POINT OF ENTRY / Katherine DiBella Seluja
This is the kind of night where one must pay one’s debts
The secret: never ask the body to give up its truths alone.
I see dancing skeletons, I mark the desert with crosses.
Won’t you say to me the word that conquers death?
Silence: speak.
Sometimes she whispers to the bones
rarely, they whisper back
At the edge of sleep, some slim truth or partial answer
to her list of many questions
This isn’t what she had trained for,
not what she had imagined.
(I have learned the ways
of dirt and stone
how best to backfill
the hole
how gently
to settle the box.)
The wind is a thin child’s call
My shadow is a cat arching and whining.
Each small heaven is full of risk.
I live curled in the mouth of the fox
His flesh was breathing slower than a wall
Who do you think was speaking
when you heard, Beware the ditch?
There are miles enough for everyone, down to the smallest child walking shoeless in the desert, trying so hard to avoid the thorns.
We dead have so much more than worry.
The dead do not rest.
They wait.
By the time he reached the gangplank, his stomach was an old woman jumping in her shoes.
They knew it was useless and
that seemed to make it more compelling.
What soup can resist the flavor of weary?
(WHERE TO BUY THIS BOOK: https://www.unmpress.com/9780826365309/point-of-entry/)
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