Hayden Berry (he/they) is a writer, drag king, and alum of the Iowa Young Writers Studio living in Philadelphia.

reading “queens in exile” on the anniversary of sylvia rivera’s death

 

i have no home to my name and i

will not be

the last of my kind

to lose it all to avoid

death, or something worse.

maybe one day

i will leave this house

and hide with friends and

throw a bottle at the building

i trapped myself

in, let the walls bleed instead of me

then pick up

the shards

and toss the blood at the sky,

let it ripple,

give my father’s god the bird

while whispering the names of

mothers i deserved.

i deserve

 

enough hellbound laughing gas to

keep me and my future

roommates high for days, to

lay my guts on the floor so

they can name

every fucked up piece of me

without the fundamentals. let there be

an autopsy done by discord

servers and

the former daughter artist son of an artist

that i ran around in diapers with,

the one i still send pictures

of fish in ponds

while saying hey, it’s you.

 

there’s a lot of girls

inside me – dead girls. my girls.

girls that never existed if you look.

or did they? as if

you really care. actually,

maybe you cared more than me.

maybe the actor and the mask are

the same to you. maybe

the actor is the act

in your eyes. you don’t see

me before

the lights come up.

 

i stared at the hudson

for too long

when i left poughkeepsie 

by train, as if

the window shielded me from anything and

the water wouldn’t kill me.

the streets will probably kill me.

but so will oxygen.

it’ll take eighty years

if people

don’t rip my heart out

 

first. i take the ice,

i take the glass, i take the bricks, i take

what i’ve forgotten

(for real this time)

and i say go cry about it;

i’m gonna cry but you won’t

see it. you saw me falling

in love with the stars and

thought it was for

you. you

wished on them for me

as if they’d do anything for you,

man. What a word “human” is

when you can’t feel it.

 

all i can ask

the ground and god and my memories

is that someone finds

a home,

a narrative worth loving,

mistakes worth celebrating in

whatever i leave in

my wake.