Decomposition
Monday sees Mangoes in her Dreams.
Swollen, Ripe, Too-Many, Too-Much
she says. Sweet, Plump, Soft As Tar In The Summer,
she says. Mangoes, she says, Bloated Things;
Broken Things.
Monday sees Mangoes in her Dreams.
She sees them when Ma plants the geraniums in July
& spades the earth. Skewers it. Spears it. Spills pools
of molten dirt and dribbles it over the flower box --
sweet juice, sticky juice. Mushy like overripe Mangoes.
Monday sees Mangoes in her Dreams.
They splatter her in her sleep & blister the stagnant air,
leech the cicadas songs with sap; drown them. The sterile
hills fill with fruit, sluice through Ma’s geraniums & twist
& turn & flood & jerk her awake. Awake, Awake.
Monday hides from The Mangoes.
Sometimes they writhe through the crevices in
her sneakers & she sees them in clear day -- brisk dawn.
Monday, they tell her, Don’t Run, We’re Just Same:
Left In The Sun Long Enough,
& We’ll Soften
& Crinkle
& Rot.