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Sarah Law

My mother has outlived Lieutenant Uhura

by six months and an English summer
although she could never compete in astrophysics

or the hailing frequencies between green-
goddesses and the barrel-chested captain

Uhura kissed just once under duress
although it was always Officer Spock

she really held the line for – my mother, now
nonagenarian, still recalls the formulae

for salt and water, symbols for silver
and gold, like the wedding ring

she lately misplaced. A female chemist
in the 1950s was a rare and charming thing.

The carbon-based life forms you find in time
and space never last as long as your stars.

All those miniskirts and mustard jumpsuits
jiving like particles in a placenta, my mother – 

unafraid of ridicule, unafraid of war,
holding her own in the heart’s high beam. 

author bio
issue one

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