Store Conditions
Devon Neal
I don’t know about those other district managers,
polished dress shoes, ironed blouses, shelf-stripe neckties,
but I’d change nothing about this convenience store
leaning at dusk at this small town’s elbows.
The sliding doors are stuck open, the entrance
tattered with face-down price signs dusted with footprints.
The chip bags glint with wrinkles and hangover postures,
the cereal aisle a mouthful of crooked teeth.
Canned goods shuffle in uneven queue lines,
and piles of candy-filled hanging bags litter bottom shelves.
The apparel aisle is post-natural disaster,
deflated bodies strewn with careless limbs.
Empty pusher shelves at the over-the-counter medicine
look like dead pixels on a colorful screen.
In frozen foods, glass doors are hand-printed and blurry,
bags and boxes strewn and ransacked.
Somehow, I find a bag of pretzel bites, untagged,
still hiding in a rough-edged cardboard box on the shelf.
I can only find five cold beers in the entire store
but tonight, when I’m finally home with you,
there’ll only be three.
Devon Neal (he/him) is a Kentucky-based poet whose work has appeared in many publications, including HAD, Stanchion, Stone Circle Review, Livina Press, and The Storms, and has been nominated for Best of the Net. He currently lives in Bardstown, KY with his wife and three children.