blunderbuss
They said a transformer blew,
all sparks and shrapnel raining down
around the neighborhood, live wires
on the ground, hissing like snakes.
Last night, marriage was proposed.
I awoke to find my lips had formed
a yes below the no. All those children
I told you I never wanted, dancing
in my dreams like ghosts.
It is stained glass and broken porcelain,
here, where the sky smells only of
cedar and mildew. It rains and rains,
trees cracking and crashing in the wind.
coddiwomple
1.
I haven't shaved my legs in three weeks. A week ago, I was floating by on general laziness, but by now, it's officially A Statement, whether I like it or not. In all reality, that statement is, "I no longer need to adhere to mainstream beauty standards." But then again, I suppose that that's what all non-leg-shaving statements boil down to, really.
2.
I tried to write a poem a few weeks ago, and it morphed into the same nonsense that this is morphing into. A Statement. In the biz, we call something like this an "Advertorial." An advertisement disguised as an editorial. And on nights where I can't sleep and I'm not half as tortured as Don Draper but I'm drinking like him, and I want to write a poem, the only thing that comes out anymore is A Statement. The kinda thing you write when you're looking for attention or admiration or something. Applause, maybe. An advertisement for yourself. And you hope someone's buying.
3.
I live in the woods. I ride my bicycle into town, my leg hairs floating in the wind. I get buzzed by rednecks, in ridiculously large trucks, screaming obscenities. Or maybe they're just trying to hit on me. They can't see the leg hair from here.
December
1
Winter, like a head cold, is waning
beneath the DayQuil and chamomile.
The feeling like we might die, passing
with the clouds over the coast.
A raw season of filth and rain--mud
splattered onto your ankles and shins--
still, we wake before the sun.
2
Already, the daffodils sprout. Soon,
the figs will erupt and heavy, branches
stretching to the ground, the yard
drying and greening and drying again.
Perhaps I'll plant tomatoes. Perhaps
rosemary. The canal will wake, glitter
poured from dock to dock--the violinist
dancing on his houseboat. Soon.
3
Cheers to the stars. Cheers to the moon.
Champagne-tipsied, I'd kiss that beautiful man,
with fireworks and sea-salt on my tongue.
to Baltimore
1.
We went on adventures,
scanned the sky for planets
and satellites, spent all our money
on ballgames and bourbon, ran too fast
too far and fell, drunk on endorphins,
into the lake after midnight.
2.
Let's play this game again.
Come with me to steal
the neighbors' flowers
in fat bouquets that smell
exactly like your
grandmother's backyard:
gardenia and hyacinth,
handfuls overflowing, tied
together with grapevine.
3.
Reeking of roses--dirt buried
in each wrinkle of skin, tip
of finger to bend of wrist--
tshirt sticking to my spine
from the weather, from the
high noon summer ride
to your house:
I stand in your living room
like it's years ago. Yesterday.
We remove each other's socks,
run barefoot into the front yard.
The neighbors' sprinklers go on
right about now.
Skinny Dipping
High school nights, it seems.
Exhibit A:
We run wild and quiet,
kicking sand up behind us.
The park closed three hours ago,
but we break this rule like we're
passing notes in class.
Hushed giggles:
we're fourteen again,
abandoning shoes and shorts
on the beach, playing chicken
with the weather--it's still
too cold for any sane adult person,
but I double-dog-dared her,
so here we are.
Quiet, until we're waist-deep,
then a shriek.
B:
Warm beers in hand, we float,
look at the sky, gossip. Talk
about boys and broken hearts.
We've spent a lifetime
in these waters, pacts made
over stale Rainiers and under
these stars, burning brighter
the further from land we go.
C:
Imagination run wild, the lake
is still, flowing around us like silk:
a fish tail, a ball gown. The mansions,
ghostly, shroud us on all sides,
and we imagine we're rich.
Cinderella mermaids
smoking a bowl in the garden
while the others dance inside.
Princes are such a bore.
She said Bill Gates
once paid her
ten thousand dollars
for party favors,
and I ooh and ahh,
imagining what it would be like.
Extravagance. Plenty.
D:
Bliss--
sunburnt, the smell of aloe,
mother's hands soothing
fragile skin. Falling asleep
with the ocean rushing
within your calves.