My hair used to fall down to my bum like a river of gold

It’s October for the twenty-third time

and the churches are forever cavernous, devoid of me: 

my religion is rivers, 

windows wide open during heavy rain and

my religion is you. 

I handed you the keys but you couldn’t see the locks

of golden hair falling at your feet. It’s October for the sixth time;

we speculate the colour of our babies eyes

and fight on the car ride home.

You pour hot water in my tea with steady hands

while I place shaking ones in the cold flow of the Tauwharenīkau.

My dad swam here, it’s October for the forty-ninth time.

Pray, by the river with clarity

by curling our bodies together like snails into shells

by knotting ropes of gold around your wrists and bringing thumbs to meet.

Windows slam and splinter and

my religion is rivers, always.

My religion is you, still.

Rune Benzon (she/her) was born in Pōneke and has just completed a BA in English at Te Herenga Waka. She enjoys being in nature, children’s fairytales, vintage furs and an egg a day. Future aspirations include: making her first batch of kimchi, seeing a giant spider in real life, travelling the world and one day owning a pet pig called Mabel. She has just moved to Naarm where she lives with her boyfriend, three friends and sometimes the neighbours giant ginger cat (no spiders yet much to her disappointment).