--I CARRY YOU EVERYWHERE WITH ME
Strain
Your face is a Rorschach test and
there’s no way to know what your eyebrows want.
So we dine on oxygen. The table explodes in balls of black and red
fire, then regenerates. This happens
over and over.
The children are off playing somewhere
or maybe they’ve moved out, maybe they’ve grown that old.
Our dead honeymoon cat won’t stop
staring. The walls have even bigger ears stuffed up with canopies.
We used to play Gin Rummy in the tub. We
used to keep a solitary kiss intact for a whole week. We used to We used to We used to.
If I ask, you will blame it on
Shakespeare or Hitler again? Your friend who killed himself on the freeway
wasn’t fooling around and I guess you’re not either. Or maybe he was more than
a friend.
My
Father’s Legacy
When
they call your name, the angels shudder and go up in a gaseous plume of tar
smoke that flounces off the ceiling, rocking the attic, the locked chest, the
ancient lock cracking, lid jarred open, all of your sins slipping out for once,
ghosts of a dozen dead girls, none older than twelve, strangled and buried in a
quarry where no one found them until now.
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