Ocean
I needed the ocean,
and it,
me.
The water rushed over my feet,
cool,
a stark shock to the toes,
while the salted breeze
billowed my skirt
and played with my hair.
Blue-green in the morning,
the glass plated waves
mimicked the clouds
that swirled just overhead.
I laughed and reached up,
half expecting my fingertips
to graze the cotton-soft puffs.
Sun-sore by afternoon,
I sat in the sand,
drawn eyes searching the horizon.
There was a smell,
I think,
that told me a storm
was riding in on the tide,
my name,
a furious whispers
on the tip of the tempest.
The sun's battle was lost by four,
and the angry waves
whipped around my ankles,
cold, black,
and heavy with hate.
The air,
burdensome and stale,
lent nothing
as the tide dragged me
further into the sea,
the lines of my heels in the sand
washed instantly clean
as though I'd never been there at all.
Splintered
You hang from my mouth -
you're subtly bitter
and you cling to me like shadows,
restrain me like gravity,
permeate me
like language and literature.
I am on my back,
ugly
and splintered by my own betrayal.
Your eyes, my moon;
my skin, your earth.
Our consequence,
dead stars in this graveyard of a sky.
No Poetry
Be a good girl,
now.
We'll avert our blind eyes
while you scream in your glass cage.
Swallow those capsule dreams
and make your idle wishes;
we'll sell you shattered to the man
with a clean coat and paper merit,
who relishes the broken, second hand people.
He'll fix you right up
with his potions and prayers.
But, please -
don't come to us with your tears and your pleading,
for there's no poetry to speak of,
no words to rebuild it,
and we aren't in the business
of lending inspiration.
We'd rather you bite back that misplaced silence
that echoes through the air.
Find some provisional mend for those open wounds
and present yourself
as though you were never
this thing that you've become.
Let's see that smile,
little girl,
even when you're laying down to die.
Winter Games
They seize the season,
anxious to exaggerate and boast their pretensions.
Reeking of cold cash
and lukewarm charm,
status is sought and staked behind the doors of hazy hotspots,
where winter well-knowns
and the well-to-do
collect charades on napkins.
They flaunt their big bills
and serve smiles with swagger
while they pin points to shoulders
and calculate the scores to be.
And just when these pawns think they're kings,
time is dust beneath them
and the Queens are setting their clocks for another round.
A Perfect Storm
Your blood
has surged through me
for 38 years,
4 months,
3 days,
yet you and I
are no more familiar
than two specs of sand
sundered by the Sidari.
If tears were oceans
and fathers, ships,
a thousand lifetimes wouldn't be sufficient
for you to find your way
to shore;
your sea-worn hull
would be at my mercy
until time slowed to a stop
at the hands of God Himself.
If brothers were moons,
the gravity of a shattered heart
would tug at my tide,
a celestial puppet master
to render your wheel a nautical marionette,
his crescent grin
leering at your wet bow.
If regret were a rudder,
you would have been aimless
with or without
the tempest of our torment.
But even a perfect storm
can fulfill its fury,
grace unfurling through the swells,
the Pacific,
a pen in the hands of the
Author of Accord.