Cowpoke
Like everyone else does,
you said, you go around bumping into people
until one of them sticks to you.
I’ve only been bumping into you, she said.
You were leaving the bathroom shirtless.
She was looking for a toothbrush.
Later that night
you made curled prints in the carpet.
A swath of the weave
washed in one direction then the other.
You dreamt of decay, small red worms
twisting on the carpet next to the bed.
You dreamt of manatees flensed,
nude and still moving,
cowboys hieing them through water.
When you woke to watch her chest rise and fall,
you thought of rising or falling as something else.
You remembered the taut skin over her ribs
and the smoke taste her mouth gave you.
Your shoulder thumped back
and darkened from the doorjamb
at the foot of the stairs as you noticed
yourself leaving.
The daphne had just blossomed
under the dogwood and the stars
and the shapes too big to be stars.
You had to unweave your way
loose from her rising chest.
even as the slow curls
of smoke and legs and arms
still stuck to yours.