My skin prickles with heat,
Dropping doves on laundry lines
My heart leaps hard against my ribs,
Shelving sonograms in my mind,
Oh dear. I am in love.
I miss him. I see him out of the corner of my eye, walking into the living room like he’s done a hundred times before with his stark blue eyes and crisp white coat, a proud look on his face like he has the body of a panther and not a simple house cat. But he isn’t there. Only shadows cast by the wooden side tables he used to stretch himself on. A trick of the light, played on me by my aching heart. For the ornery flame tail Siamese to prance into view, and reject any and all affections, sitting elegantly with his tail tucked around his legs like a statue. Fine art, looked at, not touched. What I wouldn’t give to adore him from a distance again. Though even I was lucky enough at times to win his favor, and have the statue descend from his pedestal to rest at my feet, with his head on my ankle and the occasion lick of my fingers as I let him sniff me. His fur was soft as a rabbit’s, a forbidden fruit tempting me every time he strode through the kitchen to watch me cook. I respected his space, and in return he sat on the counter where he knew he wasn’t allowed, and perused the grocery bags curiously, often times sitting in the empty ones. I didn’t mind it, I cherished spending time with him, even if it meant washing the counters of paw prints. I miss him dearly. And I wish the tricks of the light would last just a little bit longer, so that maybe as I look at him, eager to absorb every detail of his little perfect face, he can look at me one last time and see me too.
There is an understanding in burning high rises that only it’s occupants can gather—that the rapid footsteps and baited breath do little for longevity if the staircase is ash and the elevator an oven.
No, the hurried panic is not for survival of the body, but a hunt for another. A body heat almost indiscernible undulating between the flap like flames—like pop ups out of a picture book. You may think it madness to seek heat in a fire, but this is a heat of the soul, a desire to die in embrace. To know a heart beat’s breath against your own.
An understanding that if life must be unkind, you must never let it be alone.
What use is death to a creature like me?
Well, I’ll tell you:
Death is an old bedfellow, a partner, a wife;
Is there anything so sweet as a union born in blood?
A promise to always be at each other’s finger tips?
Tool the marble into statue, we sculpt the world,
To improve it, cull those unfit for life by scythe point.
A silly question to ask me, what use is death to a
Creature? Without it, I would not have a life at all.
Like a mutant calf, my village shunned and cast
Me out to meet her, Lady Death.
She wanders barefooted, on dry and cutting blades
Something has died here, in the glades of her old memories
Its terrain water-hungry, fertile with long-lost mistakes
Sweet aroma of morning dew has forsaken this place.
But she returns, like sunken ship to lighthouse unmanned,
though only yellow grass grows in her past.
Spun silk from out my ear, divine ideation risen from a splintered mind.
Envelope your flesh with damnation and dance with me this night.
Sincerity is the blood held in by the knife in your chest. It feels too much like dying to be honest.
It hurts to watch my father split in two each night.
Right down the middle of his face, one half hops to bed and the other to the garage to yell.
The sleeping half is kind, and has never touched a drop of alcohol, and makes big pancake breakfasts on Sunday mornings.
The waking half is cruel, and has fascist memorabilia on his walls, and drills screws in pictures of the opposition to hang.
I can only love half of him, but I cannot stop even that. His image bleeds in my mind, I cannot grapple with the fact that they are the same man after all—that Nazi’s have daughters, too.
I thought life would be easier than this. That opportunities would fall in my lap, that I would never make mistakes. Typing it out now the ideas seem so foolish, but I truly believed them. The invincibility of youth waxes and wanes like the moon, beautiful, but an illusion. A display of only crescent truths and half-honesties. Once in the blue, darkness disrobes the white lies, and I am reminded of my poor decisions and silly aspirations in their naked blackness. Phases of judgment are all that is left of me, my future self peering backward at everything I have done and haven't done. I wait only for sunrise.
I am a mimic that sacrifices her true face to embody others, and I fool everyone but myself.
It is relieving to write what I think. I hadn't realized how ravenous and independent thoughts can be when left to their own endeavors. They can swarm behind the eyes so fiercely that they may pop out. And perhaps that would be a good thing, for a dangling eye can see oneself from an outside perspective, and not one manufactured and manhandled by pesky buzzing thoughts.