Devin S. Turk

Poetry

Devin S. Turk writes from personal experience about Autism, transness, and madness in the Mid-Atlantic United States, often with a cat in their lap. They have work published in Short Édition’s Short Circuit, Strange Horizons Magazine, and Disability Rights Washington’s blog, Rooted in Rights. Links to their writing and social media can be found on their Twitter, where they are active @DevinSTurk.

 

Junk Drawer

I keep a collection of keys that unlock nothing looped together, tarnished neighbors on a lanyard and I imagine that they floss their metal teeth with junk drawer gossip. Sifting my fingers through the jar of spare buttons, I wonder if they whisper to each other in plastic voices and reminisce about the favorite shirt at last Thanksgiving’s dinner before the incident involving splattered cranberry sauce. I think the Monopoly piece holds a grudge against me, still considers itself a thief’s prize, but it is the only battleship I can hold in the palm of my hand, so it stays. Once, I inherited a pocket watch with a broken latch and I treasured the thing, would hold it up to my ears as a kid just to listen though I knew it wouldn’t tick. I suspect that when I turn away, its timeless arms reach for one another.
Listen: