--THE DARKNESS COMES AND THE DARKNESS GOES
Dogfish
Of
all things,
I
watch you catch a shark.
The
fish, a gray smudge inside cunning cobalt water,
struggles
against each ripple,
darting
like sun shadows between every vented wave.
You’re
apparently a pro,
reeling
in with ease.
Your
shoulders are the color of flan,
of
toast.
I
remember how you’d tear off hunks of bread at breakfast,
smear
the crust in bleeding egg yoke
and
raise your eyes to mine,
bejeweled
and sanguine.
Now
your man unhooks the fish
and
drops it into a handy cooler while
we—
him:
_______/
you:
on video in some other hemisphere/
me:
seated and stupefied/—
watch
the slick-skinned creature gasp
and
squirm.
Loofa
Some
say you survived the collision
while
I went under steel wheels
eating
silver spurs
of
molten metal.
Some
say you’ve been dancing Brazilian again
even
though the planet’s propped up with pogo sticks
and
antique axioms,
me
eating milquetoast.
Some
say you never age
you
never think twice
you
do not apologize.
They
say you are someone else’s new elite and that I
I
should slough away
like
useless epidermis,
and
I would,
I
would but
I’ve
been peeling the layers with a paring knife
and
now all I am is blood.
Please
You
were looking at the moon,
or
perhaps you were bored.
Nevertheless,
the window owned your eyes
as
you stared.
And
there and then
a
wide streak, a pale imprint
or
glow washed over you in a kind of regal holiness,
revealing
the landscape of your freckled flesh,
your
skin a place for the softest kisses,
mane
of hair mid-spine,
woven
it seemed out of sweet summer grass.
I
remember.
There
is not a natural rescue in this drama,
no
reason on earth why you should forgive me,
yet
I’ll lift my face and ask anyway:
Please?
Prodigal
Moon
The
moon thinks it’s a sun,
a
son bloated but adrift
or
not.
Not
belonging really to anything.
See
how detached he is,
Glowing
but not proud at all,
devastated
and so, so lonely,
in
desperate need of a kiss,
someone’s
soft breath
whispering,
“Come home. Please come home.”
Sharp
and Serrated
That
is how I remember you,
breeding
black venom,
eyes
twisted metal,
your
uterus a backdrop blade.
In
summer when I go shirtless
everyone
stares
at
the scars riddled like shrapnel
and
when they say, “Thank for serving our country,”
I
never mention your name but reply instead,
“My
pleasure.”
Porch
light
There’s
a devil in the hanging plant.
Even
the unlovables need a sense of place.
Perfection
is not a thing to toyed with.
Tolstoy
wrote want he wanted, Twain pulled all our chains
and
Carver broke our lungs.
If
you can find a way back to normal
and
tell me why we matter,
I’ll
keep the door unlocked and a porch light blazing.
Winter
Animal
There’s
a wolf inside me,
long-tamed
and broken,
dry-throated
and wandering the winter woods alone.
The
white-tailed deer don’t even bother turning,
robins
haven’t a sweet tweet
and
I’ve not had a thing to eat since Spring.
Only
the snow knows,
remarking,
“Kisp. Kisp. Kisp,”
as
my paws sink through it.
Only
the snow knows
what
it is like to be this cold and unwanted.
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