The Welding-Fused Wendigo By Dom Fonce

The welding-fused wendigo

creates itself from city dust, salt and clay. From my bed, I hear it mewl out a newborn cry down

the block. My eardrum holds the sound. Robotic. Crackly like a fingernail chipping a painted

wall naked. Youngstown is the womb, and we all are the guilty party—the ones who thrusted the

seed. Every light flickers—the moon skips a beat. Scrap, old wire, and two bowls of molten steel

earthworm-inch to the bastard cell. A clomp. A shimmy. A sear. This life—this baby—grows

seven feet tall, sucking in city junk, gaining mass, clanking down my street with its fire eyes in

its fleshless hands. Hiding behind my bunk, I see it trying to suffocate itself in its own chest, hear

its motherless moans. It shoos itself away into nothing, into the city’s black, escaping the

haunting thumps of heartbeats that it can’t help but perceive in every direction except down

below its own chin.


Dom Fonce is an undergrad English major at Youngstown State University. His work has been published in, or is forthcoming in, Junto MagazineThe Tishman Review3Elements Literary Review, Obra/ArtifactCOGBlacklist JournalOhio’s Best Emerging Poets: An AnthologyWest Texas Literary ReviewGNU JournalFourth and SycamoreGreat Lakes Review, and elsewhere. He can be reached at [email protected].