Ancestors
My ancestors conjured silken earth into vessels,
Carved themselves into the hearts of trees,
Dipped their gleaming thighs
Into waters made pale by a thousand stars,
Their songs swaying and undulating like a rolling tide.
They planted the seed moon
Into the warm garden-bowl of their hips,
Their bodies rising with it every night
Until it blossomed full and heavy.
My grandmothers called the dancing wind
With ancient words, hushed and hidden and forgotten,
And wove its magic into their veins.
Their hollow bones made love to
the wide, starry sky
Until they crumbled like clay pots,
Walking with bare feet along the kiln.
And when you thread tangled knots into my wings,
I feel their fingertips kissing my throat
And a wild call inside me remembers
They took all the trees
They took all the trees,
Filled our mouths with the rotting roots
As they grated our glittering teeth
To ash and coal.
Their glinting hooks scraped
Angry along our spine,
Each vertebra a thud,
And crushed their boots into
The wet hollows of our bellies.
How, then, could we breathe?