your father now. Keep quiet!” Kara yelled.

“But Father, it’s not even past my shoulders,” she protested, but that only made her stepmother angry.

Full Figure by Laura Dymond

“I have nothing below an A, Dad,” she responded, being honest. Despite everything she went through, Selene was incredibly bright and able to maintain straight A’s throughout her first year of middle school.

“Yes sir,” Selena answered, sighing under her breath.

“Exactly; now hold still and don’t forget to finish your project tomorrow,” he responded as he began cutting her brown hair. It took only a few minutes before she looked like a boy with slightly long hair.

“I know, and people won’t approve of it being run by a woman,” she answered before he could finish.

tech company he owned. Since she was the firstborn, it was her job to run it after he retired or died.

D.C Days by Emma Brubaker

“Excellent don’t you think, my boy?” he asked and she just nodded, because she hated that he did this to her, and how he tried to make her conceal who she was. “Now get some sleep. You have to wake up early too.”“To make you and Kara breakfast, I know,” she responded and didn’t relax until he had left the room. It was then that she allowed herself to let tears fall, after these years of mistreatment. Her hope that one day things would improve had almost completely vanished. Her parents didn’t love her. So what was the point of waiting for someone else if she couldn’t be herself? Miles away another girl was having similar feelings, though unlike Selene she lived with a very loving family. Diana was a shifter, meaning that she could transform from her animal form to a human form. Right now she was in her silvery wolf pup form, and she wasn’t allowed to change into human form. No one in her pack was since it was against the rules and would expose the secret of their kind and home. The Moonlight Meadows was home to all shifters ranging from small animals like a mouse to mythical creatures like a phoenix. Centuries ago they were at war with the humans. Now there were hardly any left, which is why Diane found herself guarding the hidden gate to it in the middle of the night.“Why can’t I just be myself?” she asked.

Sherbet Skies by Ebony Reeves

Your kiss on my brow

For no one can perch on the moon without falling! No destiny is stamped into the stars! But I know better. Let it end in tragedy

In the coldest rain

Tonight we are one

By hellfire and storm

Let the tears bleed from my eyes! Let my heart be ripped in two! But I will never regret it Not for a moment Because I love you. Makenna Lemon

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In the darkest night

Let them say it is doomed from the beginning Doubt any of it is real

Your sweet voice carries my sorrows away

We’ll cackle and shriek as the ground falls away As the wind whips our hair and leaves tears in our eyes Until nothing is left but the silence of stars And the light of the crescent moon. We can dangle our feet from its sliver of silver Skipping rocks across the cosmos

Stars for You 2 by Makenna Lemon Stars for You 1 by

By a fall from the heavens

You tilt my chin up and show me the sun.

by Madison Cline

A caress of your cheek

Star-bound

The wise old oak will hold us tight Anchoring us with crooked fingers. Let them call it reckless!

We are star-bound.

Drive me to the stars in your old pickup truck Speed like no one’s watching Bend the highway to the moon!

We Just Dance Along by D. Bruckshaw Campbell Written for a friend who was soon to pass… C F At 50 treks around the sun, I turned to see what has become Am G And looked behind at the risk of tasting salt C F The wonder that I see behind unfolds as visions in my mind Dm G When I open up the door of my own vault F G And now there’s glass before my eyes, and constant hope that mirrors lie Am F G But still I wouldn’t trade the trails we blazed F G And somehow now we built all this, hand in hand, to follow bliss F G And traded hearts in ways that still amaze FChorus: G C And the song plays on F G C We just dance along F G C Am We just dance along Dm Em C As the song plays on C F We hopped on a note and rode beyond a place that we all know Am G And found a land where we could harmonizeLife Cut Short by Shela Muriel 32 33

Of this I’m sure so please do not confuse F G I don’t know what is meant by truth except what’s here ‘fore me and you Am F G And winter’s on the heels of autumn’s life F G And when it’s time to end the toil, we’ll shuffle from this mortal coil F G There may be less in front than there is behind 34 35

F G C

Dm

Am F G And dance before the flame like there’s no end F G And when it’s time to close our eyes, even then there’s no good-byes G

Am

Am

And the song plays on F G C We just dance along F G C Am We just dance along Dm Em C As the song plays on C F Every song just passes through, ready to be heard anew G With different ears and eyes most every time C F We’ll muster up just one more chance, strike up the band, make the dance G

F

F

Suspended in the love of every friend F G C And the song plays on F G C We just dance along F G C Am We just dance along Dm Em C As the song plays on C F

Dm G

In a ferocious frenzy of delight G And when our feet and legs say “no,” in our minds we’ll find the glow

In that place of no compare we cultivated family there Dm G And grew in ways I still can’t crystalize F G And there were times we stumbled round, lost the course and ran aground F G And shadows draped our eyes to what we knew F G But in that darker place we found a love that’s yet to come unwound F G And discovered light that still keeps shining through F G C And the song plays on F G C We just dance along F G C Am We just dance along Dm Em C As the song plays on C F The world has turned so many times, and we have sung so many rhymes Am G and spun the groove that kept dust from our shoes C F When you share the dance with me, our souls entwine eternally

In the morning everything becomes a sign. The gabled house is grim, a bearded ghost. At 8 am, the pines in sequined dresses tocurtseyneedles and the forsythia sweep the ground before you. The poor willow has lost her head, and there is a newlywed under the bridge muttering, “Touch it, and it will crack like a Christmashunchback.”tree farms are rows of gnarled burieddwarvesupright under invisible weight. One reckless cardinal bloodies the whole.

Snow Camp by Lana Whited

Ice Storm by John Kitterman

Fear rolls freely through the poised spectacle youtemptingwith its “everything is different.” You are different. It‘s not even spring yet all the seeds are crying, crying to be let out. To break something. In the house the wife is still abed. She has no idea. Soon she will get up to look for you, but you will not be there.

“I hope you’re right,” came the dull tone, like the wind picking up before the thunder, “I hope you’re right.”

“Maybe you’re right,” he muttered. “Maybe you’re right.”

A dark crevasse appeared in the man’s face, spreading into millions.

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“May I suggest you go again? Take in the view and feel the wind? Sometimes you come back and you’re not who you’ve been,” said the rose, gazing out the window.

The man was old, older than old, and you could almost hear him creaking. He gripped a smudged red can and a faded lighter as he slammed the door behind him. The rosebushes crackled when he poured the liquid over them and went up in a whoosh of smoke, petals quickly fading grey. The man pulled his tattered hat over his ears, hunching his shoulders, and not just because of the autumn wind.

The Last Rose by Marina Powell

One swipe and the flowerpot was gone, and dirt poured out on the boards like blood. He stood still for a moment, like an oak tree against a summer storm.

Then he put on his shoes and tied the laces. Dust flew into the air as he tied the final knot. The door banged like a cannon. When he came back, dishes shattered on the floor. The rose fell to the floor in a shower of clear glass and water; then the storm went silent. The sky had already gotten dark, and the bedroom door creaked shut.

“Fool of a thing,” he murmured. “What could you know?”

The rose lay there, breathing in the night. His footsteps sounded again in the moonlight, and bedroom slippers patted their way forward. The chair sighed as the man sat down, his figure stooped and curled.

“I thought I got them all,” he said, and his branchy fingers curled tightly, “I don’t want you here.”

“May I suggest,” the rose said, “you put on your shoes, go up to the mountain, take in the view? Sometimes these things they change us, and when you return you find you’re more than you.”

The rose’s petals began to curl at the edges, and the single leaf laid its head on the floor. Then the bedroom slippers didn’t come out anymore, only darned socks that had seen too many work days. The muttering got worse, and the socks moved to the windowsill often, standing in place for hours. The rose understood as the night fell and the moon came out one last time.“May

I suggest,” the rose whispered, “you put on your shoes, go up to the mountain and look at the moon? Sometimes it takes one last try to find you.” The man stared at the shoes in the corner. The socks disappeared behind a door, and the rose sighed. Another petal fell off, and the colors had gone grey. The rose took one last breath and accepted, giving in at

“It’s not right,” he muttered to himself, spitting the words, “It’s not right.”So the days passed, and the rose did not move. The rose watched the bedroom slippers making lines of agony on the old boards day after day.

The door slammed, and a gust of cool air ruffled the rose’s petals. The man came back with a bang. Two shoes hit the floor like gunshots, and his face was wound tight.

“What?” the old man demanded. His voice sounded like wind in the pines, like needles crunching underfoot.“Good evening,” the rose returned in its musical tone. “She left me. She left me for you, you see.”

The man wiped his nose, he put the can down. He stared at the floor, then put on his shoes.

His steps sounded like hammer blows on the porch, and he slammed the door again. His worn jacket flapped once. The house was dark, but he knew every creaky board and rapid turn. Something was out of place. Something was not right. On the windowsill, behind the curtains…there it was.He pulled the white fabric back, squinting in the harsh light. A rose. It sat in a jar, light shining through the water. Beside it sat a flowerpot, old and painted with quivery lines, filled with dry dirt.

[Untitled] by Alyssa Hogan last. So the rose did not see the socks inch their way to the corner, scared, but hopeful. The rose did not see the broken, cracked hands pull on the shoes and shuffle timidly out of the room. The door did not slam this time, no, it whispered shut with a faint click. The man went up to the mountain. He craned his neck upward and looked at the moon. His withered lungs took in air, and the man, he looked at the view. Then he bowed his shoulders, curled inward again, and headed home. The door did not slam as the shoes came back off, and crooked fingers with split nails picked up a dead rose. The socks shuffled to the windowsill, watching over the night, but there was no storm. The man stroked the petals and laid the rose to rest, whispering, “You were right.”

Peace by Riley Church

The Wasp

by Madison Cline love is a wasp with butterfly wings it flutters and buzzes caresses but stings be careful with whom you decide to trade rings for love is a wasp with butterfly wings

Tiger Lily by Alyssa Hogan

And Alice follows him for tea

A Big Slice of Heaven

42 43

Being on time, he was not skilled

Green teacups waiting to be filled

Rings of thick grey smoke would make Alice choke

We’re Not Bad, just a Little Mad

And said “Dear Alice? Is it true?”

The White Rabbit has quite a bad habit

The Cheshire Cat who steals Hatter’s hat

Is smiling down from a tall tree

As she’s asked once more “Who are YOU?”

He says “We’re not bad, just a little mad”

Once Alice is found, she must stand her ground

More Cheese, Please by Shela Muriel

by Alyssa Hogan

The Blue Caterpillar looked down with a slight frown

Or it’ll be “Off with her head!”

by Kiersten Jones

The evil Red Queen who has yet to be seen Her white roses are painted red

The Mad Hatter has never been madder

If love is not easily angered, why are some relationships violent or toxic?

Love by definition is something that can’t be seen or touched, it can only be felt. In most media, it’s described as the most powerful thing in the world. And in a way it is, but if that’s the case why is it so painful?

If marriage vows are meant to be sacred, why do some spouses end up cheating?

Why are hundreds of people’s relationships ending every day?

Love isn’t something that can be avoided or forgotten, it’s a part of being human. As painful as it can be, pain lets us know that we are alive.

If love is meant to be acceptable, why are some couples not accepted for being different? If you never forget your first love, then why does heartbreak exist?

The thing about love is that it’s not a clear path. Sometimes it’s rough.

Smile by Will Poch Smile, all you make me do is smile You never make me feel hostile I haven’t felt this way in awhile I even dig your style You make my heart go wild All you’re gonna see when you look

Define Love by Kristina Cossa

Love is patient, love is kind and not easily angered. One day it’s simply there alive inside your heart. at me is

smiles United as One by MacKenzie Ensley 44 45

Karma by Jacques Moore-Roberts

Your love is abnormal but beautiful, Your flaws are invisible, Your strengths make me stronger, I love your morals and principles. I’ve never loved anyone before, so to me this is new. If you’re grass on a cold morning, I’ll be your daily dew. Loving you is what I’ll do daily, When one sense leaves the others get amazing, Treat your lover right or be with them no longer, There’s no better comeback for unfair love, Than the judgment from a woman named Karma.

Natural Gold by Anna Tomlin46 47

I want powerful femininity. I want gentle masculinity. I want a buzz cut the way women have them. I want long hair the way men have it. I desire to be shockingly femme. I yearn to be undoubtedly masc, I admit. Should I be both, neither, or either-or?

How dare you? How dare you sit high on your throne and pretend like you don’t know? You think that you are so sweet and kind. If only the rest of the world could see your true colors, then they would change their minds too. They wouldn’t stand around and talk about how creative your mind is or how happy you make other people. They would grind their teeth at the thought of what your true capabilities are. They wouldn’t joke around about that one time in front of everyone where you were rude and completely out of line. Instead, they would have grabbed you up by the neck as you did to me when I asked you if our friends could come over last Friday. They would tell you to shut your mouth before they shut it for you. Much like the words you told me yesterday when I tried to suggest a cheaper shopping option. I have thought long and hard about how it was possible for one to be so cruel, heartless, and distant. But then I remember that tonight I put my fist through the drywall. I told you that if you didn’t leave me alone at that moment, you would never make it out of our house alive. I told you that I have never sat on a throne and I completely know my worth. I know what I deserve and I know how you treat me. When I realized that I had become your punching bag, I knew that you needed to step down off that throne and speak with the common people. I do not know exactly what tomorrow looks like, but it sure doesn’t look like me waking up next to you and holding my breath so that I don’t make you angry. I am tired of walking on your scattered eggshells. Tomorrow isn’t going to be an outing with our friends in which you talk down to me the whole time. Tomorrow looks bright for me. I will laugh and embellish in all the things that make the world such a beautiful place. I will be able to do this because tomorrow, I will be on my own for the first time in 11 years. Without you, I will be able to stand tall and be subtle with all my wisdom. Without you, I will be free to make my own choices. Without you, I will be able to live the life that I deserve.

Choked by Caroline King

He Will Know No Shame by Casey Craddock

48 49

Should I just continue being what I’ve been before?

Gender envy by Casey Craddock

45 A Little Kiss by Caroline King SuntheinSitting EnsleyMacKenzieby DownLookDon’t EnsleyMacKenzieby Turtle Tire by MacKenzie Ensley50 Lounge by Alyssa Hogan Feeling Nutty by Laura Dymond Pondering by Nancy Brubaker 51

My heart is only a frozen piece of time with your absence, I’m stuck inside a sunken place feeling abandoned, Yelling for help but I feel silenced by the world, Can I not be loved because of the design by my Lord? I see love but does love see me? Do we interact or does it watch me like TV? Who’s to say what? When nothing is said, Missed calls and text messages left unread, Miscommunication caused dysfunction again, Arguments over basic things because our relationship is not advanced, Clean my heart and make it pure, Come back to me and unfreeze time, If you say you love me please be sure, Because good intentions are hard to find. Koi Pond Garden by Anna Tomlin

52

by Jacques Moore-Roberts

Good Intentions

Oh, you loved us, I know that. But only in the way you love things the Light by MacKenzie Ensley

Dear Mother, dear Father, I thought the world was ending the first time I saw the sky. There was just so much. So much light, so much space. A color I don’t even have a name for. There is nothing like this where I grew up. It looked like the edge of collapse, like a hole in the world, and it opened something inside me too. At home, I had thought that sky meant shadow, meant ending, meant the boundaries of our world.

I know that you think children should stay where they are put. And that you put us in the dark for a reason. But I cannot bring myself to say that I am sorry for leaving. For so long, we saw the world in two dimensions—flickering shadows and unsteady light. I thought that’s all there was. I thought that’s all I was. Out here, I could see nothing at first. Because of everything I had missed, everything I had never known existed. I still don’t have names for all the things that exist out here—that live and grow and move—all the colors.Rain.Ididn’t know that water could come from anything other than a cup or a bowl. The feeling of it against my skin…One day I will learn all of the words and I will find one big enough for that feeling. And I saw a cat today. I have seen cats before, rippling across the cave walls, and I knew it when I saw its shape. But it….it leaps and bounds and plays. It is patterned with so many colors. And I am told they are all different from one another? Each its own thing. Every one of them will be….more…than all of the ones I ever thought I saw in the cave.

Why would you ever keep this from us?

In the cave there is no such thing as space or movement. So I am glad to know the world is big enough to make me feel small. I want things I didn’t know were possible to want—to breathe, to grow.

*Inspired by Plato’s Allegory of the Cave*

Blinded by

by Abigail McGovern

54 55

Dear Mother, Dear Father

Tree of Illumination by Anna Tomlin that you fear will break if too roughly handled—held close to your chest, locked away. Mother, Father, you kept us from ourselves.

56

And I know this because while I knew we all sounded different, and thought different, I never thought of myself as something separate. We all looked the same, cut from the same cloth, shadows on the wall. We knew the same things and wanted the same things only because there was nothing to want. But now I have seen myself. And there was a self to see. I want to know what the others look like, what colors they like, what creatures.Iwant to know who they are, but more than that, I want to give them the chance to know themselves. You will say that you were protecting us. Because even in my short time up here, I have seen that the outside world can be brutal. There is blood and betrayal, corruption. War. Brother against brother, bodies in fields. But you were wrong. That does not outweigh the sight of the setting sun or the feel of wind in hair or what it is like to laugh with other people, to move freely, to choose who you want to be. To know that there is more than one thing to be.

I will always have scars from the chains, from your efforts to keep us in one place. In attempting to shield us from the darkness of this world, you have plunged us into the shadows of another. Like scars are the memories of pain, it seems to me that shadows are the memories of life. I am sick to death of memories. I am ready for the moment. I am afraid, yes. Of all that is new and all that is uncertain and how big the world really is. But, Mother and Father, unlike you I will not be bound by my fear. I am imagining you making excuses. Begging me to come back, pleading with me to forget all that I have seen and all that I now know. I will be back, you don’t have to worry about that. But I will never again be Neverchained.again step into the darkness, never again mistake a shadow on the wall for any real representation of life. That is not a life worth having. When I come back, I am setting them free. I am pulling the others into the light with me. One by one if I must. Whatever it takes. I can finally see.

So Mother, Father, brace yourselves for me.

Without by Caroline King I am sorry. I am so sorry that I could not meet your expectations. I am sorry that I was not what you expected me to be. We will never make it to the end; however, we have gone too far forward to return to the beginning. When we agreed that it just wasn’t working, I thought that it was going to be okay. That this separation would help me feel better. It did not and I was sad for a while. I am sorry that you saw, in me, what I could never be. You say you are too clingy, but maybe I am too distant. You say that I am too busy to have you, but maybe you are too pessimistic, unwilling to find time to spend with me. I am sorry that my words might hurt you. And I am sorry that you seem to be fine, while I am completely shattered. Telling you this now is funny to me because you were the one that would always apologize for everything. I hated it. I am sorry that I hated it so much. I am sorry that when you expressed your feelings I backed down. A fight is what you needed and when you said “this is it, we aren’t working,” I should have said “hell no!” instead of “okay I understand.” But now I am done apologizing because you did wrong too. Right now, you may be too arrogant to see your wrongs, but I see them clearly. I no longer want to talk to you because you hurt me and, while I understand what you did, I need time to lick my wounds. So please, be angry with me if it makes you feel better. Post pictures with your so-called friends that I have never seen before. Talk bad about the way I ceased communication with you. Do whatever it takes to make yourself feel whole again. Because, for me, all I needed to do was get rid of you to make myself whole.

Brave New World by Ashley Minnick

58

I am from where my skin color wasn’t accepted always trying to be enough I am from shattered glass and broken people who only know tragedy and pain I am from siblings taken too soon babies who now call heaven home

I Am by Jasmine White

I am from a womb that was made for two

I am from a place where kindness is rare a place where love is rare

Inspired by George Ella Lyon

I am from a small town that many people in a big city never heard about I am from my sister doing all the talking but I’m always silent

Life’s Blessing

I am from a loving creator that made me in his image but I am not made to be perfect

I am from never knowing enough but sometimes knowing too much I am from being different but wanting to be the same

New Life by Madison Cline by C J Hughes

60 61

A wedding? I love those, especially when Drinks are served all around. And silver and gold are not always, mate, the treasure that needs to be found. I could leave it all and never return, Sail away on my one love, the sea. Belay that belay that, me hearties, yo ho, And bring that horizon to me. Don’t have regrets. I never do, Or else they’ll eat you away, And always remember, when or wherever, That it’s Captain Jack Sparrow, mate. by Caroline King

It’s Captain (Lessons from Jack) by Marina Powell

I love those good moments, the best parts of me, And I wave as they pass me by.

What a man can do and what a man can’t Are the only two rules of this life.

I’m not crazy ‘cause I know I am, But why is the rum gone again?

You will always remember today as the day— Wait! Stop! I’ve dropped me brain! Ah, the pirate’s life is the best there is, With rum and jars of dirt.

Thank goodness I’m mad, because if I wasn’t, This would probably never work.

I’m the worst? So you say, but you have heard of me, And it’s Captain, Captain Jack.

Soar

Rudder, mast, sails are what a ship needs, But not what a ship needs to be. Freedom, mate, is that nature of it, And that’s what the Pearl is to me.

Take what you can, steal what you can’t, Never give anything back.

I wash my hands of this weirdness, close your eyes and pretend That it’s all just a very bad dream. And there should be a ‘captain’ in there, somewhere, If ever you’re speaking to me. That’s unhelpful, it seems that I have Again misplaced the rum. Not everything is what it seems, Else where would the stories come from?

So great my mind can’t quite comprehend it

Because God said “No weapon formed against me will prosper”

Who’s finally found the end of the tunnel

64 65

I am worthy of love, unconditional and beautiful

I am an overcomer of what the world meant to destroy me

Abandonment, adversity, and affliction has nothing on my God

Not perfect but chosen

I am Morevaluableprecious and beautiful than a ruby

I am worthy of love as deep and vast as the ocean, A love I can only see in my faraway dreams

I am broken but not destroyed

Someday I will receive this love and it will be wonderful

It Will Be Wonderful

I am strong and courageous in a world full of suffering

I am light in the midst of darkness

Mr. Krabs by Caroline King

by Jasmine White

I am beautifully and wonderfully made in God’s image

Healing from pain one should never know

I am created for a purpose

Ancestral by Jacques Moore-Roberts

“Ivy?” she called out as she knocked on the door. When no one answered she knocked once again. “Ivy?”

In 1912 in Greenwich Village a young brown-haired blue-eyed twenty-year-old woman was walking through the streets late at night when she started to hear something hitting the wall in the dark alleyway of New York. She stopped in her tracks wondering what was there and investigated the dark alley hoping that she could see something move within the “Hello?”darkness.saidthe girl as her voice shook with fear. “Is someone there?” Thinking that it was her imagination, she stepped away from the alley and continued to walk back to her house. Her feet were hitting the concrete at an increased speed; she was determined to get back to her house before anything bad would happen. She shouldn’t have been scared about what was going on around her. It could have been a rat or an alley cat; however as she turned the corner, she heard footsteps following her. Now terrified, the girl began to walk faster, her skirt blowing behind her as she was moving at a pace that would most surely make the skirt flow around her legs. As the girl picked up her pace, she heard the footsteps that were following her. This time she had to get away from it as the footsteps seemed like it kept increasing every time she sped up. Eventually making it to her small apartment, she raced inside and slammed the door shut. Locking it behind her, thinking that she was now safe, the girl sighed with relief and took off her wool sweater. Laying it on the nearest couch, she went to check on her cousin, Julian, to see if she had gone to sleep.

The stranger approached her with his knife in his hand. The girl tried to walk around him but he blocked her path. The man had a weapon in his hand that he could use to harm her; he could also harm her cousin, and she wasn’t about to let that happen. As she was about to run around him, he backed her against the wall and thrust the blade into her stomach. The girl gasped as the color drained from her face and life left her eyes. The man pulled the dagger out from the girl’s stomach, causing her to collapse on the floor, blood pooling out from the wound.

When she entered Julian’s room, she saw that Julian was curled in bed with the blanket covering her body. Smiling softly, the girl made her way to her room where she was going to get ready for the night and hoped that what she heard in the alleyway was all in her imagination. As she was starting to undo her hair, she suddenly saw someone in her mirror. The girl cried out as she turned to see who it was.

“Hello,” said the operator from the other side of the phone. “What’s the emergency?”“Please!Send the police! Someone murdered my cousin!” screamed Julian, and she hung up the phone and she waited for a good ten minutes when the police arrived. Julian opened the door for them as they raced inside and entered the room in which Ivy had been murdered. The police made sure to bring out the dead body and make the room a crime scene. Julian sat outside on the curb as she was thinking back to what she had seen. Her cousin was killed, and it didn’t look like there was any evidence except for the fact that her cousin was holding the dagger

When her cousin didn’t answer, she pushed open the door and saw, to her horror, her cousin lying on the floor. Panic swelled throughout her body as she made her way over to Ivy. The minute she got to Ivy she saw that her dear cousin had been stabbed in the stomach. It did not look like the killer hesitated. Racing into the living room, Julian grabbed the phone and dialed the police thinking that they would help her figure out who murdered her cousin.

The very next day, Julian woke from her sleep and was surprised that her cousin hadn’t woken her up. She got out of bed and started getting ready for the day. Julian put on a white blouse with a poiret slit skirt, stockings, and one-inch heels. Believing that her cousin, Ivy, was still asleep, she made her way to Ivy’s room.

The Rookie Detective by Shela Muriel

“Hello, beautiful,” said the stranger, who had somehow gotten into 68 69

her bedroom. “You should not have protested; women should know where they stand within the society,”

As Julian walked around the apartment complex she noticed something shiny out of the corner of her eye. Curiously, Julian made her way over to the alleyway that had a ladder leading up to Ivy’s room. Bending down, Julian picked up the object and examined it. It was a silver lighter that was meant to light cigarettes. It didn’t make any sense, Ivy was never a smoker in her entire life. Now with more determinism, Julian felt confident enough to solve this mystery. All she had to do was find more clues that could lead her to her cousin’s killer. This time, she wasn’t going to back down without a fight.

End of excerpt from The Rookie Detective novel

Time Travelling by Emma Brubaker with her own hand. After a while of waiting, one of the police officers approached her. “Ms. Walker,” said the officer. “Yes sir?” “Can you tell me what happened?” “I don’t know,” says Julian as she wiped away a tear. “I walked in and saw Ivy dead on her floor,” she continued. “She was murdered by someone.”“Noma’am, what I believe happened was that she committed suicide,”“What?! That’s not possible. She was never depressed; she was always“There’scheerful.”noother way to say it, Miss; she had the knife in her hands and she just stabbed herself,” “No, you’re wrong,” says Julian as she started to become confident. This officer was lying: there was no way her cousin would commit suicide. Julian knew better than that. She looked at the officer’s name badge which said ‘Officer Matthew.’ “Officer, I know my cousin was murdered, and I will figure out who did it,” “Why don’t you leave that to me?” said another man, who was wearing a trench coat as well as a suit and tie. “Who are you?” “Sorry,” says the man with brown hair as he held out his hand. “My name is Jefferson Stalin,” he continued “and l’m the detective that is in charge of this case.”

“You’re going to figure out who murdered my cousin?” “Yes, we just need any information that you can hand us to help solve this “Youmystery.”cangoahead and search the house; some of her belongings should be Stalinthere.”nodded his head toward Julian in a polite manner as he entered the house searching for anything that could help them figure out what had happened to Ivy. However, Julian wasn’t about to sit around and let the men solve the mystery; she was going to solve it herself. If

anyone was going to solve this mystery, Julian was. She waited until the officers weren’t looking and started to search outside the apartment complex for any clues that could help with this mystery.

70 71

Great Ball of Fire by Lana Whited

74

The sparks are building in my throat, Evidence of the better, braver parts of me.

You are a joy that can’t be taken away. You are a friend who helps me through hard times. When you entered my life, you came to stay. Your comforting words are worth more than dimes. To me you are an angel in disguise. You’re always giving through good times and bad.

When I’m Breathing Fire by Abigail McGovern

Samantha, My Little Sister by Shela Muriel Samantha, looking at you makes me smile.

Half my life I’ve spent with ashes coating my tongue, the result of a fire fizzled out, a life on the run. Their bitter taste has muffled the words I meant to say and I’ve been choking them down, spitting them away. But they’re still there, burning in my chest, fighting your rules with every single scorching breath.

So I’m striking a match against my ribcage now, Counting 1, 2, 3

So when I’m breathing fire, babe will you look the other way? Or will you finally have the courage to face what I finally have the courage to say?

You are someone to love with all my heart. Being next to you is always worthwhile Though we argue, we can’t be drawn apart.

The sparks are building in my throat, Evidence of the better, braver parts of me.

Sometimes I fear I’m still coughing up dusty remains, checking all your boxes and biting back pain. But when I look over my shoulder, I see footprints in the ash, proof that I’m pushing forward, making a path. I understand the poisonous urge to bury what frightens you in the debris, But at some point we both must face the lightning-struck destruction you’ve wrought inside of me. So I’m striking a match against my ribcage now, Counting 1, 2, 3

Sisters are intelligent, kind, and wise. You are the sweetest friend I ever had. Having a sister is not just a trend. It’s knowing I can turn to you, till the end.

Blue 180 Degrees by Shaylise Jones

Thrown from heaven because I loved her more than anything.

Do you know why God has cast me down? Because I bowed to no crown? Because I was feared all around? Because I had a bond so profound? Ah, that’s the very thing.

IF I DIE AND GO TO HEAVEN MY LOVE LIVES FOREVER IN GOD’S LAND. Who do you love? Or who caused your love to be shallow? Your past has caused your future lovers’ chances to be narrow We all search for the one that makes our heart jump, But sometimes we need to crawl and walk in love before we run, But most importantly, LOVE YOURSELF BEFORE YOU LOVE ANYONE ELSE.

Reaching for the Stars by Lana Whited

Love is a language that only an empathetic heart may understand. Trust that my heart is genuine and stick to love’s plan. I feel sweat trickling in the palm of love’s hands.

Love Yourselfby Jacques Moore-Roberts

If You Have Not Loved, Then You Have Not Known God by Casey Craddock

Ice Drops by MacKenzie Ensley

“Where I’m From” by Caroline King

I am from swing sets and toys strung throughout the yard. I am from tough times, easy ones as well. I am from working hard to be remembered.

I am from “Quit your bitchin’ and get over here and help me,” Staying up late to make sure the cows calved safely.

I am from dad building me a custom car seat in the tractor, both heavily chipped from years of labor.

Inspired by George Ella Lyon’s “Where I’m From”

I am from chickens roaming freely through the yard, and waking up in the mornings to a cow’s sweet moo.

I am from the wooded areas just outside of town limits. I am from swimming in the deepest parts of the creek. And cool summer nights lying under the stars, the smell of fresh-cut grass.

I am from everyone having a dog as a companion, a guard over his family. I am from my neck of the woods, A place where I call home.

Palomino Sunset by Nancy Brubaker

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A Lasting Nothingness

I have been here before And yet my memory betrays me I have no sense Is this because I feel nothing or everything? Am I alone? I feel as though I have something to miss I don’t recall losing anything How long have I been here? Has it been MaybeHours?minutes?days? I do not feel panicked I feel bliss Yes… Bliss No worries or cares No reason for why, how, or what If this is my reality then so be it I will make it last.

by Braden Homsey

8180

I met you before the beginning of school and you were nice. You were the funny kid and I was a bit shy, so we clicked instantly. So, of course, we exchanged numbers and you answered whenever I called. Months and years went by and we talked through texts, but getting you to call was hard. We talked about each other and became close, at least I thought so. They were messages left unread and calls left unanswered as time went on. I kept my doubts to myself, but it kept happening, and so now I ask, will you answer my call? This is a long-distance relationship after all.

Mushie by Emma Brubaker

Answer My Call by Kristina Cossa

Forever Ferrum by Nancy Brubaker

become an English teacher. He is on Ferrum’s baseball team.

Tom Nix from Rocky Mount is a professional artist and a collector of local art. Before retirement he taught Spanish and led the drama program at Franklin County High School. He is former president of the Franklin Guild. He has also traveled extensively, especially to Spain. Staff

Kristina Cossa is currently a junior Liberal Studies major with minors in English and Theater. She has loved acting and theater since she was a child. She writes stories, mostly short but sometimes book-length novels.

Kiersten Jones from Roanoke is majoring in Music Business. She enjoys reading books, writing poetry, playing music, painting, and baking treats.

Makenna Lemon from Bassett is majoring in Graphic Design with a minor in Media and Communication. Her interests include Marvel, quilting, and drawing.

Mackenzie Ensley is majoring in Music Performance, and minoring in Forensic Science. She likes to draw, take pictures, and play the violin and piano.

Ashley Minnick from Henry County is a senior in the Elementary Education program. She is involved in NSLS, Help Save the Next Girl, and Delta Phi Epsilon sorority. She is a member of the Boone Honors Program.

Nancy Brubaker, a 1994 Ferrum College graduate, is a veterinarian, Associate Professor of Animal Science, and Program Coordinator of the One Health Minor.

C J Hughes is an Education major from Martinsville. He plays football. He and his girlfriend are having a son in April.

Jasmine White is a junior majoring in Liberal Arts with emphases in English, Elementary Education, and History. She plans a career in education.

Chelsea Zizzi from Yorktown is a Chemistry major and an English minor who loves to play tennis and write poetry.

Luis Felipe Marques from Brazil is majoring in Business Administration with minors in Sports Management and Marketing. He is on the men’s soccer team, and he has an internship in Ferrum’s Athletic Department.

Braden Homsey is a senior Education major with an emphasis in the English language. He loves poetry, wrestling, and spending time with family and friends.

BiBiographiesJudges

D. Bruckshaw Campbell is an assistant professor of English and Journalism and advisor to The Iron Blade. He graduated from the University of MissouriColumbia School of Journalism and earned an MFA in creative Writing from National University. He and his wife, Hope, have four children.

Shela Muriel is a senior from Greensboro, NC. She is a Creative and Professional Writing major with a minor in History. In her spare time when she isn’t reading or writing, she likes to go on walks and take pictures. She is currently writing an anthology collection and a debut novel. Will Poch is a freshman Education major with an English minor. He hopes to 84 85

Emma Brubaker from Franklin County is majoring in Chemistry and Ecotourism. She is a member of the Boone Honors Program.

Casey Craddock, an Animal Science major with a minor in Equine Science, works at Titmus Agricultural Center and is a member of the Equestrian team.

Anna Tomlin from Virginia Beach is an Environmental Science major with a Biology minor. She plans to become a wildlife rehabilitator.

Cara Ellen Modisett, has taught English at Ferrum and advised Chrysalis and The Iron Blade. She has served as editor of Blue Ridge Country magazine and a producer and reporter for WVTF radio. Her work has been published in several magazines and journals. She holds degrees in music and English from James Madison University and an M.F.A. in creative nonfiction from Goucher College; she is currently a senior at Virginia Theological Seminary and a candidate for priesthood in the Episcopal Church.

John Kitterman, a semi-retired English professor now teaching as an adjunct at Ferrum College, enjoys writing poetry and fiction and talking about creativity.

Madison Cline is a sophomore majoring in Horticulture. Her hometown is Christiansburg. She enjoys gardening, playing the piano, and reading.

Mike Dunavant,’93, is a former Iron Blade editor-in-chief who majored in History and minored in Photojournalism. He worked 10 years as a journalist. After 20 years of teaching history and instructional coaching in Henrico County Public Schools, he currently works as a project manager for the Virginia Department of Education in Richmond.

Shaylise Jones from Buckingham County is a Studio Art major and a History minor. One of her art interests is colored pencils, often using one color for an entire picture. Another interest is pen, especially for portraits.

Marina Powell is from Russia. She is a Music major and a member of the Boone Honors Program. She likes running, art, writing, rock music, and her dog.

Caroline King is a senior Teacher Education major with an English emphasis. She enjoys reading, writing, and photography. She is looking forward to discussing a variety of texts with her future students.

Ebony Reeves from Rustburg is an Environmental Science major with a goal to become a meteorologist.

Laura Dymond is a senior from Woodbridge who is majoring in Environmental Science and hopes to one day be working in the forests that she loves.

M. Katherine Grimes is a professor of English and advisor to Chrysalis. She is editor of Critical Insights: The Ousiders and coeditor of Critical Insights: Harry Potter. She and her family live in Ferrum.

Shawn Havens from Glade Spring is majoring in Agriculture Science with a emphases in Horticulture and Crop Science. His hometown is Glade Spring, and his main interest is growing plants.

Jacques Moore-Roberts is a senior English major with a Creative and Professional Writing emphasis. He loves to make music and has songs on streaming platforms under the profile “YBI Jacques.” He enjoys writing poetry about real situations to help people overcome trauma and mental health issues.

Joshua Bernard, ‘10, is a husband and father who writes fiction, articles, blogs, and website content and provides proofreading services. His Ferrum College degree is in Environmental Science, and he worked in wastewater for five years before turning to writing full time, freelancing on a variety of platforms. He is currently setting up a writing business, The Write Nerd, LLC.

Abigail McGovern is a junior from Round Hill, majoring in English with a Creative Writing emphasis and minoring in History. She is co-president of Help Save the Next Girl and a member of the Boone Honors Program and the cross country and track and field teams. She is also a PAL Tutor.

Lana Whited is a professor of English and director of the Boone Honors Program. She is the author of Murder, In Fact, editor of The Ivory Tower and Harry Potter and Critical Insights: The Hunger Games, and coeditor of Critical Insights: Harry Potter. She and her family live in Ferrum.

Scout Lynch, who was raised in Baltimore and plans to declare a major in English and a minor in Business, loves vegan food, writing Dungeons and Dragons campaigns, and art and writing.

Other Contributors

The staff of Chrysalis wishes to thank the judges for sharing their time and expertise.

Iasianthus by Anna Tomlin Acknowledgements 86

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