Brian Gyamfi, a finalist in Narrative’s Sixteenth Annual Poetry Contest, is a Ghanaian American writer from Texas and the recipient of two Hopwood Awards and the Michael R. Gutterman Award. A graduate of the University of Texas, Austin, he lives in Ann Arbor and teaches writing at the University of Michigan.

To Hold a Kingdom

by Brian Gyamfi

The Fall


Father’s body bargains with my body and I
witness his spine morph into wings—


a moth, or a fly, something like a symbol.
He holds violence in his breath, his hands. I need


to keep father’s wings tied to the heavens, separated
from my spine. To keep his hands closed—the life,


a prowling of a cell. God, can I bargain
with the brain to hold nothing:

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