the sapphic chronicles
Meryl Streep would be proud of us
We existed as girls, no
space between our respective bodies, girlhood
into teenage-hood afraid of ourselves, stolen
kisses in my bedroom at my parent’s house, conservative
decor lining the walls because they were always very strict; I
look at her now like I looked at her then with
yearning and aching to reach out and touch her, my
hands shaking as I try to stop them from pressing against her arms, her
bare chest blooming, underwear
decorating growth, small and existing, we
never knew about Hollywood romances as girls but
we know about them now and we
are one.
orange segments
I’m healing. I know this because I
can eat orange segments without thinking about you. I know this because
even though your control felt like a kiss
nothing
feels better than her lips. Trauma
lives in the gaps between my fingernails, scrapes
year-old bruises off skin like scab, sinking
into her voice feels like redemption.
When I thought about you between my legs I’d flinch.
When I think about her between my legs they part wider. Women
know my body like it’s their own and
lesbian
is who I am.
Not yours anymore, I am mine alone.
Her fists don’t look like pain, only
a promise.
I tell her to kiss me.
I want everything that isn’t you.
memory foam
when delphine said to cosima
“I can’t stop thinking about that kiss”
I felt that,
it’s been eight hours and I still can’t stop touching my lips
I shiver when I remember your taste
god I wish you could have stayed
I could kiss you for days
my lips have never known such need
I’m falling for you and
I can’t stop myself because
adoring you feels like the easiest thing I’ve ever done,
I can still feel your teeth on my tongue
thank you for asking to kiss me
I want your hands in my hair again
I want my hands on your face again
pulling you closer,
I want to lay down and watch ten episodes of grey’s anatomy with you again
I just want you next to me
you smell like soap and suggestion,
promise and protection,
walking away from your coach felt like going against instinct
I miss you
Lucy Pettigrew is a twenty-one-year-old she/her lesbian poet from Nottingham, UK. She has been writing poetry since she was sixteen and her work now mainly revolves around lesbian themes, coming to terms with the label ‘lesbian’ and the joys and difficulties of wlw relationships. She has been shortlisted in a couple of competitions, published in Valley Press’ Beyond the Walls 2020 anthology and on the Dark Poets Club website. Some of her poetry is due for publication in the Tipping the Scales literary journal, the third edition of Femme Fatale Gals magazine and on The Teeming Mass website.